Monday, November 06, 2023

When Marriage Sellers Say Married Men Live Longer

"Married men live longer."

Wow, that sure looks like strong reason to marry, right?

But... as usual, the realities behind the statistics being used to sell marriage to men can tell a different story.

1) Women are more likely to marry and stay married to healthier and wealthier men. Guess what? Healthier and wealthier men tend to live longer. If a couple is living together but she won't marry him because he's ill, then again, he's counted as "unmarried."

2) Divorced men are usually counted as "unmarried." If a man gets ill and his wife divorces him and he dies, he is counted as "unmarried." The suicide rate for divorced men is high, too. What if, instead, those men had learned to be happy without ever marrying?

3) Men who die young are far less likely to have married. What ages are the statistics counting? If they are counting "men 16 years of age and older," that means any unmarried guy who died at 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30 can skew the statistics in comparison to the fact that most men who live 40 or more years will have married. To put it simply, if you look at 10 guys who died before age 40 and 10 guys who died in their 70s or 80s, chances are, the older guys were married. It doesn't necessarily mean that marrying kept them alive longer or that the men who died younger died younger because they didn't marry.

Do you see how the statistics might not be making a clear indication that marrying causes a man to live longer?

It is possible that having a woman in his life who nags him to go to the doctor can keep a man alive longer. That's a reasonable consideration. But a woman can do that for a man without a terrible state contract. In fact, I urge men I'm not married to and I will never marry to go their doctors. More people should do that, instead of telling a man to sign a terrible state contract because it might appear to be correlated to longevity.

Finally, even if it could be definitively proven that marrying does, in fact, extend a man's life, let's consider what that would mean. It would mean that he trades decades of freedom, peace, quiet, control over his own finances and life, and everything else about life that Free Men enjoy that the average husband doesn't, for mere months or a couple of more years of convalescence, when he might not even remember who he is or be able to feed or wipe himself. Consider that carefully, guys.

Indeed, the stats are likely turning out as they do because an elderly man’s wife was there to call for help when he collapsed. So he lives a few months longer. If you really want to live longer in that condition, guys, technology can now monitor you and summon help, for much less cost than a wife.

Hey, what about women? Oh, what do you know - married women don't live as long as unmarried women. Shouldn't men avoid being selfish by avoiding marriage, since it appears to rob women of life?

1 comment:

  1. Anonymous1:22 PM

    Yes indeed. Also, "married men live longer". I mean, I don't think most of us (in America) are living in an Indian reservation or a very economically deprived place like McDowell County, West Virginia (former coal mining hub), where men's life expectancy is under 70. It's not like you're gonna get to live longer as a 15-35-year old.
    In most urban/suburban counties, the life expectancy usually at least 75. Do you really want to "live longer" in that age group? Some "testimonials" from Reddit:

    When my grandma was in her late 80s, she'd seen two husbands die and wasn't able to walk well any more, she said one day to me "Getting old is terrible, I hope it never happens to you" and she meant it with so much love and kindness.
    --
    My grandmother died at 102. She outlived one daughter, her husband by nearly 50 years, all of her siblings. She refused to start making new friends because "they just die." She lived with my parents, but she had such a lonely existence at the end.

    AND:
    I suspect that as Gen X, we'll most likely be forgotten about by our children and grandchildren and gather together in loose circles to play Dungeons & Dragons while discussing the best strategies for beating the newest Mario while trying not to aggravate our arthritis.

    ReplyDelete

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