Anonymous wrote:Also, the 50% divorce rate includes all marriages. The rate for first marriages is lower, because the rates for second, third, etc. marriages is sky high.
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.
Hmmm, interesting.
This might be why our circle is (so far) divorce free.
Anonymous wrote:I am 40, DH is 45, grad degrees, most friends married late-ish. None of the e.g. 20-25 couples we know fairly well have divorced. I think this is not atypical for this type of cohort. A couple acquaintances/friends-of-friends have got divorced but I (obviously given the nature of the "relationship") do not know the details.
Anonymous wrote:I am in my mid 30's and the majority of the people in my circle are Mid 30's to Mid 40's. We all are educated with advanced degrees and are middle to upper class. Although no one in our circle is divorced yet, more than half of the couples are living in miserable marriages. It only has to be a matter of time before someone is the first to make the plunge. When we all get together the women all complain about the husbands and the husbands all complain about the wives (according to my DH). Many of the marriages are sexless an emotionally lonely. I honestly only know of one happily married couple in the group! I think many of them don't see anyway out of it, financially or because kids are involved. The situations I hear about really do make me very sad, as we all are fairly young to be living such miserable lives. It is really amazing to me how much my view of marriage has changed the older I have gotten and the more I see. The bottom line is that just because you are not seeing the divorces happening in your group, does not mean these couples don't dream about divorcing daily!
Anonymous wrote:In my circle, one friend has divorced. Marriage was definitely a mistake for them because they were divorced less than a year after they were married. I have another friend who had an affair, moved out but now has reconciled with her husband so they are still together for now. Both couples were childless.
Most of my married friends have kids between the ages of 3-10. None of my close friends with kids have divorced.
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: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.
OP again. People do act like everything is wonderful. But even if its an act, people are NOT getting divorced....yet. I just find the statistic interesting. If the rate around me is 5%, what must it be elsewhere to level out at 50% nationwide!!!
Several of my friends fathers have been married and divorced two or three times... So that helps boost the 50% stat. So it's not 5/10 people...it's 5/10 marriages. Get two of these men in a group and that's 6 divorces between them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
OP again. People do act like everything is wonderful. But even if its an act, people are NOT getting divorced....yet. I just find the statistic interesting. If the rate around me is 5%, what must it be elsewhere to level out at 50% nationwide!!!
Several of my friends fathers have been married and divorced two or three times... So that helps boost the 50% stat. So it's not 5/10 people...it's 5/10 marriages. Get two of these men in a group and that's 6 divorces between them.
Anonymous wrote: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.
OP again. People do act like everything is wonderful. But even if its an act, people are NOT getting divorced....yet. I just find the statistic interesting. If the rate around me is 5%, what must it be elsewhere to level out at 50% nationwide!!!
Anonymous wrote: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.
OP again. People do act like everything is wonderful. But even if its an act, people are NOT getting divorced....yet. I just find the statistic interesting. If the rate around me is 5%, what must it be elsewhere to level out at 50% nationwide!!!