Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know it happens and I've heard the statistics but I literally don't know one couple who is divorced in my large circle of acquaintances. I know of a few distant relatives, but none in our education/socioeconomic level. Has anyone else had this experience? Do all the divorces just happen later in life?
Maybe your circle is part of the group that pretends all is perky in lalaland, the ones that post pure joy on FB. I'm in McLean and know at least four couples divorcing in DS class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know it happens and I've heard the statistics but I literally don't know one couple who is divorced in my large circle of acquaintances. I know of a few distant relatives, but none in our education/socioeconomic level. Has anyone else had this experience? Do all the divorces just happen later in life?
Maybe your circle is part of the group that pretends all is perky in lalaland, the ones that post pure joy on FB. I'm in McLean and know at least four couples divorcing in DS class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People with graduate degrees who get married for the first time after the age of thirty only have a fifteen percent chance of getting divorced.
I couldn't find the data to support this assertion of 15%. Do you have a source? The Bureau of Labor Statistics doesn't quantify using these categories at this time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, my circle is mid to upper 30's, with kids late preschool and elementary. Maybe 60% have graduate degrees, UMC.
My experience is the first wave of divorces are when the kids are in grade school...
Yes. Then again when kids leave for college
Anonymous wrote:People with graduate degrees who get married for the first time after the age of thirty only have a fifteen percent chance of getting divorced.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When your kids are in high school or college lots divorce. The men that are the most financially successful are often the first ones to divorce and/or cheat.
I don't think this is correct. Most likely to divorce are those who have already been divorced and those you marry young prior to obtaining a college degree. In my circle of people who are financially successful (and well educated) there are very few divorces. Divorce destroys wealth; there is a lot of incentive to stay married if you are doing well.
Anonymous wrote:Mid-30s wife here with a mid-40s husband.
I'd say that 25-30% of my mid-30s circle of friends have divorced; most married in their early 20s. One or two were quickies (met, engaged, married in 6-9 months, no baby) and probably did not know each other too well.
About 50-60% of our friends in my husband's mid-40s age range are divorced, including him. Went to three weddings this year that were first time marriages for 30s girls and second time for their 30s-40s husbands; looking at my ten closest girlfriends, all in their 30s and 40s, about half are second wives.
Anonymous wrote:I know it happens and I've heard the statistics but I literally don't know one couple who is divorced in my large circle of acquaintances. I know of a few distant relatives, but none in our education/socioeconomic level. Has anyone else had this experience? Do all the divorces just happen later in life?