Hi Alistair!
This is attorney Mike L. Weening! Count me in! I am always supportive of anguished father's that are willing to share their stories of love for their children. I would only hope that many more fathers would open up and share their experiences on the web! There is strength in numbers!
Good luck to you and the website!
Mike L. Weening, Esq.
Visit Mike L Weening @
www.fathersrightsinc.com
Links:
Do visit the website for American Coalition of Fathers and Children:
http://www.acfc.org/
The Hidden Effects of Divorce on Children
http://www.darndivorce.com/the-hidden-effects-of-divorce-on-children/
I have found this article to be highly informative and I emphasize on the importance of reading it. We adults happen to be selfish at times and undermine the real needs of a life we bring in this world. Divorcing parents often think that their decision would not affect the life of their kids simply because they are "too young to understand what's goin on". They often think that their kids will eventually get "used to it".
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Quick Facts: 80% of children with divorcing or divorced parents experience some form of Parental Alienation. 20% of these children experience such behaviors at least once a day (Source: American Bar Association). In 2002, women received physical placement in 84.4% of the cases and men 15.6% (Source: U.S. Census Bureau, released February 2005). About 85% of custodial parents are mothers (Source: Journal of Family Psychology. 2003, Vol. 17, No. 2, 206–219). Three out of four teenage suicides (75%) occur in households where a parent has been absent (Source: Elshtain, Jean Bethke, "Family Matters: The Plight of America’s Children." The Christian Century, July 1993.) |
Does Divorce
Make People Happy?
Findings from a Study
of Unhappy Marriages
Call it the "divorce assumption." Most people assume that a person stuck in a
bad marriage has two choices: stay married and miserable or get a divorce and
become happier. But now come the findings from the
first scholarly study ever to test that assumption, and these findings challenge
conventional wisdom. Conducted by a team of leading family scholars headed by
University of Chicago sociologist Linda Waite, the study found no evidence that
unhappily married adults who divorced were typically any happier than unhappily
married people who stayed married.
Even more dramatically, the
researchers also found that two-thirds of unhappily married spouses who stayed
married reported that their marriages were happy five years later. In addition,
the most unhappy marriages reported the most dramatic turnarounds: among those
who rated their marriages as very unhappy, almost eight out of 10 who avoided
divorce were happily married five years later.
The research team used data collected by the
National Survey of Family and Households, a nationally representative survey
that extensively measures personal and marital happiness. Out of 5,232 married
adults interviewed in the late Eighties, 645 reported being unhappily married.
Five years later, these same adults were interviewed again. Some had divorced or
separated and some had stayed married.
The study found that on average
unhappily married adults who divorced were no happier than unhappily married
adults who stayed married when rated on any of 12 separate measures of
psychological well-being. Divorce did not typically reduce symptoms of
depression, raise self-esteem, or increase a sense of mastery. This was true
even after controlling for race, age, gender, and income. Even unhappy spouses
who had divorced and remarried were no happier on average than those who stayed
married. "Staying married is not just for the childrens' sake. Some divorce is
necessary, but results like these suggest the benefits of divorce have been
oversold," says Linda J. Waite.
Why doesn't divorce typically make adults
happier? The authors of the study suggest that while eliminating some stresses
and sources of potential harm, divorce may create others as well. The decision
to divorce sets in motion a large number of processes and events over which an
individual has little control that are likely to deeply affect his or her
emotional well-being. These include the response of one's spouse to divorce; the
reactions of children; potential disappointments and aggravation in custody,
child support, and visitation orders; new financial or health stresses for one
or both parents; and new relationships or marriages.
The team of family
experts that conducted the study included Linda J. Waite, Lucy Flower Professor
of Sociology at the University of Chicago and coauthor of The Case for Marriage;
Don Browning, Professor Emeritus of the University of Chicago Divinity School;
William J. Doherty, Professor of Family Social Science and Director of the
Marriage and Family Therapy program at the University of Minnesota; Maggie
Gallagher, affiliate scholar at the Institute for American Values and coauthor
of The Case for Marriage; Ye Luo, a research associate at the Sloan Center on Parents,
Children and Work at the University of Chicago; and Scott Stanley, Co-Director
of the Center for Marital and Family Studies at the University of Denver.
Marital Turnarounds: How Do Unhappy Marriages Get
Happier?
To follow up on the dramatic findings that two-thirds of
unhappy marriages had become happy five years later, the researchers also
conducted focus group interviews with 55 formerly unhappy husbands and wives who
had turned their marriages around. They found that many currently happily
married spouses have had extended periods of marital unhappiness, often for
quite serious reasons, including alcoholism, infidelity, verbal abuse, emotional
neglect, depression, illness, and work reversals.
Why did these
marriages survive where other marriages did not? Spouses' stories of how their
marriages got happier fell into three broad headings: the marital endurance
ethic, the marital work ethic, and the personal happiness ethic.
The Powerful
Effects of Commitment
Spouses interviewed in the
focus groups whose marriages had turned around generally had a low opinion of
the benefits of divorce, as well as friends and family members who supported the
importance of staying married. Because of their intense commitment to their
marriages, these couples invested great effort in enduring or overcoming
problems in their relationships, they minimized the importance of difficulties
they couldn't resolve, and they actively worked to belittle the attractiveness
of alternatives.
The study's findings are consistent with other
research demonstrating the powerful effects of marital commitment on marital
happiness. A strong commitment to marriage as an institution, and a powerful
reluctance to divorce, do not merely keep unhappily married people locked in
misery together. They also help couples form happier bonds. To avoid divorce,
many assume, marriages must become happier. But it is at least equally true that
in order to get happier, unhappy couples or spouses must first avoid divorce.
"In most cases, a strong commitment to staying married not only helps couples
avoid divorce, it helps more couples achieve a happier marriage," notes research
team member Scott Stanley.
Would most unhappy spouses who divorced have
ended up happily married if they had stuck with their marriages?
The
researchers who conduced the study cannot say for sure whether unhappy spouses
who divorced would have become happy had they stayed with their marriages. In
most respects, unhappy spouses who divorced and unhappy spouses who stayed
married looked more similar than different (before the divorce) in terms of
their psychological adjustment and family background. While unhappy spouses who
divorced were on average younger, had lower household incomes, were more likely
to be employed or to have children in the home, these differences were typically
not large.
Were the marriages that ended in divorce much worse than
those that did not? There is some evidence for this point of view. Unhappy
spouses who divorced reported more conflict and were about twice as likely to
report violence in their marriage than unhappy spouses who stayed married.
However, marital violence occurred in only a minority of unhappy marriages: 21
percent of unhappy spouses who divorced reported husband-to-wife violence,
compared to nine percent of unhappy spouses who stayed married.
On the
other hand, if only the worst marriages ended up in divorce, one would expect
divorce to be associated with important psychological benefits. Instead,
researchers found that unhappily married adults who divorced were no more likely
to report emotional and psychological improvements than those who stayed
married. In addition, the most unhappy marriages reported the most dramatic
turnarounds: among those who rated their marriages as very unhappy, almost eight
out of 10 who avoided divorce were happily married five years later.
More
research is needed to establish under what circumstances divorce improves or
lessens adult well-being, as well as what kinds of unhappy marriages are most or
least likely to improve if divorce is avoided.
Other Findings
Other findings of the study based on the National Survey Data are:
Courtesy AmericanValues.org