Sister Mary Lisa wrote:Notice that the only example out of thousands of diverse family situations that you could come up with where it's OK to be a "different" family is by being a widow or widower. All other families who aren't this model family as outlined in the Proclamation are viewed as less than ideal and somehow lacking. I know this is true, having been married to a non-member for 14 years while being an active Mormon, and being consistently placed on the fringes of the crowd, because I was different. Because I took my kids to church alone. People at church treat people who aren't the "ideal" differently.
While I am sorry to hear of your situation, you have misread my point. Sometimes people make mistakes which leads to less-than-ideal situations but for which they do not deserve a metaphorical scarlet A. Repent and sin no more. Also, some situations happen because one party hurts the other.
And it is implied, like you just did, that if you don't live that, you haven't sought out the righteous path for yourself, or it's assumed you haven't attempted to strive hard enough for it.
I neither implied nor thought any such thing.
I wonder if a righteous young LDS man would rather choose to marry a young, righteous, beautiful divorcee with three kids, or a young, righteous, beautiful, single woman who'd never been married yet. Only one of them fits the "ideal" he should strive for as outlined in the Proclamation.
Balderdash.
If an LDS woman has a very best friend who isn't LDS, and they love each other with all their hearts, and he is the perfect mate for her in all ways, she will be discouraged from seeking him for her mate, because he is not "ideal." I find this so sad, pointless, and wrong.
Ah, so that's the real problem. I think it's an issue of perspective. I find that loving God and considering an eternal perspective is far more important than anything else. If you disagree, well, that is your decision. I think it makes the most sense from an eternal perspective to find a companion you can share the eternities with and who will be equally yoked in raising your children in the gospel. If you disagree, then perhaps your priorities are different in such a way that I find baffling. Mormonism is something that demands total commitment. That said, you don't deserve a scarlet A.