Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No offence, but I would not want DD to date someone from a divorced family.
Usually single parent families are dysfunctional and this imprints on the kids one way or the other.
And you are on the relationship site because?
Anonymous wrote:Just like hereditary diseases, there is a higher chance of people with emotional trauma, physical abuse, alcoholism, divorce, infidelity, bankruptcy etc to bring more emotional burden to their relationships.
Is it a given? No, obviously not. Is it likely? Unfortunately yes.
There was a recent study concluding that couples who have friends who divorce have a 75% increase in the risk of their own marriage ending. Why wouldn't a family history of divorces increase their chances of divorce? Even if they are consciously trying not to, subconsciously, they may mess up unless they went through effective therapy to overcome it.
Anonymous wrote:Is this an OK standard to have?
My fiance told me he would never date a woman with divorced parents. He said it normalizes divorce, they grow up in a home where marriage is temporary, and in a lot of cases they no longer have a father. I think I agree with him, but it seems kind of mean to dismiss people based on their parents' actions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH’s parents would never dream of divorcing. Especially now in their 70s when their only hobby is hating each other.
Awesome response. My parents are “celebrating” 50 years of marriage next year. They dislike each other and bicker constantly. OP l think a better question would be to ask how important it is that your dating partner has a loving supportive family. That can come from a single parent, extended family, etc.
Anonymous wrote:"if a woman’s parents divorced, her odds of divorce increased 69%, while if both a husband and wife’s parents divorced, the risk of divorce increased by 189%."
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/between-the-generations/201902/if-my-parents-are-divorced-is-my-marriage-doomed-fail?amp
Anonymous wrote:It sounds mean to say it out loud (and so most people don't do so), but if you are looking for a long happy marriage, it makes sense to pick a spouse whose family modeled those skills. If you are just looking to date and have fun, there is no need of course. My parents were happily married until my mother's death and so were DH's parents (until one of them passed) and this wasn't something I considered when we got married, but in retrospect, it makes sense that we both fell into the model we had been shown. I think someone from a broken home can have a great marriage, it just takes more conscious thought and effort.
Anonymous wrote:DH’s parents would never dream of divorcing. Especially now in their 70s when their only hobby is hating each other.
Anonymous wrote:No offence, but I would not want DD to date someone from a divorced family.
Usually single parent families are dysfunctional and this imprints on the kids one way or the other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't believe so many of you have taken the side that this makes sense. It's so judgmental. I am not the same person as my mother. I'm a competent adult with my own thoughts and values and I make my own choices. If you're not competent enough to do the same, then you make a bad partner whether or not your parents are married or divorced. It's inane that I would be judged based on my parents' choices (and my parents aren't divorced, just saying this hypothetically). If you judge me based on them, then good riddance to you, I dodged a bullet.
What if cancer runs in someone's family? Would you not marry them because either your kids might get cancer on the early side, or they might get cancer and you'd become a widow/widower? I don't agree with this either but it actually makes more sense because cancer is actually something that's genetic that you can't control. Choices are under your control, assuming you're mentally healthy to start with.
I don't see so many agreeing. It is a judgement based on statistics. It's not even a huge discrepancy in statistics. Clearly people need to see others as individuals and not percentage points of likelihood to do something or not.
I think the thing here is that the PP (above this last one)who is feeling “judged” is taking it personally as though the guy is saying she isn’t “worthy” of dating bc of her parents’ divorce. And I get where anecdotally it feels icky and offensive if you fall into that group bc you totally could make a different choice than your parents and get married and stay married! But as this PP pointed out, statistically, if the goal is to make sure you stay married, it’s a better bet to date a girl whose parents are not divorced. That’s just a fact.
It’s like it you want your kids to grow up going to church just like your family did, then statistically you should aim to date and marry someone whose family also went to church every week. Doesn’t mean that there aren’t people who are converts after having kids OR who go to church even though their parents didn’t! It just means that if you want to better your odds at being a church-going family, you marry someone whose family of origin already shares that as a valued norm and practice.
No need to get offended. There are always exceptions. And maybe that fiancé missed out on dating some great girls...but he set the parameters based on statistics, not on you (or anyone else) personally so that he could heighten the odds of achieving his no-divorce goal.
Too many words. Is the goal a happy marriage, or not getting divorced? Those are two separate things. Avoiding potential partners whose parents who are divorced does nothing to further the goal of a happy marriage as far as I can tell.
+1. This is the only response that matters. Do you want and intact marriage or a healthy marriage?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Majority of divorced people come here and post about all the red flags they didn't see or chose to avoid.
It doesn't mean their parents were divorced.
And obese parents can have healthy weight offspring.
It’s an odds thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Majority of divorced people come here and post about all the red flags they didn't see or chose to avoid.
It doesn't mean their parents were divorced.