Anonymous wrote:I'm not divorced; my parents weren't divorced; none of my grandparents were divorced.
No doubt we all had plenty of reasons to divorce, but none of us did or do.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not divorced; my parents weren't divorced; none of my grandparents were divorced.
No doubt we all had plenty of reasons to divorce, but none of us did or do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Um I just accepted it and got the hell on with life. It's called resilience. You need real therapy if you're struggling with this as an adult.
I don’t think it is insulated for adults to still grapple with their parents’ divorce as it is never simply that the parents’ marriage ended. The child must also adjust to:
1) changed financial circumstances in most cases. We went from MC to living in a slumlord-owned dilapidated rowhouse in low income, high poverty inner city neighborhood. That was dramatic, but even my own children went from MC to LMC/working class for five years after my own divorce.
2) physical separations for parents. 50/50 is not the solution to this.
3) new partners and siblings of parents remarry
4) disruption of routines and holidays.
why isn't 50-50 custody a solution to physical separation?
You start with 100%. You lose 50% of the time with your kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Um I just accepted it and got the hell on with life. It's called resilience. You need real therapy if you're struggling with this as an adult.
I don’t think it is insulated for adults to still grapple with their parents’ divorce as it is never simply that the parents’ marriage ended. The child must also adjust to:
1) changed financial circumstances in most cases. We went from MC to living in a slumlord-owned dilapidated rowhouse in low income, high poverty inner city neighborhood. That was dramatic, but even my own children went from MC to LMC/working class for five years after my own divorce.
2) physical separations for parents. 50/50 is not the solution to this.
3) new partners and siblings of parents remarry
4) disruption of routines and holidays.
why isn't 50-50 custody a solution to physical separation?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Um I just accepted it and got the hell on with life. It's called resilience. You need real therapy if you're struggling with this as an adult.
I don’t think it is insulated for adults to still grapple with their parents’ divorce as it is never simply that the parents’ marriage ended. The child must also adjust to:
1) changed financial circumstances in most cases. We went from MC to living in a slumlord-owned dilapidated rowhouse in low income, high poverty inner city neighborhood. That was dramatic, but even my own children went from MC to LMC/working class for five years after my own divorce.
2) physical separations for parents. 50/50 is not the solution to this.
3) new partners and siblings of parents remarry
4) disruption of routines and holidays.
Anonymous wrote:As a kid I used to pray daily that they’d divorce. They divorced my freshman year of college and I was pissed (still am) that they waited til then. They weren’t doing me any favors!
Anonymous wrote:I’m 48 and none of my friends have divorced. In my big extended family there has only been one divorce and my uncle’s wife was incredibly psycho so we were all relieved to get him back after his 25 years of enslavement/cut off from family by her.
None of my kids’ friends have divorced parents. Nobody in my neighborhood has yet to divorce —40/50/60s age range.
I don’t even know any divorced co-workers and I’m going into year 23 at my current job.
I grew up in this area/UMC.
My husband is from Ohio and about 75% of family and friends are divorced.
Where do you live OP?