Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find that marrying a quality person and being a thoughtful spouse has a 100% success rate. There are no people on either side of the family that are divorced.
I know so many people who made the same gloating statements and ended up divorced.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought this was interesting and insightful: a study on the economic and social impacts of divorce. For children whose parents divorce when they are young, more likely to experience teen pregnancy, jail and early death, less earning potential:
https://www.cbsnews.com/amp/baltimore/news/children-divorce-finance-economy-university-of-maryland/
And how does that compare to children whose parents stay together despite dysfunctionality and hating each other?
If they can’t make those comparisons, I am not interested in these findings.
They discuss that in the article
Anonymous wrote:I find that marrying a quality person and being a thoughtful spouse has a 100% success rate. There are no people on either side of the family that are divorced.
Anonymous wrote:I find that marrying a quality person and being a thoughtful spouse has a 100% success rate. There are no people on either side of the family that are divorced.
Anonymous wrote:Correlation not causation. It could be that the type of parents that would have kids who go to jail and gave teen pregnancies are also the type of adults who tend to divorce. Of course divorce isn’t ideal but neither is marrying the wrong person or living with domestic violence or experiencing financial and health issues that can’t be resolved or being with someone that ends up with a criminal record and on and on. I agree with the prior poster - what exactly do you think is rocket science here or new / impt enough for a thread on this?
Anonymous wrote:I don't know but for my kid Dad and I both remarried which makes my kid rich because the 4 of us earn millions a year.
Anonymous wrote:I find that marrying a quality person and being a thoughtful spouse has a 100% success rate. There are no people on either side of the family that are divorced.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought this was interesting and insightful: a study on the economic and social impacts of divorce. For children whose parents divorce when they are young, more likely to experience teen pregnancy, jail and early death, less earning potential:
https://www.cbsnews.com/amp/baltimore/news/children-divorce-finance-economy-university-of-maryland/
Honestly, F*** U, OP.
Are you posting this so you can congratulate yourself on being so superior to other people
I guess I don't totally fall into this age range the paper is talking about because my kid was 7, but just.... F*** U. He up and left, what was I supposed to do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought this was interesting and insightful: a study on the economic and social impacts of divorce. For children whose parents divorce when they are young, more likely to experience teen pregnancy, jail and early death, less earning potential:
https://www.cbsnews.com/amp/baltimore/news/children-divorce-finance-economy-university-of-maryland/
And how does that compare to children whose parents stay together despite dysfunctionality and hating each other?
If they can’t make those comparisons, I am not interested in these findings.