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:I grew up with a divorced single mom and I’ve heard this. I don’t care. It doesn’t bother me.
Not the type of person I would want to be with anyway. And I don’t say this with a sour grapes complex.
Anonymous wrote:Yea there is fallacy in his logic. He is using no divorce as a crutch to avoid the risk of a broken marriage.
The truth is that we are all vulnerable to the risk of being hurt in marriage.
There are plenty of broken people from married homes, and whole people from divorced homes. And vice versa.
I think this is a stupid rule tbh. But to each their own.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I have been thinking about this. DH and I have come from a culture where people did not used to divorce. As the couples grew older they sort of made peace with their situation and of course put their kids first. Both DH and I came from intact and functional families and this has allowed a lot of the business of living to go on despite some extreme ups and downs in the families.
My kids are grown. Here is what I have told them - 1) don't marry a child of divorce, 2) don't marry a person who has addiction and genetic mental illness and 3) once you marry, don't have babies unless you have lived together for a few years. People show you who they are and you should believe them. Addiction, abuse and adultery cannot be tolerated, and children tend to mimic what they see in their homes.
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:Yes, I have heard this before. I don't think it is a rare sentiment.
I dated someone like this once who thought this way, while at the same time, acknowledging that their parents were miserable (but still married)
In my family those who went into marriage confident with each set of parents had never divorced are now, in fact, divorced. Those who came from divored households are happily married by all appearances for 10+ years.
I don't think divorced parents are as much of a red flag as family relationships in general.
Anonymous wrote:I am the child of an alcoholic but I am not neither an alcoholic nor addicted to any other substances. I am a child of divorce but have been with the same person for over 20 years. My spouse comes from a ‘intact’ family pushing 50 years married and is emotionally stunted and verbally abusive. Never judge a book by its cover.
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.