Men And Women Were Asked Why They Really Divorced. Here’s What They Said

I just returned home from a few weeks in The Big Apple where most of my closest friends live. I was very disappointed to learn that so many of them are either in the process of divorce or about to file for divorce. Too many to be exact! I think a lot of it has to do with how rough the last recession was on them and also the duration of their marriage. It is very hard to stay with the same person for 20 plus years unless they are truly your perfect match and soulmate=unfortunately, this is not the case with the majority of married couples! Even Mark Sanford is separated from the woman who he ended his marriage for! 🙁

Ask a newly divorced person what went wrong in their marriage and you’re likely to get a polite, pat version of the story: We simply grew apart. We wanted different things in life. I couldn’t live with him anymore. It’s not every day you get to hear the frank, no-holds-barred version of what led someone to divorce, but earlier this week, divorcés on Reddit revealed those details. The answers were as honest and unflinching as you’d expect from an anonymous forum.

1. She couldn’t imagine having kids with him.
“I realized that I wouldn’t trust him to take care of any kids we might have someday. And then I realized, if I felt that way, why would I trust him around me?”

2. He married a narcissist.
“We divorced because she knew I had her figured out. She couldn’t manipulate me and control me anymore. Once I understood narcissism, it was over.”
That goes both ways folks! Statistically speaking, many more men are narcissists than women!

3. They really did just grow apart.

“We were married for eight years. I think we both knew it wasn’t forever. I loved her dearly and she loved me. However, there was always something we couldn’t provide each other. We just ended up growing apart and fell into gap that was never going to close. I have no regrets with the marriage. I have two wonderful girls, one of which I adopted that was hers with another man. We are still good friends and talk daily. We have our arguments but for the most part, we get along great for ex-spouses and people are always impressed by it. I still spend the holidays with her family even though she is in another relationship. I get along great with him, too.”

4. She cheated.
“We found out that I couldn’t have kids without some expensive science getting involved. She couldn’t handle that, and took matters into her own hands and got pregnant by someone else. I was prepared to forgive her behavior up until that point. She wanted to come back later, but burned bridges and all…”
Or he cheated which again is statistically much more common! 🙁

5. They got married too young.
“I was too young (married at 23 to a 30-year-old) and we simply couldn’t make it work. We became different people from who we were when we first met and had a fairly amicable split. One of our main problems was that we had never really discussed the future properly (in detail, not just ‘oooh, won’t it be nice when we’re old!’) and I think we both assumed a lot about each other’s priorities. For example, I am very urban and he wanted us to move to the countryside. Neither of us was ‘wrong,’ we simply weren’t right for each other.”

6. He was too dependent on her.
“During the 10 years we were together (married for six), he never held a job for very long. At first, I believed his excuses — it was never his fault — and I tried to be supportive. But it got to be too much. I got tired of him never taking responsibility for being late or for being lazy. The last two years we were married, I was working two jobs (one full-time and one part-time) and he was unemployed for about a year. Did he help out at all around the house? Nope. I’d get home at 11 p.m. at night after having been gone since 7 a,m. and he’d demand dinner. He never did the laundry or cleaned anything. He spent all day playing video games and draining our bank account. I finally got smart and left.”
Or she was too dependent on him and would amount to less than zero without him! 🙁

7. They realized they had married for the wrong reason.

“We got a divorce because we never should have gotten married in the first place. But we wanted ‘the dream.’ It’s amazing how many people of my generation this happens to. Thankfully, we realized it for ourselves before children were involved.”
What else is new?? 🙁

8. He couldn’t trust her.
“For one, a lack of trust (on my part). I caught her in too many lies and ended up second guessing everything she told me or failed to tell me. Basically, I ended up reading too much into everything she did because I never knew or trusted what she was saying or her motives. She got sick of it and left me.”
Or she didn’t trust him which again is much more common and the reason for my broken engagements! 🙁

9. She could no longer stand the criticism.
“We stopped wanting the same things in life and I grew tired of constantly being criticized. I didn’t think the commitment [of marriage] required me to feel broken.”
That goes both ways too, but women tend to verbally criticize men more as women are much more vocal about their feelings.

