Tuesday 29 September 2015

Divorce Jokes

Here are some of the printable jokes from this site!
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My wife left me the other day, because apparently "I'm too formal"

So I sent her a letter of complaint.
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My wife came home from work to find me sitting watching the football. 

"I've decided I'm leaving you, all you do is talk about football you think about nothing else," she said. "I'm also seeing someone else truth be told." 

"Really?" I replied. "What team does he support?"

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My wife said I need to grow up. I was speechless.

It's hard to say anything when you have 45 gummy bears in your mouth.


Source:- http://www.sickipedia.org/sex-and-shit/divorce/my-wife-said-i-need-to-grow-up-i-was-1622426

Sunday 27 September 2015

My Marriage Ended And My God, The Loneliness Is Nearly Killing Me



My Marriage Ended And My God, The Loneliness Is Nearly Killing Me

In the end, we're always kind of alone, aren't we?
I'd be a fool and a liar to sit here and write that I haven't found the bright spots in separating from my wife. And she'd probably tell you the same thing. So much of our own marriage became work at the end. And when the only love affair going down in your life requires shoveling way more coal into the engine than it gives off heat, well yeah, it may be time for a change.
So that's what happened. We changed things up. We split.
Breaking up makes some people ecstatic and giddy and instantly infused with some sort of new-found liberation. To them, I raise an eyebrow and quietly mumble my congratulations. 'Well done, you b*stards. Enjoy your f*cking freedom.' It hasn't been that way for me though, and I don't think I'm alone. Walking away from my marriage, even if it made sense at the time, has been tough. And for good reason, I think.
Obviously, I don't miss the bad stuff, the arguing and the slamming doors. And even though I’m not going to stand around and tell people that we were the perfect couple (just look at all of our happy photos together on Facebook and Instagram, you fools!), that still doesn't mean that I don't feel incredibly lonely without her in my life. Because guess what? I do. And screw you if you think I'm an a*s to feel that way or to admit it out loud.
There are nights when I stand in the middle of my kitchen in this old house I've rented, stare at the juice-stained couch sitting there like a battleship parked in front of the TV a room away, and wonder what the heck she’s doing at that exact moment. Then I'll start thinking about how we used to end up on the couch together almost every night of our marriage. (And with almost a decade together, that's a lot of couch time.) We anchored our own sides of the thing with regularity to the point of tradition.
Now, the split is the split and she's not there anymore. It almost feels like she died, but she didn't. I know that and I'm glad of it, obviously. But still. I walk over and sit down and flick on the flat-screen and before long, as I scan the channels mindlessly and take a sip of my wine, I run across our old shows.
Seinfeld.
The King of Queens.
Roseanne.
The Sopranos.
Hell, even Mike & Molly.
We had so many shows we watched together. And because I laugh at almost any joke any half-a*ssed TV writer out in Hollywood has ever put into an episode, she spent most of a decade sitting on her side of the couch, being pummeled by my laughter. Maybe she doesn't miss that. And even if she did, I know that wouldn't be nearly enough to make things better or turn life around, but I miss it so much, man. And I need to tell someone that, but there's no one here.
Eventually, down the road, I'm supposed to imagine that there might be a new someone down the end of my couch, someone different, from a different place, with a different name and a different look and different charms and quirks and tastes than the woman I used to know. But I'm not there yet. Not even close. I don't think about someone else, mainly because I don't want to.
Right now, tonight, at this very instant, I guess I feel as lonely as I've ever felt and that has nothing to do with the fact that I'm typing this post while sitting my a*s on the couch. Alone.
And for what it's worth, I hope that tonight, my ex maybe feels the same way.
I hope she might somehow know that I'm still obviously able to laugh my stupid laugh at this old re-run of Seinfeld we watched together a hundred times back in the day. But when I peel apart the hope, scrape away the frost and cut my hand through the fog of all this separation, I also hope she notices that she can't hear the sound of my laughter anymore.
Except in her head.
And that's the kind of loneliness I'm getting at.

Source:- http://www.yourtango.com/2014225740/marriage-ended-now-lonliness-killing-me

Friday 25 September 2015

Throwaway Attitude ?

