Anonymous wrote:I don't buy the "but the marriage was over a lot time ago" argument. Look at the comments on this thread talking about how it took 2, 4, 6 years to finalize the divorce, and how frustrating and unpleasant it was for that to be a drawn out process. It might have been years since you felt connected to and in love with your spouse, but the divorce itself is specifically the ordeal that you should take more time to move on from.
I cannot imagine getting engaged to someone who is like "yes my marriage has been dead for years and I just spent 2 solid years going through the separation process, dealing with the legal issues and division of property, learning to live on my own, etc." I can see *dating* someone in this situation if we really clicked, but if they wanted to get married less than a year after the paperwork was final, I'd gently suggest to them that their urgency to get married has more to do with their divorce than it does with the intensity of our connection.
Just realistically, it's about the divorced person wanting to turn the page, prove something to themselves or other, or make up for lost time. IMO, those are bad reasons to rush a relationship. They are actually good reasons to slow down and take some time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t know of any divorces with kids that took less than two years. And in most cases, the relationship was over long before a divorce was initiated.
By the time mine is officially done, it will have been one month shy of 4 years, beginning on the official date when we decided we were separated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a woman and while I didn't get engaged after divorcing, I did hop back into dating very quickly (within a couple weeks of separating).
Even though we separated on that specific date, I had actually spent the last 3 years in therapy, processing our issues, trying to fix the relationship, realizing he wasn't going to change, grieving, healing, etc. So by the time I caught him cheating again, I wasn't emotional, wasn't upset, wasn't sad, didn't need to grieve, it was more feeling disappointed and then 100% ready to move on.
OP here. Dating I totally get! I've had many friends in crap marriages and I totally understand that you'd be ready to get out there. Especially in your case where you'd done a lot of work on yourself. But if you'd met a great guy and he'd proposed a few months after your divorce, would you have said yes? Or if you were dating a divorced guy and everything was going great but the divorce was still *fresh*, would you be willing to get engaged just a few months after the paperwork is signed?
I personally would not. I am all for people moving on and don't think people have to like stay at home and think about what they did or something. But you just had this marriage fall apart, you're really going to jump right back on the ride?
Anonymous wrote:People who have kids at home still and remarry quickly after divorce have psych issues and are unable to be alone. That’s my middle-aged take from observing many friends and acquaintances. Or maybe they never were into the original spouse in the first place. Kids and unwinding from a long marriage make things super complicated, so quick remarriage is an idiotic decision imo.