Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am almost 38, and among people I know who are roughly the same age, nearly all the divorces are happening to parents of one child, under the age of 2. In one case, the husband started an affair during pregnancy and is now getting remarried to his mistress with the ink barely dry on his divorce decree. In the other handful of cases, it's just seems like the baby breaks the relationship. Pretty sad. I know one divorce of a two lawyer couple around our age...fairly typical, met in law school, cohabitated, she pressed for an engagement, he agreed, then it ended after about 3.5 years because there was no there there and their financial habits varied wildly. I don't think he ever really loved her and she loves everybody she dates.
It’s lack of sex, not the baby, which breaks the relationship.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mid 40s here and this makes sense. We are coming out of the baby years when it was all hands on deck and when there was no sex in the regular sense
Now there is lingering resentment from my wife about all the things I did wrong, we haven't rekindled the romantic side and frankly we are spiralling away from each other. And yes, as a successful man, it is easy to see alternatives out there and the potential of never having an intimate life again is stifling.
There is no excuse ever to have an affair. Get a divorce, give her the house, a good settlement and child support/alimony and move on.
Anonymous wrote:When the youngest hits middle school. That's when the couple sits on the couch St 830 pm with nothing to do anymore except relax. And when they realize they should be reconnecting sexually but don't
You can basically predict the divorces by the amount of sex a couple manages to have when kids are young.
Anonymous wrote:I am almost 38, and among people I know who are roughly the same age, nearly all the divorces are happening to parents of one child, under the age of 2. In one case, the husband started an affair during pregnancy and is now getting remarried to his mistress with the ink barely dry on his divorce decree. In the other handful of cases, it's just seems like the baby breaks the relationship. Pretty sad. I know one divorce of a two lawyer couple around our age...fairly typical, met in law school, cohabitated, she pressed for an engagement, he agreed, then it ended after about 3.5 years because there was no there there and their financial habits varied wildly. I don't think he ever really loved her and she loves everybody she dates.
Anonymous wrote:
Single woman in DC have the cream of the crop to pick from if they are looking for casual relationships.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had 4 friends divorce last year at age 33-34, no kids for any of them. All got married around 27/28. I thought it was kind of odd since when you look at their stats, so to speak, they were all in low risk categories for divorce (didn't marry super young, educated, finances fine, etc). Have a 5th friend with a terrible husband who I hope joins them, but think she'll double down and have a baby.
These divorces don't surprise me one bit, I don't care what the stats say. Look closely at their relationships. They are almost all college sweethearts who dated for 5+ years, lived together, owned a dog, and all that crap before they often even got engaged. Today, people who get married at 27/28 are NOT marrying people they met at 25/26. 27/28 is prime time for an inertia marriage to start.
Anonymous wrote:The ones who married in their early 39 s got divorced at 30.
Anonymous wrote:I had 4 friends divorce last year at age 33-34, no kids for any of them. All got married around 27/28. I thought it was kind of odd since when you look at their stats, so to speak, they were all in low risk categories for divorce (didn't marry super young, educated, finances fine, etc). Have a 5th friend with a terrible husband who I hope joins them, but think she'll double down and have a baby.