Tracey how to cope with divorce


In the wake of a very high profile celebrity divorce case here in the UK, I was asked to speak on a handful of mid-morning BBC radio stations on their case and the general topic of divorce and domestic abuse.
I was asked several times whether people threw the towel in on their marriages quicker than had happened in the past. Prior to my research on the subject, I would have said that as a society (Western world anyway) we have embraced an almost throwaway attitude towards things like our mobile phones, old computers, TVs and so on. We can replace and upgrade their spec in a heartbeat and it is possible that we’ve transported that same attitude into our marriages.
It’s more likely, however, that with a spiraling population with enormous financial pressures on their shoulders to keep up with the Joneses’ that the value of that most precious of institutions may have slipped through our fingers a tad.
I think more emphasis on the work/life balance in favor of life and subsequent better communication will help us to hold onto the good and overcome the bad.
Is it time to book a day off and give your faltering marriage one last shot? Believe me, walking away from anything with your hands held high, saying you’ve done all you can, will bring you comfort in the future.

Source:- http://divorcedandscarednomore.com/throwaway-attitude/?fb_ref=Default

Wednesday 23 September 2015

Women Are More Likely To Initiate Divorce, But Not Dating Breakups

constraining, oppressive, uncomfortable and controlling.......mmmm interesting
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unhappy couple
Credit: NotarYES | Shutterstock.com
Women are more likely than men to initiate divorce in the United States, but they are no more likely than men to initiate breakups in a dating relationship, a new study finds.

"The breakups of nonmarital heterosexual relationships in the U.S. are quite gender-neutral and fairly egalitarian," study author Michael Rosenfeld, an associate professor of sociology at Stanford University, said in a statement. "This was a surprise because the only prior research that had been done on who wanted the breakup was research on marital divorces."
Previous research had found that women are more likely to initiate divorce, at least in the United States, Europe and Australia. In the new study, Rosenfeld compared divorces to nonmarital breakups, in an effort to understand the driving forces behind each type of breakup. [

To investigate, he looked at data from the 2009 to 2015 waves of How Couples Meet and Stay Together, a nationally representative survey spearheaded by Rosenfeld and his colleagues. The new study includes 2,262 adults, ages 19 to 64, who reported having opposite-sex partners in 2009. By 2015, 371 of the participants had broken up or gotten divorced.
Women initiated 69 percent of the 92 divorces, Rosenfeld found. But there was no statistically significant difference between women and men when it came to nonmarital breakups, regardless of whether they were living together, he said.  

Monday 21 September 2015

The Science Of Breakups: 7 Facts About Splitsville

A couple sits outside, having a fight
Credit: Antonio Guillem/Shutterstock.com
When love goes sour, the fallout can be severe — just check out the song list of any Taylor Swift album.
But what does science have to say about the emotional aftermath of breakups? It turns out that just like relationships themselves,separations can be complicated. How people respond depends on factors like how they felt about the relationship in the first place, how entwined their self-image was with their partner's and even how their partner reacts on social media.
Here are the cold, hard facts about splitsville.

1. Breakups are predictable
Ever been through one of those breakups where you were the last person to see it coming? It may sting when your friends nod knowingly when you tell them you're single, but here's even worse news: Science probably could have given you a warning, too.
A 2010 study published in the journal Psychological Science asked 222 volunteers, all of whom were in relationships, to say their partners' names and then give two words they felt were related to them.

Next, the researchers did a test of implicit association, which uncovers feelings people might not even admit to themselves. They paired the partner-related words with either positive words (e.g., "gift") or with negative words ("death") and asked the participants to press a button either when the word was linked to a positive or to a negative.
The idea is that if a person feels positively about the word they gave about their partner, they will be faster to press the positive button when the word is linked to positive words. If they feel negatively, they will be quicker to press the button when the word is linked to negative words.
It turned out that the people who were faster to link their partner-related vocabulary to negative words were also more likely to split up over the next year than people who  were faster to link their partner descriptions with positive words, the researchers found. This was true even when controlling for relationship satisfaction and conflict. 

"This suggests that the earliest seeds of relationship decay might be found within attitudes that subjects might be unaware of or are unable or unwilling to report," the researchers wrote.

2. Breakups are about identity
The more committed a couple, the more that each person's sense of self begins to overlap their partner's, according to a 2010 paper in the journal Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin. A series of studies — relying on surveys and daily diaries — found that a breakup can disrupt a person's sense of self, leaving them adrift.

libido-couple-02
College students who'd been through a breakup were more likely to use words like "confuse" and "bewilder" in daily diary entries than those who hadn't, the researchers found. They were also more emotionally distressed than people who hadn't lost their relationships, according to a six-month survey in which students filled out questionnaires each week. Notably, the less clear the students felt about their own self-concept, the more distressed they were after a breakup.
"Couples may not only come to complete each others' sentences; they may actually come to complete each others' selves," the researchers wrote. "When these relationships end, individuals experience not only pain over the loss of the partner, but also changes in their selves."

