05-22-2017, 02:22 PM
(This post was last modified: 05-22-2017, 02:31 PM by MarylikesGrimm.)
(05-22-2017, 01:55 PM)Loona Wrote: Don't get me wrong I like the old Bones. Temperance did things she never wanted. She never wanted to get married and have children and later on she changed. I think Booth changed her - but it's almost out of character.
Mary: Some of the women in my family were like Temperance. It is true these women may not feel they have to have marriage and children but if they get pregnant it does not mean they will get rid of the baby or not work with the father. In general the more educated the women the more likely they will evidently get marry even if is not the stereotype.
https://www.brookings.edu/blog/social-mo...e-married/
Eleanor Krause, Isabel V. Sawhill, and Richard V. ReevesFriday, August 19, 2016
Marriage used to be a classless phenomenon. But, not anymore: in 2008, marriage rates amongst college-educated 30-year-olds surpassed those without a degree for the first time. Among women in their early 40s (between 40 and 45), a clear gap has emerged in recent decades:
The education-marriage relationship appears to hold even at these higher levels, as rates of marriage amongst middle-aged women with advanced degrees are now higher than for those which just a bachelor’s degree:
Eleanor Krause, Isabel V. Sawhill, and Richard V. ReevesFriday, August 19, 2016
Women characters do not have to be having sex with the lead to be important to the story.