I find that one of the most important things is to make sure you have a support system, whether they are other doc wives, family or friends. Finally, it is a very tight-knit community and despite efforts to insulate you from conversion-minded missionaries, you will be exposed to a lot of people that think, like this woman does, that atheists are without a moral compass. I am 27, LDS, and 5 days away from marrying my own amazing non-Mormon man.

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Apps At Your Fingertips. No easy answers here. I'll keep digging through it, but there's a lot there and I'd like some suggestions to narrow my search. You and your fiancee might want to get in touch with one to work out the day-to-day issues of an interfaith marriage. It's gonna hurt, and it's gonna break her heart, but much less so than waiting until you've both committed to each other and start discussing your future together. This woman is a human being, not a caricature of a TBM. The scenario where she refused to watch a possibly 'anti' documentary and wanted to watch church-sanctioned material sounds like a red flag.
I would need to ask my husband again. As ex-mormons, can anyone here offer some insight about this girl, her religion, and what exactly I may be getting myself into if I continue dating her. You can also attend their singles conferences, or participate in social activities organized by the Church. I agree with Rachel- this is not what I signed up for. And there are questions and lessons that dual-faith couples face that zero-faith or single-faith households do not. I definitely don't want to lead her on. Besides the obvious brain damage that you will be made to suffer your entire married life, there are future kids to think about. He's usually trying to catch up on sleep working on a presentation, patient notes, etc I know communication is key, but it's helpful to know that others are going through the same experience. Affection will come and go based on our attitudes, and will not carry through the rough spots в married in the Church or outside.
It's like talking to a wall. Then, do any of the above morsels of advice matter. Unless you have those same understandings, I'm sad to say the relationship is almost certainly doomed. A lot of Mormons escape that pitfall and can put people first. If I were you, I would sever the relationship and find someone else. Initially I thought he would join the church and life would get back on the only track I knew. I have always worked full-time and no employers ever give you any lenience. Every new set in our ward looks at him as fresh meat.