3. Dwelling might be healthy
The post-breakup ritual is sacrosanct: Ice cream, pajamas, sappy movies.
A little bit of wallowing may be a good thing. When researchers asked recently single people to participate in intensive sessions exploring their feelings about the breakups, they found that these individuals actually recovered better than people who participated in just a few short sessions. The results, reported in 2015 in the journal Social Psychology and Personality Science, were somewhat counterintuitive.

"At first glance, it might seem like repeatedly reminding participants that they had just broken up — and asking them to describe the breakup over and over — might delay recovery," study researcher Grace Larson of Northwestern University said in a statement. But instead, Larson said, lingering for a while in a self-reflection phase appears to help people put the past behind them.

4. But don't dwell too much
A man stares forlornly at his computer screen.
Thinking about a breakup might be beneficial, but try not to torture yourself. Research finds that obsessively checking Facebook to see what your ex is up to is probably not a good idea.

In a study of about 500 mainly college-age women, researchers found that those who spent more time checking their ex's Facebook page were more likely to report experiencing distress, negativity and longing for their partner, and less likely to experience personal growth after a split. It's hard to tell from the research whether the Facebook stalking was causing the distress or vice versa, but the social media site didn't show any sign of helping, according to the study published in September 2012 in the journal Cyberpsychology, Behavior and Social Networking.

However, defriending an ex might backfire: People who weren't Facebook friends with their ex were just as bad off as the obsessive Facebook stalkers, the study also found. Cutting off all contact with an ex might shroud his or her life in appealing mystery, the researchers suggested, whereas occasional exposure to boring status updates might bring the ex's memory off a pedestal.

5. It's hard to let go
If you just can't shake a breakup, don't beat yourself up. Romantic rejection is not unlike kicking an addiction, according to 2010 research in Journal of Neurophysiology.
The researchers looked at people who had recently experienced a breakup and who said they were still in love with their exes. The participants underwent brain scans while looking at photographs of their former flames, as well as photographs of other friends and acquaintances. 

When looking at their lost love, the volunteers showed brain activity in a region called the ventral tegmental area, which sits in the midbrain. This area is known to be activated when people are in love, and in situations involving motivation and reward. Other reward- and addiction-centered areas, including the nucleus accumbens in the forebrain, also became more active. 
The good news is that the strength of the activity faded with time, the researchers reported. No matter how stubbornly the brain holds on, it eventually lets go.

6. It differs by gender
Anyone can experience heartbreak. Still, how you experience it might depend, in part, on your gender.
Women report higher levels of emotional pain, anguish and even physical pain after a breakup than men, according to a 2015 paper in Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences. For example, on a 10-point scale of pain, women rated their post-breakup anguish at 6.84, on average, compared with 6.58 in men. More than 5,000 people in 96 countries participated in the study, which included gay as well as straight respondents.

7. It might not be as bad as you think
However you slice it, breakups are rarely easy. But there's a silver lining: We often overestimate how bad they'll be.
A couple having coffee
People bounce back from breakups about twice as fast as they'd expect, and they aren't nearly as devastated by the relationship loss as they predicted they'd be, according to a 2008 study in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology.

The researchers tracked 70 undergrads in relationships over time, asking them weekly about their relationship status. Some of these questions had to do with how the person expected to feel if their relationship ended. People expected it would take about 20 weeks to emotionally recover, on average.

But among the 26 people who did experience breakups during the study period, it actually took about 10 weeks to get back into the groove, the researchers found. And people's actual distress was much lower than they'd predicted before the relationship went south. 


"Life goes on in the wake of a breakup," study researcher Paul Eastwick of Northwestern University told Live Science at the time. "And when you're making your predictions, you aren't thinking about all the things that could be positive that might happen in the next week or two."

Source:- http://www.livescience.com/51946-science-of-breakups.html

Saturday 19 September 2015

Imagine Having To Pay To Divorce Your Abuser

Imagine having to pay to divorce your
abuser. One woman's 15-year battle
means you now won't have to
Women of Kirewa, Uganda, celebrating.

Story highlights

  • Uganda has banned the practice of making divorced women refund their bride price
  • Campaigners say bride prices devalues women and is at the root of much of the violence they experience
(CNN)Florence Musidika was a primary school teacher in an unhappy and violent marriage. In 2002 she asked her husband for a divorce. In response, as she bent over one morning to light a fire to make breakfast for her three children, a grenade planted by her husband in the charcoal exploded in her face.
Miraculously, the then 27-year-old from Mbale in eastern Uganda survived the blast, but was soon confronted by a new injustice: under customary law her marriage to her abusive husband could not be dissolved until her family had refunded the bride price he had paid by in exchange for her hand.
Musidika is just one of many women whose families knew of her suffering but, unable to return the payment -- often made in livestock -- they sent her back to her abuser, imploring her to "try and be a good wife," explains Atuki Turner, the founder of women's rights organization Mifumi.

