Can a marriage destroy someone?
No. The actual ceremony, the act of, etc...the marriage itself cannot destroy someone.
The problem *is* the people in it. The old saying "guns don't kill people, *people* kill people" fits here. Marriage doesn't destroy people, people destroy people.
Once people get that figured out, then they can move onto the next problem: the insignificant other.
If you have problems with your significant other, long before you put the rings on, then you shouldn't even consider a marriage with that person.
People that have been divorced say "Oh I'll never get married again. It was too expensive, and cost me half of everything."
No. The marriage only cost you the license and the fee required by the religious or court official.
The other person, their spoiled and disgusting ways, and their "gotta have it all" divorce proceedings cost you.
If you marry the right person to begin with, none of that will happen.
I have high doubts that I'll be marrying my current girlfriend of three years (well, close to three). I gave her a ring, got down on my knee, the whole 9 yards. She's never told her family about it, and wears the ring on a necklace when she's around them because she's afraid they'll disown her for marrying me.
Shows you where her priorities are (at least somewhat). I love her dearly, but that hurt me beyond compare, and proved to me that she is not the one to walk down the aisle with.
I'd be crazy to marry her, because I know it'll end in a divorce. Whether it's personal issues between the two of us, her family problems, whatever...no point in doing it when you know going in, that it's bound to fail.
As a girlfriend, she's wonderful. As a wife, doubtful. I hate to be harsh and cold like that, but if she'll put me on the back burner to please her family, she'd do it to anyone. (Her parents are incorrigible and extremely difficult to deal with. Her father...that man is quite evil when he wants to be. Downright vicious and bullheaded.)
But she and her family would be the ones who would destroy me. Not the marriage. There *is* a difference.