She's a wonderful person and I think we could work, so yes. I really hadn't considered a lot of the points people have brought up. He actually wanted them to be active in a religion and thought this was a good idea. We have known each other for many years. Please wait a few minutes and refresh this page. But his absence in the spiritual side of my life, and that of my mother, was very hard. Their values and the values of popular western culture are wildly disparate, which can be tough for them to navigate early in life. Second, in my experience mormons have been some of the kindest people I've ever had the privilege to know, and they have not lived up to the cult image you describe. You need to disabuse them of this notion.
Love the way you normalize the challenges of being married. God will help you both work this out. It is also considered disrespectful to others, as they may be uncomfortable because of your open displays. During our brief break, two of his nurses chased him like crazy, immediately after he left being in a year-long relationship where two families were blended. I've been the main parent for 30 years. For me and the woman I'm in love with, we CAN discuss it without breaking down into spittle and hate. I'll bring up some CES letter issues, let her know why I wouldn't want my children raised like this, and we'll see what happens. Part of me wants to say Yes!!. So far I have found it is a day to day thing.
He wants me to sit around while he does his stuff. She is considered "an old maid" by Mormon standards, so she may be willing to marry you--hoping you will convert someday --but she will constantly be reminded that your marriage is inferior to the "Eternal Families" of sealed Mormons, and she will fear dying and never seeing her loved ones again. You have to come second right now. The church can be a very cruel place for single people.
What my boyfriend and I used to do when we were long distance is write really, crazy long emails to each other almost as long as my blog posts. They will serve as a constant reminder to her that she needs to conform- and you won't be wearing any. There are a great many beliefs I can't condone but most of them are along the lines of gender stereotyping, and how you apply that to your own life obviously varies by individual. It's really cool to be able to connect with someone who shares all of those things with me. Never marry someone with the goal of a post-marriage conversion. IF she becomes an Atheist free thinker like you then consider keeping her.