Thursday 17 September 2015

Amour No More



Amour No More
An international romantic story that did not have a happy ending - written for Wikivorce Magazine by Gillian Chandler
Sour grapes!
What happens when love in a foreign country goes wrong?
At first he was a romantic stranger with sultry accent that made you go weak at the knees. You were a young, successful career woman ,ready to be seduced just like any “femme fatale’ should be. Oh this is so like the movies. Your friends all envious at your international jetset lifestyle, flipping between countries just to sneak a few passionate moments with your beau. Flowers. Chocolates. Life’s a peach!
The proposal was so romantic that how could you say no? Well you didn’t.
Infact, so high on love, you not only accepted to become Madame Maintenant but you also agreed to set up home in his wonderful country. You take him at his word when he promises to treasure you forever.

Tuesday 15 September 2015

Middle-aged men and women who have experienced the upheaval of separation, divorce and remarriage are almost as healthy as couples in stable marriages, according to a new study involving LSE.
Researchers from the UCL Institute of Education, London School of Economics and Political Science, and London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine point out that individuals who have divorced and remarried are no more likely than those who have remained married to have cardiovascular or respiratory health problems in early middle age.
                                                    divorce-140pDr George Ploubidis, a Population Health Scientist at the UCL Institute of Education, and his colleagues, including Professor Emily Grundy from LSE's Department of Social Policy, were surprised to find that some men even experienced health benefits, in the long term, despite going through divorce.

“Numerous studies have found that married people have better health than unmarried people. However, our research shows that people born in the late 1950s who live together without marrying or experience divorce and separation, have very similar levels of health in middle age to those who are married,” Dr Ploubidis reveals.

“Previous research has also shown that men experience an initial decline after divorce, but we found that in the long term they tend to revert back to their pre-divorce health status. Surprisingly, those men who divorced in their late 30s and did not subsequently remarry, were less likely to suffer from conditions related to diabetes in early middle age compared to those who were married.”

The study is thought to be the first to investigate the links between life-course partnership status and health in middle age in a large sample of the population that had undergone medical examinations.
The researchers analysed information on more than 10,000 people born in England, Scotland and Wales in the same week of spring 1958.

They examined the relationship status of National Child Development Study members at ages 23, 33, 42 and 46. From 2002 to 2004, when study members were aged 44 to 46, specially trained nurses visited their homes to carry out comprehensive health checks.

After taking into account early life characteristics that are associated with partnership status and adult health,  the researchers found that couples who married in their 20s and early 30s and remained married had the best levels of health. However, unmarried couples living together had almost identical standards of health.
They also discovered that men and women who had never married or lived with a partner, had the worst health in middle age, with higher likelihood of conditions related to diabetes, cardiovascular and respiratory problems.

“For those people who experience separation and divorce, it appears that as long as they begin another relationship, their health does not suffer in the long term,” Dr Ploubidis explains.
“Previous research shows that there are several possible factors to explain the link between partnership status and health. A partner can positively influence your health behaviour, by encouraging you to exercise more, as well as provide important support in tough times. A couple’s income also appears to play an important role in affecting health.”

Almost two thirds of male study members married in their 20s and early 30s and remained married. Around 42 per cent of women were married by their early 20s, and were still married at 46 years of age.
More than 8 per cent of men and 6 per cent of women married in their 20s or early 30s, but later divorced, and then remarried or cohabited. More than 11 per cent of men and 12 per cent of women had never married or cohabited.

In 2014, there were more than 3 million cohabiting partnerships, and 12.5 million married couples in the UK. According to research by the Office for National Statistics, there were 118,000 divorces in England and Wales in 2012.

“Life-Course Partnership Status and Biomarkers in Midlife: Evidence From the 1958 British Birth Cohort” by George B. Ploubidis, Richard J. Silverwood, Bianca DeStavola and Emily Grundy is available online from the American Journal of Public Health website http://ajph.aphapublications.org/doi/abs/10.2105/AJPH.2015.302644.

