Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, women just have more options. Remember it wasn’t until the 70s that a woman could even open a bank account in her own name. Men used to have us financially, emotionally, socially, and physically trapped.
This was true in the United States or in Saudi Arabia?! WTH
Could a single working woman open a bank account? What would she do with her money? Or was it just married women that had to have their husbands name on the account?
Anonymous wrote:Someone said women could not open bank accts till the 70s. The truth is, women were allowed to do so on the 60s.
They are confusing banks being required to allow women credit applications in her own name no matter marital status.
Anonymous wrote:In 1955 women couldnt have their own bank account and marital rape was legal.
Interesting that you think that is "better" than divorce.
Anonymous wrote:They just have open marriages.
Anonymous wrote:Great, and I take care of a number of things my wife isn't even aware of. In her mind, the kitchen just cleaned itself after she seemingly used every pot in the house to make spaghetti for the kids, or things that are broken that she didn't even realize were broken, magically fixed themselves when she was taking a nap. Sitting around with a barely managed pile of mental anxieties and overanalyzing life's trivialities doesn't mean you have more of a 'load' than men do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great, and I take care of a number of things my wife isn't even aware of. In her mind, the kitchen just cleaned itself after she seemingly used every pot in the house to make spaghetti for the kids, or things that are broken that she didn't even realize were broken, magically fixed themselves when she was taking a nap. Sitting around with a barely managed pile of mental anxieties and overanalyzing life's trivialities doesn't mean you have more of a 'load' than men do.
Not every husband is like you. Some men just go to work and don't contribute to the house. They don't even buy their own clothes. They'd rather wear shoes with holes and wait for the wifey to buy a new pair.
Anonymous wrote:One issue is different expectations. Take abuse control out of it. I think both sides now might leave a marriage if it was no longer fulfilling. If the person was not you soul mate anymore. If you grew apart. None of those reasons would have caused most people to get divorced.
Divorce is an interesting topic. Rates are inverse to income. Meaning low income high divorce rate. As high as 75%. Middle income 50%. Real UMC — under 250k a little less Rich 1 million plus 10% or less. Why?
Why do most rich people not divorce?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They were worse before IMO. My grandma was clearly abused by grandpa. She had her own apartment nearby where she could go when grandpa went crazy at times. They owned a small farm and usually lived there. They never divorced though. He was alcoholic and died of heart attack. Police did nothing as domestic abuse was not a crime unless you kill the other person.
My father was just as abusive to my mother; she had nowhere to go. He found her every time. She finally divorce him when we were in high school. I begged her to do it long before. This all was in the old country.
I left my husband within two years in US when he got physically abusive. Leaving has become easier.
Most men I met have not been marriage or even dating material. A lot of untreated mental issues and special needs that come out when they can't hide them anymore.
Agree.
It’s like they never learned to talk or resolve things, they go straight to arguing, bullying and verbal abuse.
One of the things that has happened is that the marriage material men or most of them are married after college or after professional school. Doctors lawyers mbas. They have not been on the market for years before they are married.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They were worse before IMO. My grandma was clearly abused by grandpa. She had her own apartment nearby where she could go when grandpa went crazy at times. They owned a small farm and usually lived there. They never divorced though. He was alcoholic and died of heart attack. Police did nothing as domestic abuse was not a crime unless you kill the other person.
My father was just as abusive to my mother; she had nowhere to go. He found her every time. She finally divorce him when we were in high school. I begged her to do it long before. This all was in the old country.
I left my husband within two years in US when he got physically abusive. Leaving has become easier.
Most men I met have not been marriage or even dating material. A lot of untreated mental issues and special needs that come out when they can't hide them anymore.
Agree.
It’s like they never learned to talk or resolve things, they go straight to arguing, bullying and verbal abuse.
Anonymous wrote:Research.
If you are a young woman or man asking this question, do the research. The world was a different place in 1955.
An average woman in 1955 could not drive, did not have a college degree, could not get a job beyond retail/minimum wage, would not be approved for a credit card...was not even allowed to open a bank account or rent an apartment without a male co-signer.
How is she getting a divorce?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, women just have more options. Remember it wasn’t until the 70s that a woman could even open a bank account in her own name. Men used to have us financially, emotionally, socially, and physically trapped.
This was true in the United States or in Saudi Arabia?! WTH
Anonymous wrote:Great, and I take care of a number of things my wife isn't even aware of. In her mind, the kitchen just cleaned itself after she seemingly used every pot in the house to make spaghetti for the kids, or things that are broken that she didn't even realize were broken, magically fixed themselves when she was taking a nap. Sitting around with a barely managed pile of mental anxieties and overanalyzing life's trivialities doesn't mean you have more of a 'load' than men do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They were worse before IMO. My grandma was clearly abused by grandpa. She had her own apartment nearby where she could go when grandpa went crazy at times. They owned a small farm and usually lived there. They never divorced though. He was alcoholic and died of heart attack. Police did nothing as domestic abuse was not a crime unless you kill the other person.
My father was just as abusive to my mother; she had nowhere to go. He found her every time. She finally divorce him when we were in high school. I begged her to do it long before. This all was in the old country.
I left my husband within two years in US when he got physically abusive. Leaving has become easier.
Most men I met have not been marriage or even dating material. A lot of untreated mental issues and special needs that come out when they can't hide them anymore.
Agree.
It’s like they never learned to talk or resolve things, they go straight to arguing, bullying and verbal abuse.
Or maybe you harangue the men in your life and they don’t feel they deserve to be unduly criticized at every turn. Just a thought. Also, maybe you approach them in a pandering, condescending manner and they respond angrily. Men are simply. Speak plainly to them. Realize that they just want to speak plainly and we can’t read your mind if you’re mad about something.