Anonymous wrote:IMO the tone has changed because social media has become prevalent in the last decade. Twitter was founded in 2006. Facebook founded in 2004.
People can now see what kind of stress their friends, family, relatives are under with pictures and videos of all the incidents. They can also see what life is like in a happy and unhappy marriage.
Honestly - look at this video of a mother and child interacting and tell me this family is 'healthier' than someone who decided to divorce an argumentative spouse and take the children to a healthier environment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve been on this forum more years than I care to count. The relationship discussion was a big draw for me when my kids were little and even beyond that. I really wanted to divorce DH. However, there was so much logic and push here to stick it out, etc and I’m glad I did. Now I see posts with similar problems and the majority of advice seems to lean towards divorce. What changed?
More options career-wise for women. Women see more friends and kids thriving post divorce. I was the second divorce in my social circle. There was so much pessimism and misinformation about what would happen to me. 15 years later, 1/2 are divorced. No one had that knee-jerk doom and gloom prediction anymore.
In earlier generations, there were several factors that kept women in bad marriages for longer. They typically did not have the skills or career to earn a good income to support a family and the stigma of being a divorcee. Fortunately both of those are not as prevalent as they once were.
My parents are divorced and it was really the best thing all around. I sometimes post in these thread to provide a point of view that divorce is not always going to be devastating to the children. It is a false but commonly held belief that children are always traumatized by a divorce. My parents are now happily remarried to other people and my siblings and I are all in healthy long-term marriages. Why be completely miserable in life if your spouse is a jerk or you are just fundamentally not compatible.
Just to offer a different perspective, my parents divorced and it had a huge affect on me, in ways I still don't fully understand. I hated the separate families, the step mom/brothers/sisters, the split holidays, the hurt is caused our family, the financial stress it put on everyone. Sure we looked fine on the surface, but i was (and still am) really torn up about it - that was over 20 years. My relationship with my father was never the same, especially after he remarried. As other PPs have mentioned, every situation is different, it's really difficult to know how it will affect your kids. PP, it's great that everything worked out well for you. I've never shared my feelings with my parents, so it's very likely they felt everything worked out well for them too.
I am sorry that you have continued pain. But happy marriages do not end in divorce. What is your counter factual? A fantasy of a different marriage for your parents? Divorced but not remarried?
"I'm sorry but...." does not come across as very sincere.
I also don't agree with you that "potentially' happy marriages don't end in divorce. it is niave to think that a marriage is always in a state of blissful happiness. I'd rephrase your sentence, and say that committed marriages don't end in divorce.
My counter factual (whatever that means) would be for them to have stayed married and made more of an effort to work through it with therapy and self improvement - that didn't happen from what I saw. If in the end, they still couldn't reconcile their differences, then so be it, at least they tried.
Normal caveats apply for adultery, abuse, addiction, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve been on this forum more years than I care to count. The relationship discussion was a big draw for me when my kids were little and even beyond that. I really wanted to divorce DH. However, there was so much logic and push here to stick it out, etc and I’m glad I did. Now I see posts with similar problems and the majority of advice seems to lean towards divorce. What changed?
More options career-wise for women. Women see more friends and kids thriving post divorce. I was the second divorce in my social circle. There was so much pessimism and misinformation about what would happen to me. 15 years later, 1/2 are divorced. No one had that knee-jerk doom and gloom prediction anymore.
In earlier generations, there were several factors that kept women in bad marriages for longer. They typically did not have the skills or career to earn a good income to support a family and the stigma of being a divorcee. Fortunately both of those are not as prevalent as they once were.
My parents are divorced and it was really the best thing all around. I sometimes post in these thread to provide a point of view that divorce is not always going to be devastating to the children. It is a false but commonly held belief that children are always traumatized by a divorce. My parents are now happily remarried to other people and my siblings and I are all in healthy long-term marriages. Why be completely miserable in life if your spouse is a jerk or you are just fundamentally not compatible.
Just to offer a different perspective, my parents divorced and it had a huge affect on me, in ways I still don't fully understand. I hated the separate families, the step mom/brothers/sisters, the split holidays, the hurt is caused our family, the financial stress it put on everyone. Sure we looked fine on the surface, but i was (and still am) really torn up about it - that was over 20 years. My relationship with my father was never the same, especially after he remarried. As other PPs have mentioned, every situation is different, it's really difficult to know how it will affect your kids. PP, it's great that everything worked out well for you. I've never shared my feelings with my parents, so it's very likely they felt everything worked out well for them too.