Source:- http://www.lse.ac.uk/newsAndMedia/news/archives/2015/06/Divorce-and-health.aspx

Sunday 13 September 2015

Taking Divorce Out Of The Courts Is Not An Attack On Marriage


 Woman taking off wedding ring
‘Anything that removes the adversarial nature of divorce is good for our emotional health, if not for the lifestyles of some lawyers.’ Photograph: itanistock /Alamy

Should getting a divorce be made as easy as “discarding an old carrier bag”? I think it should be, actually, and I probably know as much about marriage as Ann Widdecombe, who has criticised proposed reforms that will enable couples to arrange “over the counter“ divorces.
Widdecombe was speaking about the move to take divorce out of the court system and have it dealt with by a number of regional centres. These measures, called for by our most senior family judge, Sir James Munby, are an attempt to free up the courts and have the all paperwork done by administrative staff. This streamlining of the process could speed things up – particularly in the case of uncontested divorces where no children are involved. This seems entirely sensible, but critics like Widdecombe who already think divorce is too “easy” are upset that getting a divorce will be as simple as getting a TV licence. Which reminds me …


Actually, divorce is rarely simple. Feelings are complex, and never divided fairly or equally when a relationship ends. The divvying up of children and home is fraught, but this a separate thing to the legal declaration of the end of a marriage. Indeed, it is often only through the process of divorce itself that many begin to understand that, whatever they intended it to be, marriage is a serious legal contract based on property. Therein so much conflict lies. The sheen of romance, the choosing of elaborate wedding favours, the rose-petal confetti certainly help to blur any comprehension of what marriage means legally, no matter what special and individual vows you have conjured up.
If, after the thrill is gone or the wedding is paid for, a couple without children decide to separate, it is sure better to simplify the process by which they may unbind themselves legally. Munby is aiming to make the system more “honest”, and to decouple the administrative process of divorce from any dispute over children or money. Eventually he would like to remove “fault” and the need for couples to cite “unreasonable behaviour”. Anything that removes the adversarial nature of divorce is good for our emotional health, if not for the lifestyles of some lawyers.
Uncontested divorce is a good place to start, but there will always be conservatives who see anything that makes divorce “easier” as a fundamental attack on marriage. It is as though the only thing keeping married couples together is a fear of paperwork. The continual refrain that marriage is the ideal and those not in this institution are failures or inferior does not chime with the reality. Both our divorce rate and the number of children born outside marriage indicate that family patterns are changing, that different choices are made.
There is no threat to the happily married, and good for them. And will the unhappily married suddenly rush to get divorced because it may be slightly quicker? Of course not. This idea that marriage is undermined by making it slightly less time consuming to broker the end of a contract is unrealistic. As is the notion that if you make divorce more difficult for people, that they might reconcile. By the time many couples have decided to get divorced, many of them will have thought longer and harder about this than about the decision to get married. It is painful, but what undermines marriage are not reforms to divorce law. No, what undermines marriage are married people and the things married people do.

Source:- http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jun/22/divorce-out-of-courts-marriage

Friday 11 September 2015

Ten Reasons NOT To Get A Divorce

Reasons NOT To Divorce

I think the average couple in today's world has thought about divorce at least once during their marriage. And for some, divorce is a constant threat. For others, divorce feels like their only hope. Whether you have thought about divorce once or you think about it every day, this article gives ten good reasons NOT to divorce.
I start with the disclaimer that both my husband and I are divorced. But for both us, we did not choose it. Our spouses chose it and we had to live with it. If your partner chooses to end the marriage, you cannot force them to stay married.
One more disclaimer. If a partner is any of the following, I believe divorce is justified:
  1. ADULTEROUS
  2. ABUSIVE
  3. ADDICTIVE
  4. ABANDONING
In other words, if she's cheating on you, hitting or putting you down, an alcoholic or drug addict, or has left you for someone else, THIS ARTICLE DOES NOT APPLY TO YOU!
If the preceding reasons do not apply, however, I present you with ten reasons not to divorce.

The Fairy Tale Is Officially Over

For children of divorce, the fairy tale is officially over.
For children of divorce, the fairy tale is officially over.

1. the Kids

The first reason is something we all know about and we all consider: the kids. Should you stay married for the children? Well, at least think about how it will affect them. You might get over it in time. They never will.
They will never get over the loss of their family, and their lives will never be the same. Never. When Mom and Dad go apart, and start living separate lives, a child's world is never the same, and they must navigate a new reality. For that boy or girl, the fairy tale is officially over. Yes, kids do "move on," but they are affected by it forever.
In fact, Judy Wallerstein, a well-known advocate of children of divorce, stated that even 25 years later, children of divorce were 40% less likely to marry. They had romantic problems so many years later after the divorce!