10. He wanted out for the kids’ sake.
“I married her when I was young and my mother had just died. I felt I needed someone. It was a marriage of convenience for the next ten years. It was when we had kids and were forced to interact with each other that I could not stand it anymore. I asked out of the marriage when the kids (twins) were 3 years-old because I felt if they were any older it would affect them too much and I would not be able to leave. I am very happy I did it. Although the financial strain of child support and alimony has been difficult, I feel it was the best thing for me and the children. I remember actually thinking that I have one life to live and there is no ‘do over’ unless I did it when I did.”

11. He grew up. She didn’t.
“We were incompatible on an emotional level. I kept hoping she would grow up. She didn’t. She stayed the same person I married. Go figure. A year of couples therapy, six months of personal therapy for me, 15 years and three kids later…we got divorced.”
I keep hearing “I grew up but HE didn’t. The Peter Pan syndrome! 🙁

12. Their marriage was virtually passionless.
“I had a comfortable and ‘nice’ marriage for 11 years. I’m not sure if we were ever passionate, but by the end, we were much more like good companions who had maintenance sex once a week. Then she had an affair with a co-worker and I realized I wasn’t really in love and happy anymore.”
That passionless comfortable union ends the second you fall head over heels in deep passion with your soulmate! At that point, it becomes unbearable to stay in the marriage! You really need to live in a very structured environment to be satisfied with just good companions! Living in an isolated vacuum allows for security without temptation! Kind of like being very happy to get a Hershey Bar all the time because you never got a Godiva! 🙁

SOURCE:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/11/21/why-people-get-divorced-_n_6200210.html

The War of The Roses

3 thoughts on “Men And Women Were Asked Why They Really Divorced. Here’s What They Said

  • Anonymous

    I’m guessing Number 7 is the most common, other than the dirty looks I got when laughing through War of the Roses. The battle lines were drawn and a couple of lawyers were able to buy new vehicles. Ha
    Good article.

    Reply
  • Marisa SungPost author

    I just returned home from a few weeks in The Big Apple where most of my closest friends live. I was very disappointed to learn that so many of them are either in the process of divorce or about to file for divorce. Too many to be exact! I think a lot of it has to do with how rough the last recession was on them and also the duration of their marriage. It is very hard to stay with the same person for 20 plus years unless they are truly your perfect match and soulmate=unfortunately, this is not the case with the majority of married couples!

    Ask a newly divorced person what went wrong in their marriage and you’re likely to get a polite, pat version of the story: We simply grew apart. We wanted different things in life. I couldn’t live with him anymore. It’s not every day you get to hear the frank, no-holds-barred version of what led someone to divorce, but earlier this week, divorcés on Reddit revealed those details. The answers were as honest and unflinching as you’d expect from an anonymous forum.

    Once again, the past recession beginning in 2008 was a real deal breaker for scores of people. Now that the economy is better, they can afford to get divorced. I think that the recession caused a great deal of damage that is irreversible at this point. Once a relationship gets to the breaking point it is very difficult to fix.

    The War of the Roses

    Reply
  • Marisa SungPost author

    I just returned home from a few weeks in The Big Apple where most of my closest friends live. I was very disappointed to learn that so many of them are either in the process of divorce or about to file for divorce. Too many to be exact! I think a lot of it has to do with how rough the last recession was on them and also the duration of their marriage. It is very hard to stay with the same person for 20 plus years unless they are truly your perfect match and soulmate=unfortunately, this is not the case with the majority of married couples!

    Ask a newly divorced person what went wrong in their marriage and you’re likely to get a polite, pat version of the story: We simply grew apart. We wanted different things in life. I couldn’t live with him anymore. It’s not every day you get to hear the frank, no-holds-barred version of what led someone to divorce, but earlier this week, divorcés on Reddit revealed those details. The answers were as honest and unflinching as you’d expect from an anonymous forum.

    Once again, the past recession beginning in 2008 was a real deal breaker for scores of people. Now that the economy is better, they can afford to get divorced. I think that the recession caused a great deal of damage that is irreversible at this point. Once a relationship gets to the breaking point it is very difficult to fix.

    The War of the Roses

    Reply

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