I am sorry that you have continued pain. But happy marriages do not end in divorce. What is your counter factual? A fantasy of a different marriage for your parents? Divorced but not remarried?
Anonymous wrote:Affair recovery definitely cites the degree of cheating as a sliding scale. Long term affairs are the hardest for a marriage to recover from.
Yes- some people break up after a one night stand, but in sheer numbers and studies- the degree of cheating and marriage foundation - length, kids, etc all come into play.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Posters trash people that reconcile after an affair. Even if somebody was faithful for 20 years, the family/marriage was happy, the cheater is extremely remorseful and in individual therapy. They call the woman (oddly not the men) all kinds of names...spineless, weak, etc. 80% do not divorce and many of those are women that are working and successful.
Marriages can end up being stronger and more fulfilling in the 2nd half when blown open and rebuilt. Not all situations are the same yet this board comes at it as if all cheaters/people and type of affairs are the same. Some cheaters are awful, some are not.
I agree there is a real delusion from some women about how great divorce will be financially for them. They often are shocked at the financial situation after.
The grass isn’t greener a lot of the time.
DCUM will trash a guy that cheats but I think a woman that cheats gets it worse - they get the woman plus the incel men. As for reconciling with a cheating spouse, I don’t think many guys post about that as far as I’ve seen. There could be less guys posting on DCUM, plus I believe less guys take back the cheating wife and likely fewer will admit that they have.
I don’t agree with having a sliding scale of cheating. It doesn’t matter in the sense if was a one night stand, a long term affair, OW baby, a sex addiction, after 3 years of marriage or after 20, because there are people that are willing to work on changing from any of those things, and there are some that are not. There are some people willing to move past any of those things no matter if the partner does the work or not, and there are some that cannot. I learned long ago that people make different choices than I would given the exact same situation and we can both be happy with those choices. So it’s possible that the grass is really greener for me on the other side while it wouldn’t have been for you and your marriage is better than ever while that wouldn’t have been true for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve been on this forum more years than I care to count. The relationship discussion was a big draw for me when my kids were little and even beyond that. I really wanted to divorce DH. However, there was so much logic and push here to stick it out, etc and I’m glad I did. Now I see posts with similar problems and the majority of advice seems to lean towards divorce. What changed?
More options career-wise for women. Women see more friends and kids thriving post divorce. I was the second divorce in my social circle. There was so much pessimism and misinformation about what would happen to me. 15 years later, 1/2 are divorced. No one had that knee-jerk doom and gloom prediction anymore.
In earlier generations, there were several factors that kept women in bad marriages for longer. They typically did not have the skills or career to earn a good income to support a family and the stigma of being a divorcee. Fortunately both of those are not as prevalent as they once were.
My parents are divorced and it was really the best thing all around. I sometimes post in these thread to provide a point of view that divorce is not always going to be devastating to the children. It is a false but commonly held belief that children are always traumatized by a divorce. My parents are now happily remarried to other people and my siblings and I are all in healthy long-term marriages. Why be completely miserable in life if your spouse is a jerk or you are just fundamentally not compatible.
Just to offer a different perspective, my parents divorced and it had a huge affect on me, in ways I still don't fully understand. I hated the separate families, the step mom/brothers/sisters, the split holidays, the hurt is caused our family, the financial stress it put on everyone. Sure we looked fine on the surface, but i was (and still am) really torn up about it - that was over 20 years. My relationship with my father was never the same, especially after he remarried. As other PPs have mentioned, every situation is different, it's really difficult to know how it will affect your kids. PP, it's great that everything worked out well for you. I've never shared my feelings with my parents, so it's very likely they felt everything worked out well for them too.
I am sorry that you have continued pain. But happy marriages do not end in divorce. What is your counter factual? A fantasy of a different marriage for your parents? Divorced but not remarried?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Posters trash people that reconcile after an affair. Even if somebody was faithful for 20 years, the family/marriage was happy, the cheater is extremely remorseful and in individual therapy. They call the woman (oddly not the men) all kinds of names...spineless, weak, etc. 80% do not divorce and many of those are women that are working and successful.
Marriages can end up being stronger and more fulfilling in the 2nd half when blown open and rebuilt. Not all situations are the same yet this board comes at it as if all cheaters/people and type of affairs are the same. Some cheaters are awful, some are not.
