According to a 1982 study by two Indian researchers, the level of self-reported love in arranged marriages increased over time until they surpassed the level of self-reported love in marriages that were freely chosen. Incredible as it sounds, people with a very limited say in choosing their own spouses eventually became happier with their relationships than people with the freedom to choose anyone they wanted.
Although we almost always read “Romeo and Juliet” as the quintessential story of love at first sight,Shakespeare actually offered his own sly critique of romantic love at the beginning of the play. Romeo is pining away for love — but not for Juliet. There is another fair damsel who has rejected Romeo’s advances, and he declares himself inconsolable. He disdains finding someone else and tells Benvolio, “Thou canst not teach me to forget” — which is, of course, precisely what happens a few scenes later when Romeo meets Juliet and realizes that he was completely wrong before and only now has discovered true love.
We never remember that part of the story, though, because if we think of “Romeo and Juliet” from that perspective, the whole play starts to skew in ways that contradict our usual romantic notions.
Perhaps the time has come for us to take a skeptical view of romance, particularly the over-the-top variety peddled so effectively on Valentine’s Day.
I know I’ve made this comment before, but two decades ago, I became good friends with a Hindi gentleman, whose marriage was arranged while he lived in India – it has been a happy and successful marriage. He arranged marriages for all his children while living here in the US – and these have been similarly successful. Having had the opportunity to discuss these matters with his has been, to say the least, eye-opening. Before our discussions, I would have told you that arranged marriages were the worst form of bondage; he has changed my mind.
I am still thankful that I had the choice – my wife and I never would be married otherwise, although my parents now adore her, they never would have considered her.