Dear Prudence,
My good friend is about to get married, and I think she is making a huge mistake. She is young, beautiful and successful, and her fiancé is more than twice her age, six times divorced, has several children ranging from preschool age to adult age, and doesn’t have a relationship with any of them. He’s also unemployed, broke, and was couch-surfing when they met only eight months ago. She wants to start trying for children immediately after the wedding.
Beyond just being a loser, I also think he is an abuser. I spent 10 years in an abusive marriage and I know the signs. He is love-bombing her, and I can already see the subtle signs of abuse beginning. He’s a very smooth talker, and I think it’s telling that he was able to convince six women to marry him, and they all left.
I’ve been open about my concerns since the beginning, but he has an excuse for everything, and she explains it all away. I’ve begged her to at least give it more time before they get married, but she is certain that he’s “the one” and wants to start a family as soon as possible. While I truly hope things will be different for her, half a dozen ex-wives and even more estranged children is a pattern, and I highly doubt my friend will be the exception.
Is there anything else I can do? I don’t want to push her away, and she has already distanced herself from me a bit, but I’m not sure I can stand by and watch her throw her life away either.
—Worried Friend