I agree there is a real delusion from some women about how great divorce will be financially for them. They often are shocked at the financial situation after.
The grass isn’t greener a lot of the time.
DCUM will trash a guy that cheats but I think a woman that cheats gets it worse - they get the woman plus the incel men. As for reconciling with a cheating spouse, I don’t think many guys post about that as far as I’ve seen. There could be less guys posting on DCUM, plus I believe less guys take back the cheating wife and likely fewer will admit that they have.
I don’t agree with having a sliding scale of cheating. It doesn’t matter in the sense if was a one night stand, a long term affair, OW baby, a sex addiction, after 3 years of marriage or after 20, because there are people that are willing to work on changing from any of those things, and there are some that are not. There are some people willing to move past any of those things no matter if the partner does the work or not, and there are some that cannot. I learned long ago that people make different choices than I would given the exact same situation and we can both be happy with those choices. So it’s possible that the grass is really greener for me on the other side while it wouldn’t have been for you and your marriage is better than ever while that wouldn’t have been true for me.
Maybe people shouldn't cheat.
And there's no such thing as sex addiction - see the DMS V.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Posters trash people that reconcile after an affair. Even if somebody was faithful for 20 years, the family/marriage was happy, the cheater is extremely remorseful and in individual therapy. They call the woman (oddly not the men) all kinds of names...spineless, weak, etc. 80% do not divorce and many of those are women that are working and successful.
Marriages can end up being stronger and more fulfilling in the 2nd half when blown open and rebuilt. Not all situations are the same yet this board comes at it as if all cheaters/people and type of affairs are the same. Some cheaters are awful, some are not.
I agree there is a real delusion from some women about how great divorce will be financially for them. They often are shocked at the financial situation after.
The grass isn’t greener a lot of the time.
DCUM will trash a guy that cheats but I think a woman that cheats gets it worse - they get the woman plus the incel men. As for reconciling with a cheating spouse, I don’t think many guys post about that as far as I’ve seen. There could be less guys posting on DCUM, plus I believe less guys take back the cheating wife and likely fewer will admit that they have.
I don’t agree with having a sliding scale of cheating. It doesn’t matter in the sense if was a one night stand, a long term affair, OW baby, a sex addiction, after 3 years of marriage or after 20, because there are people that are willing to work on changing from any of those things, and there are some that are not. There are some people willing to move past any of those things no matter if the partner does the work or not, and there are some that cannot. I learned long ago that people make different choices than I would given the exact same situation and we can both be happy with those choices. So it’s possible that the grass is really greener for me on the other side while it wouldn’t have been for you and your marriage is better than ever while that wouldn’t have been true for me.
Anonymous wrote:Posters trash people that reconcile after an affair. Even if somebody was faithful for 20 years, the family/marriage was happy, the cheater is extremely remorseful and in individual therapy. They call the woman (oddly not the men) all kinds of names...spineless, weak, etc. 80% do not divorce and many of those are women that are working and successful.
Marriages can end up being stronger and more fulfilling in the 2nd half when blown open and rebuilt. Not all situations are the same yet this board comes at it as if all cheaters/people and type of affairs are the same. Some cheaters are awful, some are not.
I agree there is a real delusion from some women about how great divorce will be financially for them. They often are shocked at the financial situation after.
The grass isn’t greener a lot of the time.
Anonymous wrote:It's been that way forever. I'm divorced for 7 years now and my ex-wife would foolishly come here for relationship advice. She got some of the juice to instigate a divorce (as well as horrible legal advice) right on this forum. I post here to try to give a wake-up call to women who think divorce is going to be great, and a judge is going to hand them everything. My ex is currently 100 pounds overweight, single, living in a home that smells like cat urine, and the kids don't respect her.
If you value marriage at all I'd leave this place and never come back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IMO the tone has changed because social media has become prevalent in the last decade. Twitter was founded in 2006. Facebook founded in 2004.
People can now see what kind of stress their friends, family, relatives are under with pictures and videos of all the incidents. They can also see what life is like in a happy and unhappy marriage.
Honestly - look at this video of a mother and child interacting and tell me this family is 'healthier' than someone who decided to divorce an argumentative spouse and take the children to a healthier environment.
Don’t be ridiculous.
Other than Conway’s daughter, people only post the happy or fabricated stuff.
Nobody can tell what is going on in anyone’s life from social media. It’s a farce.