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      • Those who live in a commuter marriage are typically better educated and better paid. Indeed, those with greater financial resources or flexible job schedules experience fewer difficulties in these marriages.
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  1. Jan 22, 2013 · Commuter marriages are incomplete since they lack co-residence; the two individuals cannot physically be together every day as the ideal of romantic love assumes they should be.

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  3. Jun 15, 2017 · Some data suggest commuter or long-distance marriages are increasingly common as more couples are equally invested in their careers or one partner is forced to move for a job in a tight economy...

    • Anna Medaris Miller
    • Contributor
  4. Dec 12, 2017 · the rise of commuter marriage reflects decades of social change in women’s workplace participation, american individualism, technological saturation, bureaucratic hurdles, and the symbolic significance of marriage itself.

    • Danielle J. Lindemann
    • 2017
  5. May 1, 2015 · The very notion of a “commuter marriage” conjures up images of couples suffering quietly while living miles apart, but new evidence suggests some distance may be good for the health of the...

  6. Apr 15, 2019 · But seven percent of Canadian couples aged 20 and up, including 31% of 20–24-year-olds, are in a ‘living apart together’ relationship. Census data also show that nearly 4 million Americans and...

  7. Ruth McMullen, Vicki Samemi and Dr. Tina Tessina join Caitlyn to discuss some of the good and bad aspects of having a commuter marriage, and offer some tips as to how to make it work.

  8. Nov 1, 2016 · But according to the U.S. Census Bureau, roughly 3.5 million couples in the United States live separately for reasons other than an impending divorce. Many of these are "commuter marriages." This number has more than doubled since 1990.

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