
Marriage is sold to women like a dream destination. A gorgeous wedding, a loving partner, a warm new family and a promise that life will somehow sort itself out beautifully once you get there. But somewhere between the ‘shaadi ka outfit’ trials, the venue shortlisting and the never-ending guest list debates, most women forget to ask themselves one question that actually matters: Am I ready for what marriage really is? How does it actually feel to live it every single day?
Finding the right person is only half the work. The other 50% is knowing yourself well enough to know what kind of life you genuinely want to build. Before saying ‘yes,’ here are 10 things every woman should seriously think about.

In India, the pressure to get married is huge. Once you cross 25, relatives start commenting, and friends start settling down. Your social media feed starts looking like one long wedding album. And without anyone saying it directly, you know it's your turn now. But here's the thing: pressure is not a reason to get married. Ask yourself this: If nobody was asking about your marriage, would you still want to tie the knot right now? Your answer to this question will reveal more than you think.

Many women assume that marriage won't change anything about their professional life. Sometimes that's true. Most of the time, it isn't. Have you both talked openly about what work means to each of you? What happens if you get an opportunity in another city? How will household responsibilities be split between two people with careers and ambitions? There's a difference between a partner who genuinely supports your goals and one who simply doesn't object to them. Know which one you have.

When a relationship begins, everything feels good and easy, but that's not the real test. The real test is this: can you show up as you actually are (not the best version but the real one)? Can you say what you actually think to your partner? Can you share what genuinely worries you without being judged? Because marriage is a lifelong partnership. Pretending to be someone else quickly becomes very exhausting. Marry someone who knows the unfiltered version of you and still shows up.

Money is one of the biggest reasons for conflict in marriages. It is also one of the last things couples actually talk about before the wedding. Who pays for what? Are finances shared or kept separate? What are each other's spending habits? Is there any debt on either side? What if one person earns significantly more? Of course, love is the fundamental thing required but financial talks are a huge factor too. A slightly uncomfortable conversation about money before marriage is a hundred times easier than a full-blown argument about it three years in. Have it now.

A lot of couples walk into marriage believing they're on the same page about this simply because they've never disagreed out loud. That's not the same as actually talking about it. Do you both want children? When? How many? What kind of upbringing do you have in mind? What happens if one of you feels differently about it five years from now? These are not small questions.

It's easy to be a good partner on good days. Most people manage that just fine. The question is what happens when things get hard. When you disagree, how does this person communicate? Do they actually listen, or do they just wait for you to stop talking? Do they get defensive, go quiet, or find a way to work through it together? Marriage isn't held together by the easy days. It's held together by how two people behave on the difficult ones. Pay close attention to that.

Loving the same kind of food, travel destinations and movies is a good start. However, it is not enough. What do you each believe about how responsibilities should be divided, raising children, discussion over personal space, etc, matters more. Shared interests definitely make a relationship enjoyable but shared values make it last long. When trouble hits you in life, like losing a job, some illness or a family crisis, it comes in handy to keep things together.

In India, marriage rarely involves just two people. It involves two big families, each with their own expectations and lifestyles. Close family bonds are obviously a beautiful thing but boundaries need to exist too. Can your partner stand up for you when it matters? Do both families understand that the couple needs space to build something of their own? This conversation feels awkward to have just before the wedding. However, skipping it doesn't make the tension disappear. It just adds up and can later burst.

A partner can make your life richer, warmer, and more meaningful. But they cannot be the entire foundation of it. The marriages that hold up well over time are almost always the ones where both partners have their own individualities, friendships, interests and goals. If your happiness, mood or peace is almost entirely dependent on another person's presence, that's worth examining honestly.

Marriage is mostly just regular life. It's a tired Tuesday evening. It's navigating a family situation nobody prepared you for, dealing with stress, splitting chores after a long workday, and making small decisions together about things that aren't remotely romantic. Can you imagine sharing those everyday moments with this person for years? Because that's what marriage actually is, most of the time.
Marriage is one of the biggest decisions a woman will ever make. Nobody is looking for a perfect partner, that person doesn't exist. What you should really figure out is simpler than that: does this relationship give you room to grow? Does it make you feel genuinely respected? Does it allow you to remain fully yourself? The wedding is for one day. The questions are what shape everything that comes after it. Ask them, answer them honestly and then decide.