Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My BIL still regrets his divorce 10 years later. He behaved poorly to the extent that his own parents and siblings distanced themselves from him. He’s gotten therapy but hasn’t been in a stable relationship since. Former SIL is happily remarried and has twins with her new husband, in addition to hers and BIL’s child.
It sounds like he regrets his bad behavior and the divorce is just a side effect of that bad behavior. Why hasn't he been able to find a new relationship? Presumably if he regrets his behavior he's aware enough to make changes in how he behaves?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there’s a lot of regret, but not all of it regretting the divorce. Divorce typically comes with a big financial hit that can take many years to recover from.
+1 Divorce is the single worst financial decision you can ever make. Your worth gets cut in half and your expenses double. So basically you are left to live on 25% of what you had. Often, people who aren't the earners in the family don't understand the gravity of this.
Divorce should only be a worst case decision, not simply because you're "unhappy". It's much easier to work towards " happiness" within a marriage, when you're not also going through financial hardship.
It wasn’t my choice but I regret it. Our retirement plans were joint and made sense for two thoughtful, financially measured people. When DH bolted and our savings and retirement were split and our equity was split before it could grow for the amount of years we’d planned…well, 25% for me is definitely accurate. DH’s career is just entering the years where his comp will grow in a way that’s a reward for all the grinding years before. Mine is entering the years where any year could be the last.
I regret ever meeting him, but I don’t think that’s what OP was asking!
Yikes.
Your lawyer should have helped you all in this one.
Only so much that they can do but definitely wrung every last dime out of the situation. DH timed things very precisely to specific comp dates to protect future tranches but I was able to get a little of that. He sucks.
Did he leave for another woman? What a POS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there’s a lot of regret, but not all of it regretting the divorce. Divorce typically comes with a big financial hit that can take many years to recover from.
+1 Divorce is the single worst financial decision you can ever make. Your worth gets cut in half and your expenses double. So basically you are left to live on 25% of what you had. Often, people who aren't the earners in the family don't understand the gravity of this.
Divorce should only be a worst case decision, not simply because you're "unhappy". It's much easier to work towards " happiness" within a marriage, when you're not also going through financial hardship.
It wasn’t my choice but I regret it. Our retirement plans were joint and made sense for two thoughtful, financially measured people. When DH bolted and our savings and retirement were split and our equity was split before it could grow for the amount of years we’d planned…well, 25% for me is definitely accurate. DH’s career is just entering the years where his comp will grow in a way that’s a reward for all the grinding years before. Mine is entering the years where any year could be the last.
I regret ever meeting him, but I don’t think that’s what OP was asking!
Yikes.
Your lawyer should have helped you all in this one.
Only so much that they can do but definitely wrung every last dime out of the situation. DH timed things very precisely to specific comp dates to protect future tranches but I was able to get a little of that. He sucks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there’s a lot of regret, but not all of it regretting the divorce. Divorce typically comes with a big financial hit that can take many years to recover from.
+1 Divorce is the single worst financial decision you can ever make. Your worth gets cut in half and your expenses double. So basically you are left to live on 25% of what you had. Often, people who aren't the earners in the family don't understand the gravity of this.
Divorce should only be a worst case decision, not simply because you're "unhappy". It's much easier to work towards " happiness" within a marriage, when you're not also going through financial hardship.
It wasn’t my choice but I regret it. Our retirement plans were joint and made sense for two thoughtful, financially measured people. When DH bolted and our savings and retirement were split and our equity was split before it could grow for the amount of years we’d planned…well, 25% for me is definitely accurate. DH’s career is just entering the years where his comp will grow in a way that’s a reward for all the grinding years before. Mine is entering the years where any year could be the last.
I regret ever meeting him, but I don’t think that’s what OP was asking!
Yikes.
Your lawyer should have helped you all in this one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there’s a lot of regret, but not all of it regretting the divorce. Divorce typically comes with a big financial hit that can take many years to recover from.
+1 Divorce is the single worst financial decision you can ever make. Your worth gets cut in half and your expenses double. So basically you are left to live on 25% of what you had. Often, people who aren't the earners in the family don't understand the gravity of this.
Divorce should only be a worst case decision, not simply because you're "unhappy". It's much easier to work towards " happiness" within a marriage, when you're not also going through financial hardship.
It wasn’t my choice but I regret it. Our retirement plans were joint and made sense for two thoughtful, financially measured people. When DH bolted and our savings and retirement were split and our equity was split before it could grow for the amount of years we’d planned…well, 25% for me is definitely accurate. DH’s career is just entering the years where his comp will grow in a way that’s a reward for all the grinding years before. Mine is entering the years where any year could be the last.
I regret ever meeting him, but I don’t think that’s what OP was asking!
Does he at least have trusts for your kids? Or are they SOOL too?
Anonymous wrote:My BIL still regrets his divorce 10 years later. He behaved poorly to the extent that his own parents and siblings distanced themselves from him. He’s gotten therapy but hasn’t been in a stable relationship since. Former SIL is happily remarried and has twins with her new husband, in addition to hers and BIL’s child.
Anonymous wrote:With a good marriage, regret very often
With an abusive marriage, regret not doing it earlier
Anonymous wrote:I think my exh regrets it.
Attempted hoovering (starting about a year or so after the D, which got shut down) after moving on with lightning speed. Partnered up so fast that most people (family, friends, kids) realized, without me saying a word, that he was the one who wanted out even though I filed.
I miss being partnered but my standards are higher now. I'm aging backwards (which helps, not going to lie, ha), kids are great, $ is solid.
I filed to set him free, but ended up setting myself free in ways that I couldn't imagine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there’s a lot of regret, but not all of it regretting the divorce. Divorce typically comes with a big financial hit that can take many years to recover from.
+1 Divorce is the single worst financial decision you can ever make. Your worth gets cut in half and your expenses double. So basically you are left to live on 25% of what you had. Often, people who aren't the earners in the family don't understand the gravity of this.
Divorce should only be a worst case decision, not simply because you're "unhappy". It's much easier to work towards " happiness" within a marriage, when you're not also going through financial hardship.
It wasn’t my choice but I regret it. Our retirement plans were joint and made sense for two thoughtful, financially measured people. When DH bolted and our savings and retirement were split and our equity was split before it could grow for the amount of years we’d planned…well, 25% for me is definitely accurate. DH’s career is just entering the years where his comp will grow in a way that’s a reward for all the grinding years before. Mine is entering the years where any year could be the last.
I regret ever meeting him, but I don’t think that’s what OP was asking!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there’s a lot of regret, but not all of it regretting the divorce. Divorce typically comes with a big financial hit that can take many years to recover from.
+1 Divorce is the single worst financial decision you can ever make. Your worth gets cut in half and your expenses double. So basically you are left to live on 25% of what you had. Often, people who aren't the earners in the family don't understand the gravity of this.
Divorce should only be a worst case decision, not simply because you're "unhappy". It's much easier to work towards " happiness" within a marriage, when you're not also going through financial hardship.
It wasn’t my choice but I regret it. Our retirement plans were joint and made sense for two thoughtful, financially measured people. When DH bolted and our savings and retirement were split and our equity was split before it could grow for the amount of years we’d planned…well, 25% for me is definitely accurate. DH’s career is just entering the years where his comp will grow in a way that’s a reward for all the grinding years before. Mine is entering the years where any year could be the last.
I regret ever meeting him, but I don’t think that’s what OP was asking!