Anonymous wrote:Reminds of the old joke where a couple appears before a judge seeking a run of the mill divorce. He is about to sign off when it dawns on him that this couple is in their lay nineties and have been married for nearly 80 years!
Not able to stop himself, he asks why, after 8 decades, are you two divorcing now?
To which the husband replied, "Well, your honor, we've wanted to get divorced for 70 years now. We've hated each other. But we thought we'd wait until the kids died first".
Anonymous wrote:Reread the article. It says kids of divorce have a harder time forming relationships and a higher rate of divorce, and a lesser relationship with the noncustodial parent.
Anonymous wrote:The unified research shows kids do better in intact homes that are low conflict even if the marriage isn't particularly fulfilling for the parents. http://articles.latimes.com/2001/jul/09/news/cl-20178
To summarize - divorce is the lesser of two evils for kids if the parents are openly hostile and violent. Not if the parents get along but don't love each other.
Anonymous wrote:Why? Hasn't it generally been agreed that kids suffer more when parents try to grin and bear it than they do when parents divorce?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting. Seems like a lot of high conflict on this board.
Disagree. Mismatched libidos where people discreetly cheat is not high conflict. An environment of physical abuse or shouting matches would be high conflict.
Abuse in another form. Cheating is abuse.
It actually isn't but it also isn't something the kids see unlike physical abuse. Kids who grow up in a home where dad discreetly cheats on business trips are not the same as kids who grow up in a house where dad beats the shit out of mom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting. Seems like a lot of high conflict on this board.
Disagree. Mismatched libidos where people discreetly cheat is not high conflict. An environment of physical abuse or shouting matches would be high conflict.
Abuse in another form. Cheating is abuse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting. Seems like a lot of high conflict on this board.
Disagree. Mismatched libidos where people discreetly cheat is not high conflict. An environment of physical abuse or shouting matches would be high conflict.