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It’s usually pretty obvious.
The contempt bleeds through. |
My parents split up when I was 15 and I was really embarrassed and avoided telling my friends. They figured it out though. |
| I'm 39 and maybe my cohort is still working up to it. I only know two divorced people (one was never a solid marriage, the other a situation where they disagreed on whether to have kids) and nobody in my close circle is divorced. But, I know lots and lots of single people on their 40s. Some are content, but most just never found the right person and have stopped looking. |
+1 |
| It begins to happen to couples in their late 49s, early 50s, as the children go off to college. |
Op here. Actually, I'm seeing a range between mid-30s and mid-40s with kids ranging between elementary and high school. |
Bull shit. Marriage is hard. |
I have thought of divorce and I guarantee our neighbors/social group/kids would be shocked. No one sees the disconnect and sexlessness of our marriage. Sometimes I feel awful we put up such a false front. There have been attempts to improve but it seems the best we get to is successful co-parenting. |
| Yes OP, I always feel shocked an horrified when people actually pull the trigger and divorce. Even when I know people are having problems, some how it always surprises me when they split. And I have a lot of divorce in my family. But it always feels like a punch in the gut. |
But why are you hiding it? Are you ashamed? |
My marriage was easy. Until it got hard. I totally don't think it is just one thing or the other. It comesin cycles. |
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Men hit their late 40s, or early 50s, and often experience a serious, meaningful midlife crisis, which causes them to ask "where did my life go?", and as a follow-up, "is this what I want out of the rest of my life going forward?" Many times the answer is "no", and the man therefore seek to reinvent himself through physical changes, a new wardrobe or property, new interests -- or taken to the a further extreme, a new job, wife, and/or family.
My spouse, and our marriage, were generally good and happy, until one day they were not. Precipitated by a missed professional opportunity, DH called everything about his life into question, and left me, our two teenagers still at home, and his job to move to another geographic region for a fresh start. It is devastating and inexplicable to those left behind, and I expect that we will pick up the pieces and sort through the consequences for a long time. |
Having been there, you’re giving way to much credit to yourself for how much anyone else thinks or cares about non-close friends. |
| To those who think your friends don't know- they do. I have a friend that invited another friend and me out one night to tell us- we pretended we didn't know and said all the right things, but yeah, we knew. I tend to think that no one would talk about me because why the heck would they care about me that much, but yeah, they do. |
Why? What did they see that should not have shocked them later? |