Each year there are some 270,000 marriages in the UK and 150,000 divorces. Each year divorce directly affects 80,000 more children – more than a million children are affected by divorce in the UK. In the Western World there are 20,000 divorces per week – that’s 1,000,000 per year.
The reasons given for divorce (as filed at the courts) is 45% Unreasonable Behaviour and 21% Adultery. The reality that 80% of relationships suffer from infidelity, as a result of an inability to keep off ‘the road to fear’ and its associated behaviours, plus the inevitable consequences of loss of connection and lack of a healthy, balanced polarity in the relationship.
The grass can often seem greener elsewhere, especially when there is a misalignment between partners’ values, compounded by emotionally immature behaviour, leading to severe disconnection. When in a state of fear, anxiety or depression, things always seem worse than they are, and we tend to focus on negatives and blow them out of proportion. In this state of mind, failure becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. Before making any decisions, a rational view of the whole state of the relationship is required.
Some of us unfortunately get together for entirely the wrong reasons (without any rational basis). Others of us have started to understand ourselves better and have changed, or maybe we realise that we don’t understand ourselves and decide to change our lives in order to ‘find ourselves’. In either case, this can lead to one person (or both) in the relationship changing and growing apart from the other.
So for some of us, ending a relationship with grace, understanding and acceptance is the best option.
When contemplating staying together for the kids, or when there is a clear determination from both parties to make it work, then developing a deep understanding of each other’s needs and values is essential. There are 6 fundamental human needs, plus we all have dozens of values and valued activities that compete for our attention. In all cases of value or need, we can meet that value or need in an unhealthy way (causing relationship stress) or we can meet them in a much more healthy and empowering way.
There are relationship therapists who believe most marriages are worth saving. It is certainly the case that through the power of truth, firstly with yourself and then with your spouse or partner, there are few problems that are insurmountable. A majority of marriages fail due to lack of communication, lack of affection, criticism/nagging and contempt, as opposed to the more serious issues where they are better off terminated for the health and well-being of everyone involved.
Andy and Diane can show you whether and how you are meeting your human needs right now – the positive and negative effects on your relationship, plus we have a process to elicit your values and underlying motivations, which again can have different effects on your level of connection with others. This is a sophisticated process that can lead to dramatic insights and decisions made to improve your and your partner’s experience of life and each other, with immediate effect.
Be the change that you want to see…..
Does Divorce Lead to Happiness?
Getting divorced does not necessarily lead to happiness. In fact, the two are not really linked at all. The wounds can last for several years, as can the nagging doubt over doing it better next time, or the entrenchment of ‘never again’. It is vital to regain any lost identity and in fact find your true identity, cut emotional ties with any negative past emotions. When it is impossible not to see your ex, you don’t have the luxury of time to help the healing process – so only understanding and acceptance will work.
The terrible divorce statistics for first marriages (fast approaching 50% failure rate), only get worse second (65% failure) and third time around (75% failure).
Research in the USA has indicated that divorced individuals are no happier 5 years after their divorce, than when they were getting divorced (even those that had remarried). Divorce did not typically reduce symptoms of depression, raise self-esteem, or increase a sense of mastery. The same study showed that five years later, two thirds of those on the verge of divorce, who stayed together, were in fact significantly happier [Note: the research showed an improvement in happiness, as opposed to high levels of happiness]. Three reasons were given for this: (i) enduring problems… which eventually eased, (ii) working to solve problems, change behaviour, or improve communication, (iii) the individuals finding alternative ways to improve their own happiness and build a good and happy life despite a mediocre marriage (in this study, three out of four unhappily married adults were married to someone who was happy with the marriage).
OK, so divorce is not, at least in itself, the answer to a happier future!
In our experience, only truth and learning can set you free from the past and ensure that the future is brighter. Whilst time can gradually reduced the intensity and rawness of any feelings, it takes learning to do things differently to create an empowering new future.