Kids Are Always Effected

Kids are always affected by divorce.
Kids are always affected by divorce.
Another study, "The Effects of Divorce on America," found staggering correlations between problems in children and divorce. Divorce was linked to higher drug abuse, lower grades and higher suicide rates. These are only a couple of examples; there are and have been many other studies done on this subject, as well.
Please don't think that these statistics are supposed to make anyone feel guilty, or worse about something that has already happened. Divorced parents and step parents (which I am one) all try to make the best of a difficult situation, but make no mistake, the kids are very much effected.
In my own life, both as a stepmom and as a teacher for at-risk teenagers, I have seen a lot of anger in kids of divorce. This can largely be attributed to the way children feel torn between the two people they love the most in the world: Mom and Dad, who now don't like each other very much. Just the fact of divorce is an ongoing conflict, even if there is no real squabbling going on, and causes division within the child.
So, reason number one for not divorcing is the kids. It does hurt them. Period.



2. CUSTODY

The next reason is very closely related to the first. It also deals with children. The number one reason was how it affected the lives of the children. The next one is intertwined with that, and it deals with how it will change the dynamics of your family.
One of the worst things about divorce, if children are involved, is a new dirty word you will become very familiar with: custody. You no longer have the children in your home, full-time, as you always have. You will be sharing time with those children with your ex-partner, and you will have to arrange your whole life to accommodate these arrangements.
If you are the non-custodial parent, you can never get those hours back, and you will miss those children, guaranteed. I watched my husband go through it, and there is nothing like the pain of a Dad or Mom missing their child. Nothing. Walking away from a marriage because it's not what you wanted, can mean walking away from your kids and that impact is enormous.

Children Have two homes

Divorce means that chldren no longer have one home, but two.
Divorce means that chldren no longer have one home, but two.
It is also important to realize that even the custodial parent loses out, because every other weekend, or every weekend, they go out, and you don't know what they are doing for those days, or hours. It's not that them being with your ex-spouse is necessarily bad, but most mothers like to know where their kids are, and how they are doing. Going into a custody situation changes that. You no longer have 24-hour access to your children, because you have to share that with your former mate. And that is a tough pill to swallow, no matter how you are. This is a very important consideration, and a reason that the effect of divorce is so profound.
Custody also means that your children will now have two homes, not one. For the rest of their childhood life, they will have to continually split themselves between two residences, and will have to adjust every time they go back and forth. Yes, custody arrangements might sound easy on paper, but emotionally, they are seldom easy and rarely painless.

3. the Emotional Devastation

Divorce is emotionally devastating for most people. Divorce forces us to kill all of the dreams we were counting on when we decided to marry our mate. It separates us from the one person we believed would always be there for us, holding our hand when we got old and feeble. We may deny the pain, but there is always pain with divorce. Divorce is a type of death, and we will need to grieve from the pain, just as we do when a person we love dies.
Divorce is the ultimate rejection, because we are either rejecting, or being rejected by, the one person who knew us most in this world. In this culture, we've grown so accustomed to people splitting up, that this silent pain is often ignored and not acknowledged, but it's still real. People may even cover up their pain with addictions or new relationships, but these do not heal the hurt. Many people are never the same after a divorce, because all of their underpinnings have been taken from them.

4. Loss of Confidence

When I was dating my husband, he was very reluctant to make a commitment to marry, in fact, it was terrifying to him. You see, he had "failed" at marriage once, and no way did he want to fail again. We grow up thinking that we will marry and be happy. When we "fail" at that, our confidence, our belief in ourselves as one capable of marriage, is deeply affected. We have failed at one of the key jobs of adulthood: to find a suitable mate, and make it work.
Another aspect of confidence that is affected is our confidence in our desirability. This why newly divorced often go through a stage of serial dating, desperately seeking to re-establish themselves as attractive and wanted. Or they may fall into another relationship right away, rebounding, and not choosing someone that is healthy for them, compounding and complicating the already raw wound of divorce.

This was a song wrote Kenny Chesney after his divorce from Renee Zwellweger



5. Loss of Identity

When divorce happens, both individuals lose the roles of husband and wife that they were accustomed to. Even if the marriage is troubled, there is still security in knowing that you are this person's wife or husband, and all of that is gone when the divorce papers are signed. You are no longer the wife of so-and-so, but you are now the "ex" of so-and-so, not a very affirming title. Women feel this reality in a very practical way, as they must now go from a "Mrs." to a "Ms," usually feeling that "Miss" would be a bit uncomfortable. As well, women must wrestle with the decision as to whether or not they should change their name back to their maiden one, or continue on with a last name that no longer reflects the reality of their life.
Marriage gives us a place in this world, and divorce takes it away.

