The percentage of married couples living separately is growing, and it may be for the good of the relationship.

Remember that anybody can seem great in a short interview. You have to ask the proper questions to know what you’re getting yourself into. Here are the right questions to ask a potential roommate.

If we can agree that many couples who won’t live together before marriage are religious or conservative, then it’s not a leap to suggest that those same couples have children sooner. Whether they don’t believe in birth control, or feel that making children is their responsibility to their religion or traditions, they may make kids sooner than couples who live together before marriage. That means that, should they want to divorce, they have a big thing (kids) making it quite difficult.

Can a relationship move forward if one of you wants to take a step backward?

Many couples think they know what living with their partner will be like, just based on the fact that they spend most nights together before moving in. But there’s really no way of knowing what living together is like until you do it. When you live separately, you can let a lot of things slide. […]

If your child was pregnant or got someone pregnant, would you allow the young couple to live under your roof?

Why I feel that women who want to be married should not cohabitate.

Whether you establish a marriage commitment before you move in does.

Does our society take marriage as seriously as it should?