Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My childhood BF’s mom committed suicide when she was 13. Her father remarried 6 months later. It was very scandalous and my parents, who were very good friends with them, cut him off. I was angry about it for many many years until I came to the realization that he was probably scared and at a loss as to how to raise four kids alone. It’s actually given me a different perspective on quick remarriages - some people just don’t know how to be alone or raise kids by themselves.
This is a very specific situation where it is understandable that you would sympathetic because he'd experienced a trauma -- not just losing his spouse suddenly but losing them in a traumatic way. You are right he was probably scared and at a loss because he was on his own as a dad and likely struggling to process his own loss.
That is very, very different than someone who remarries quickly after a divorce, which is what this thread is about. Most divorces do not result in you raising kids all by yourself. And yeah, people are scared to be alone. Welcome to being a human. That does not mean it is advisable to MARRY someone as soon as possible. It means you should make sure to stay connected to friends and family, potentially start testing the dating waters, and also, well yeah, get used to being alone sometimes and see how that feels.
I do not think your average recent divorced person should get the same leeway as a widower who has had his entire life turned completely inside out in the span of one day.
Anonymous wrote:I know a few people who spent more than 2 years (longest I know if is 5 years) fighting about their divorce / not getting divorced. I assume they dated during that time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My childhood BF’s mom committed suicide when she was 13. Her father remarried 6 months later. It was very scandalous and my parents, who were very good friends with them, cut him off. I was angry about it for many many years until I came to the realization that he was probably scared and at a loss as to how to raise four kids alone. It’s actually given me a different perspective on quick remarriages - some people just don’t know how to be alone or raise kids by themselves.
This is a very specific situation where it is understandable that you would sympathetic because he'd experienced a trauma -- not just losing his spouse suddenly but losing them in a traumatic way. You are right he was probably scared and at a loss because he was on his own as a dad and likely struggling to process his own loss.
That is very, very different than someone who remarries quickly after a divorce, which is what this thread is about. Most divorces do not result in you raising kids all by yourself. And yeah, people are scared to be alone. Welcome to being a human. That does not mean it is advisable to MARRY someone as soon as possible. It means you should make sure to stay connected to friends and family, potentially start testing the dating waters, and also, well yeah, get used to being alone sometimes and see how that feels.
I do not think your average recent divorced person should get the same leeway as a widower who has had his entire life turned completely inside out in the span of one day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Affair
Affair or no, it's dumb for the other person to *marry* them that fast
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My childhood BF’s mom committed suicide when she was 13. Her father remarried 6 months later. It was very scandalous and my parents, who were very good friends with them, cut him off. I was angry about it for many many years until I came to the realization that he was probably scared and at a loss as to how to raise four kids alone. It’s actually given me a different perspective on quick remarriages - some people just don’t know how to be alone or raise kids by themselves.
Nah, men don’t get a free pass.
My mom bailed when we were young. My dad had been the breadwinner, and now had to work *and* raise 3 kids alone. He stepped up, was a great dad, and never even dated until we were well into our 20s.
Life happens, and if you’re not sure you can raise kids alone if something happens, don’t have them.
Anonymous wrote:My childhood BF’s mom committed suicide when she was 13. Her father remarried 6 months later. It was very scandalous and my parents, who were very good friends with them, cut him off. I was angry about it for many many years until I came to the realization that he was probably scared and at a loss as to how to raise four kids alone. It’s actually given me a different perspective on quick remarriages - some people just don’t know how to be alone or raise kids by themselves.
Anonymous wrote:My childhood BF’s mom committed suicide when she was 13. Her father remarried 6 months later. It was very scandalous and my parents, who were very good friends with them, cut him off. I was angry about it for many many years until I came to the realization that he was probably scared and at a loss as to how to raise four kids alone. It’s actually given me a different perspective on quick remarriages - some people just don’t know how to be alone or raise kids by themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Prompted by seeing that Brittany Snow's husband is engaged just 5 months after their divorce.
Have known a few people IRL like this as well, including a guy who was married for 10+ years (no kids though) who started dating his now wife during the separation period, and then they were engaged in less than a year after the divorce.
I just could never marry someone in that situation. I don't care how much they tell me that it was a "dead marriage" and they should have divorced long ago blah blah blah, it's way too fast. How do you commit your entire life to someone who already committed their entire life to someone else and only left that person 5 months ago? What the heck?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Middle age goes by really fast. Some may see it best to just move on with things since there’s little healthy time left.
Yes. We live longer lives than before, but a lot of them are spent in illness. Best to make the most of the time you've got. Of course, you need to make some self-assessment of what happened and how you can be a better partner, and avoid people who aren't right for you. But sometimes it doesn't much time to do that, especially if, as posters explained, the relationship actually died years before the separation.