In-Laws

You might miss your in-laws more than you expect.
You might miss your in-laws more than you expect.
Source: Flickr.com

6. Loss of Family

Now, this is a very difficult one, and very painful for many people. You know how when you got married, everyone said you were marrying your fiance's family, as well as your fiance? Well, this truth also works in reverse. When you divorce your wife, you are also divorcing her family. IN MOST CASES. You see, just like the friends, family will often feel forced to take sides, and guess who they are going to pick? Of course, their son or daughter! So, the relationship with your in-laws will probably change, if not end.
I have known people who have kept in touch with their child's ex-partner, but it is rare, and often awkward. And for some people, this can be a huge loss. Family connections, even in-law ones, run deep, and we take our family for granted. It can be very painful to realize that those ties are broken, and must be re-negotiated and sometimes lost. As much as everyone would like everything to stay the same, it doesn't, and that's really hard.

Friends

It gets awkward with former friends sometimes.
It gets awkward with former friends sometimes.

7. Loss of Friends

Something you might not realize when contemplating a divorce is that your social life will change. Socially, a person's marital status is important, and affects the dynamic of a social situation. Couples often feel more comfortable being friends with other couples, and making the switch to two singles instead of one deuce will shake everything up. If you are really close, the couple might choose to see both of you at different times but if the tie between the two couples was based mostly on one of the persons in the divorced couple, your friends will often feel forced to take sides, to be loyal to their original friend. This doesn't sound very nice, but it's a reality.
As well, people don't often don't feel as comfortable with a divorced person. His lonely presence serves as their reminder that things always don't work out, and they might be forced to question their own marriage. Problems that were once covered up, may begin to come to the light, as they watch the ending of what they thought was an intact couple. Just as people often don't know what to say to someone who is grieving the loss of a loved one, people often are awkward when confronted by a divorce. They don't know what to say, so they stay away.


Money is Always An Issue

There are many financial costs to divorce.
There are many financial costs to divorce.

8. FINANCES

The longer a couple stays married, the more time they have to build up assets and their livelihood. You often see couples who have been together for a long time with a great deal of financial stability. Staying together often allows couples to accumulate assets, a good reputation, as both of them work together for the good of their household. Divorce disrupts this building process, and forces both members of the couple to start from scratch, and therefore can be very hard on both party's financial situation.
Divorce is expensive in so many ways. There are the actual legal costs of obtaining a divorce judgment. If there are children involved, custody must be decided. If there are assets, they must be divided. All of these things usually involve lawyer billing hours. Anytime a judge is involved, you must pay for the lawyer's time.
Afterwards, costs will vary greatly, depending on the situation. But it's bound to be expensive, because now, between the two of you, you are paying for two residences instead of one. Child support is also a huge cost. Taking care of your child used to be something the two of you shared, coordinating schedules and jobs to cover the responsibilities. Now, one person must find a way to care for the child mostly by herself (usually the woman) and the other (usually the man) must pay large amounts of cash to help her do this. Economically, this is far harder than trying to do it together. Both parties lose in a child support situation.
As well, job situations have to change to accomodate a new schedule and a new situation. Child care needs are different, and sometimes a move to another residence is necessary, which can affect the employment situation. If one person has been a student, they may no longer find it possible to continue with their studies, after the support of their spouse is gone.
For my husband, he moved several times after his divorce in an effort to be closer to his children. For me, I lost many of my household effects, because I did not want to fight for them, and had to move in with my parents for a while. Everyone's situation is unique, but most people incur economic costs.
Many studies have been done on this subject, and it is well-recognized that divorce has a financial impact. This excellent article discusses this issue in much greater detail and depth: "Cost of Divorce and the Financial Risks Involved.Finances can be considered another reason not to divorce.

