I'd hardly call 7 weeks into NPS "the other end", but you're doing well if you're still there.
Before you start off giving advice, would you mind taking some? I know that this is the hardest thing to convince any young person, but you should definitely put off that wedding until after you have been assigned to a sea-duty command for at least one year.
The Navy does you a HUUUUGE disservice by paying you more and giving you more freedom when you get married. Basically they are giving you big incentives to marry before you are ready.
Since I don't know you or your future bride, I can not comment in any way about your emotional readiness for marriage. Your level of maturity and financial stability are none of my business.
But you really have no clue about what the next few years is going to do to a marriage. And NOTHING is going to prepare you for it except living through it. You and your bride-to-be might be very well suited to adapt to the crap that is coming your way. You might deal quite well with long separations, low pay, long work hours, transfers to weird places, and all that crap.
BUT---
You owe it to yourselves to see what it is like before you commit yourselves to deal with it together. It is only fair to her (and you too) that she gets to see firsthand what she is getting into.
Military pay (even with BAQ, BAS, VHA, dependent health, comissary and exchange privileges) is still going to put you on a tight budget. It has also been my observation that women do not marry with the intention of being lonely all the time for years after their wedding. Unfortunately, that is what happens in the service. She is going to have to live on a low income, in a strange town, without her husband, for long lonely stretches. Before you put her through that, let her try it for a while first.
The Navy has ground many a strong marriage to dust. Give yours a fighting chance by being prepared at the start.
Best of luck to you, and thank you for serving our country.