Saturday, May 16, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Some Older Couples Have 'Weddings' Without Getting Married

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 May, 2016 12:35 PM
    Some older couples who want social recognition for their love relationships are exchanging rings, throwing parties and holding wedding-type ceremonies, but they're stopping short of getting legally married to avoid complications with retirement funds, property and grown children.
     
    "It was important for our friends to know we were committed to each other," recalled Dixie Reppe, 80, who wears a ring from her beau, Joe Pendergraft, 77, and refers to him as her fiance. "But the financial piece and the families — it's a whole lot more complicated. We decided to keep those things separate." The two live in adjoining apartments in Inverness Village in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
     
    Pendergraft bought her the ring after she visited him in Georgia. "He didn't want people to think I'd spent time with a strange man in Georgia," Reppe recalled with a laugh.
     
    Once word got out about their relationship, "we weren't sure how well accepted that would be," said Reppe. She needn't have worried: Her girlfriends threw her a surprise engagement party, and there were a few other informal gatherings with Champagne, chocolate and friends, where they could introduce themselves as a couple.
     
    One benefit of formalizing a relationship this way is that it allows older couples to dispense with terms like "boyfriend" or "girlfriend," which might be fine for 20-somethings, but can raise eyebrows among the 70- and 80-something set.
     
    "Most of the time we refer to each other as husband and wife just to keep things not so complicated," said Shirley Sapp, referring to her relationship with Doug Oxenhardt. "If you go the other route, people look at you like, 'Well what's the deal?'"
     
    Sapp and Oxenhardt, both in their 70s, were widowed when they met, and each had two grown children. Those children were among 90 guests at their 2013 wedding ceremony in Missouri, complete with a pastor.
     
    "It was just like any other marriage ceremony, except we didn't have the last sentence where the minister will say, 'By the powers vested in me, I now pronounce you husband and wife,'" Sapp recalled. "He was a really cool pastor, and when we told him our story, he said, 'Sure, I'll do it.'"
     
    But while avoiding marriage may seem like an easy way to keep finances and estates separate, unmarried couples may still face some legal complications, according to Frederick Hertz, a California lawyer and co-author of "Living Together: A Legal Guide for Unmarried Couples."
     
    Hertz noted that some states honour common-law marriage and will consider couples married after a number of years whether or not they got a marriage license, while other states allow unmarried partners to claim money or property "based on an oral or implied agreement."
     
     
    Hertz also said that signing a credit card or lease with your partner could make you responsible for the other person's debt. Other issues include who has legal authority for medical decisions, and when one partner dies, whether a surviving partner has the right to stay in the home where they lived together. That may depend on who owns it and who inherits it.
     
    Housing is one thing Reppe and Pendergraft thought about early on. When they met, Reppe was living at Inverness Village in a unit that was too small for both of them. When the unit next door opened up, they "basically blew a hole through the wall and got the apartments connected," she said. This way they have their own apartments, but they can also be together, and if something happens to one of them, the other will still have a place to live.
     
    Sapp and Oxenhardt also own separate homes where they spend time together. She owns the villa in Florida where they spend winters, and he owns the house in Lake of the Ozarks, Missouri, where they live in the warm months. Their retirement finances are separate too: She worked for the Veterans Administration, and he has a pension from the railroads.
     
    But whatever arrangements older couples make as they manage the logistics or social conventions of being together, the love and companionship they share makes it all worthwhile.
     
    "I think when you get to this stage in life, if you found happiness, when you find someone to love and someone who loves you and you can share so many common interests and you don't have to come home to an empty apartment, that's pretty special," said Reppe.
     
    "We laugh a lot," Pendergraft said.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Euthanasia: Debate rekindled on right to die for the terminally ill

    Euthanasia: Debate rekindled on right to die for the terminally ill
    Three years ago, the Supreme Court ruled against 'active euthanasia', administering a lethal injection to end lives of patients with terminal illness, but said that 'passive...

    Euthanasia: Debate rekindled on right to die for the terminally ill

    Companion planets can host life better

    Companion planets can host life better
    Having a companion in old-age is good for people and, it turns out, might extend the chance for life on certain earth-sized planets as well....

    Companion planets can host life better

    Penguin's language decoded

    Penguin's language decoded
    In a significant breakthrough, Italian researchers have decoded the language of penguins....

    Penguin's language decoded

    Man builds spaceship in his kid's bedroom!

    Man builds spaceship in his kid's bedroom!
    Have you ever thought of building a spacecraft for your kid? Learn from this man who gifted his four-year-old son a NASA spaceship simulator - right in his bedroom...

    Man builds spaceship in his kid's bedroom!

    DNA may shape political affiliations

    DNA may shape political affiliations
    The extent of liberalism in people may be linked to their bodies and deep seated psychology and not just results of conscious decision-making...

    DNA may shape political affiliations

    Lead in teeth as kid can reveal origin later

    Lead in teeth as kid can reveal origin later
    The lead that gets accumulated in children's teeth as they inhale dust and ingest soil when they put their hands in their mouths can later reveal where they come from, reveals a study....

    Lead in teeth as kid can reveal origin later