Ex is Always in Background

9. Second Marriages

I am my husband's second wife. And my husband is my second husband. Therefore, I talk about this next subject with some trepidation. For those of us making a new life after divorce, we hope and believe in second chances, and that often includes a second marriage. If a person is divorced, they will often want to share their life with someone else, and not choose to simply be alone.
But let's be honest. Second marriages are harder than first marriages. In fact, studies show that 25% of second marriages fail, as compared to 20% of first marriages, and that second marriages, on average, last 10.8 years for men, and seven years for women. Why are second marriages more difficult? Here are three reasons that second marriages are harder than first marriages.
  1. We're less innocent. For the first year and a half of our marriage, my husband and I talked about divorce a lot. Actually, I did, and my husband would get angry with me. Why did I do that? Well, it was a fear. I knew that we had both come from divorced backgrounds, and when troubles came, it was hard to keep believing that we were going to make it.The threat of divorce, the possibility of divorce, loomed over our heads, and it was like a curse. Unlike a first marriage, we were not "starry-eyed" going in. In fact, we had no illusions to break, and that made us tough, going in. I, myself, did not want to be hurt again, and so I acted out to prevent that. Am I alone? I don't think so, because second marriages are less innocent, and that makes it harder. Both parties, although they are trying to love again, are often scared, and that's not a good way to start a marriage. This might not apply to everyone, but for some people, it can definitely be a factor.
  2. It's complicated. Second marriages, especially those concerning children, are very complicated. When children are involved, they must now deal with a new person in their life, and step parents now suddenly become a type of parents to children that they did not create. One expert who works with stepfamilies an average of five to seven years to work through their complications and reach a state of balance. There are so many variables, and trying to create a new family in the aftermath of a family breakup is never an easy or simple process. When people get married the first time, they usually have some time to themselves before children enter the picture. Or even if they have children right away, they grow with those children. Step parents, however, must deal with children from the very start of their marriage, and don't have that all-important adjustment period.
  3. History repeats itself. This is closely related to the first reason, that we are less innocent. History repeats itself, unless we are healed. When people go through a rough relationship, and it ends in divorce, it is often because of patterns within themselves that affect the relationship. Unless they are healed of those patterns, they will tend to repeat in the second marriage. For example, if a woman's insecurity interfered with her first marriage, this same insecurity will probably affect her second marriage, unless she is healed of whatever wounds are causing her insecurity. If a man tends to be too controlling in his first marriage, and it drove his wife away, those same controlling tendencies will probably surface in his second marriage, and history may be repeated. The best predictor of future behaviour is past behaviour, and unless significant healing and change happens within the individual, they are at risk for similar problems to their first marriage. This might be hard to swallow, but it only makes sense.
       


10. You Promised

"Groom: I,____, take thee,_____, to my wedded Wife, to have and to hold from this day forward, for better for worse, for richer for poorer, in sickness and in health, to love and to cherish, till death us do part, according to God's holy ordinance; and thereto I plight thee my troth.
Bride: I,_____, take thee,_____, to my wedded Husband, to have and to hold from this day forward, for better for worse, for richer for poorer, in sickness and in health, to love, cherish, and to obey, till death us do part, according to God's holy ordinance; and thereto I give thee my troth."

Saying The Vows

We made a promise.
We made a promise.
Source: Flickr.com
The wedding vows. These are, above all, the most important reason not to divorce. If you got married, you promised to stay married forever. That was for richer, for poorer (through the financial difficulties) in sickness and in health (even when one of you or your family is sick, and it disrupts your life, and even causes behaviour or emotional turmoil) for better or worse (through all the problems and all the successes of life.
On that day, we promised that we would love. That we would honour. That we would cherish. These days, the "obey" part is usually replaced with respect, or another word, but the point is there. We would be there for each other, no matter what. We say those words in earnest, never guessing what they will cost us. But the words stand, nonetheless.
Mike Mason, in his incredible book,The Mystery of Marriage: Meditations on the Miracle, talks about how those vows are really impossible standards for us to keep. How can we always love, he asks? How can we always honour? Or cherish? Yet, we still make those promises. And those, he concludes, are what keep us together when nothing else does.
You promised. That is the final, most important, and most profound reason not to divorce.

For Those Who Have a Choice

In conclusion, I would like to say that this series has been hard to write, not just because it has been emotional, but because I don't want to be misunderstood. I don't want anyone to be hurt by what I am saying, by feeling judged. For anyone already divorced, I recommend moving on, and making the best of your life. Heal, and live. It's not to make you feel worse about what's already happened. And for those in abusive or adulterous situations, it's not meant to guilt you into staying in an impossible situation. Instead, it's for those who have the choice. And I so want to make that distinction clear.
Disclaimers all aside, though, I plead to those who are in the position of considering divorce, to consider the cost. IT IS A HUGE DECISION! And not one to take lightly. Few, if any, escape unscathed. In fact, it was my husband who gave me the idea to write this article. We are now happily married, but it has been a hard road for both of us to get here. His kids still live with the reality of it, and so do we. My husband wanted people to know how hard divorce is. So I share the credit for this story with him. We are still both affected by divorce to this day, and that is why I wrote these articles. What I planned to be one article turned into three, because the subject is so vast. Thanks for reading along, and take care.
Before you divorce, be sure to consider the consequences, because they are serious.

Source:- http://hubpages.com/hub/Ten-Reasons-Not-to-Get-a-Divorce