Anonymous wrote:I will never marry again. My ex cheated and the divorce experience I went through showed how biased the state can be toward men. During marriage we have the same standard of living. Post marriage she is better off. Our children were just fine during our marriage. Now that we are divorce what I am paying as child support is far more than what we paid to support our kids when we were married. Essentially with child support and alimony her income is now higher than mine. Yes I could blame my lawyer for not being a good lawyer but the judge let me not even get started.
Anonymous wrote:I will never marry again. My ex cheated and the divorce experience I went through showed how biased the state can be toward men. During marriage we have the same standard of living. Post marriage she is better off. Our children were just fine during our marriage. Now that we are divorce what I am paying as child support is far more than what we paid to support our kids when we were married. Essentially with child support and alimony her income is now higher than mine. Yes I could blame my lawyer for not being a good lawyer but the judge let me not even get started.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 40, I went through a long and difficult divorce.
My life isn't fabulously better, but it's perfectly fine. I'm interested in dating but given my marriage experience and my working in family law, the red flags can't slip by anymore.
But my kids are happy and doing well, my home is calm, and I feel much more confident - much less scared of anything. I feel... experienced? Like I've had many complex experiences and now I prefer a very specific type of person who lives similarly to me.
As a parent, friend, relative, contractor - I'm a better person since my divorce, my personality has shifted and changed in many ways I'm thankful for. Grief has been difficult but I'm mostly through that now and feel like my future is wide open, and not so incredibly limited and shoved in a box as it used to be.
People want a “makeover” - oh she got divorced and now her new husband is hotter and richer, etc. But the changes are more internal. Maybe you are so happy and liberated and confident you don’t want to date again. Maybe you do date but don’t want to marry. Maybe you end up with someone whom society thinks has lesser status but makes you feel like the most beautiful person in the world after a marriage full of abuse and neglect.
+1 Remarriage and upward mobility aren't the goals. Being happy and content enough to remain single, or not, is a great goal.
Anonymous wrote:Bridgette Nelson her fifth marriage was a charm. She married a much younger very hot guy who got her natural pregnant at 54
Anonymous wrote:Interesting comments….As a happily married man it kind of sadden that most comments seem to be from women who suddenly claim that they are now happy since they divorced. Are we really this bad? Do we make you guys so miserable and unhappy? Perhaps women have to go through at least 2 iterations to find “true” love because they are leaving one man for another, it is not like they are moving to a new “creature” that’s much better. I hope to read comments about men when divorced their wives and are now happier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting comments….As a happily married man it kind of sadden that most comments seem to be from women who suddenly claim that they are now happy since they divorced. Are we really this bad? Do we make you guys so miserable and unhappy? Perhaps women have to go through at least 2 iterations to find “true” love because they are leaving one man for another, it is not like they are moving to a new “creature” that’s much better. I hope to read comments about men when divorced their wives and are now happier.
Women have a much easier time to rebuild their lives after divorce, in my opinion. Unlike men, they are less likely to be under pressure to have children again, dating apps are biased in the sense men have to compete for them, men have to do the work to impress them, by default people assume that they are leaving bad marriages, etc….
Anonymous wrote:I'm 40, I went through a long and difficult divorce.
My life isn't fabulously better, but it's perfectly fine. I'm interested in dating but given my marriage experience and my working in family law, the red flags can't slip by anymore.
But my kids are happy and doing well, my home is calm, and I feel much more confident - much less scared of anything. I feel... experienced? Like I've had many complex experiences and now I prefer a very specific type of person who lives similarly to me.
As a parent, friend, relative, contractor - I'm a better person since my divorce, my personality has shifted and changed in many ways I'm thankful for. Grief has been difficult but I'm mostly through that now and feel like my future is wide open, and not so incredibly limited and shoved in a box as it used to be.
Anonymous wrote:Divorced in mid 40's, and lost 230 lbs. Divorce was a stressful process and the kids are still recovering, 17 years later, but we are all in a much better place. When you're going through hell, keep on going! Get a good divorce support group and lawyer, ignore the gossip, get your affairs in order, get a dog and start running/jogging, when you get dropped from by a friend/friend group, be thankful and keep looking forward. Treat yourself with grace and kindness.
I'm married to the love of my life now, and he is an upgrade in every way. He also shows my daughters how a man should treat a woman.
Hugs, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting comments….As a happily married man it kind of sadden that most comments seem to be from women who suddenly claim that they are now happy since they divorced. Are we really this bad? Do we make you guys so miserable and unhappy? Perhaps women have to go through at least 2 iterations to find “true” love because they are leaving one man for another, it is not like they are moving to a new “creature” that’s much better. I hope to read comments about men when divorced their wives and are now happier.
NP here but I think there is a reason 75% of divorces are initiated by women (at least that’s the statistic a therapist once told me, I don’t have a citation). Marriage just isn’t a great deal for women anymore
Anonymous wrote:Interesting comments….As a happily married man it kind of sadden that most comments seem to be from women who suddenly claim that they are now happy since they divorced. Are we really this bad? Do we make you guys so miserable and unhappy? Perhaps women have to go through at least 2 iterations to find “true” love because they are leaving one man for another, it is not like they are moving to a new “creature” that’s much better. I hope to read comments about men when divorced their wives and are now happier.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting comments….As a happily married man it kind of sadden that most comments seem to be from women who suddenly claim that they are now happy since they divorced. Are we really this bad? Do we make you guys so miserable and unhappy? Perhaps women have to go through at least 2 iterations to find “true” love because they are leaving one man for another, it is not like they are moving to a new “creature” that’s much better. I hope to read comments about men when divorced their wives and are now happier.