by Dr. Michael Oberschneider
Dr. Mike,
When
is the right time to get a divorce when you have children? My husband
and I have been unhappy together for years, and while both of us agree
that our marriage is over, he thinks that it’s best to stay married
until the children go off to college. He thinks that we shouldn’t “rob
our children of a stable childhood just because we screwed up” and he is
adamant that we stay together for several more years. Our children are
12 and 16. I cannot do yet another cold and loveless holiday season for
the children or myself. Thank you!
A Concerned Parent
-----
Concerned Parent,
Research
and statistics on divorce has shown that January is the most popular
month of the year for people to file for divorce -- especially for
married couples with children. Perhaps this is because married
couple do not want to deprive their children of a happy holiday season. Or
perhaps higher rates of divorce occur in January because of year-end
reflections and resolutions. While many vow to quit smoking or to
exercise more at the start of the year, maybe shedding the emotional
weight of your unwanted husband and marriage is a New Year’s Resolution
to make for yourself.
But knowing when exactly to end a marriage
is a very personal decision to make. In your marriage the right time for
your husband is after the children depart the home for college, and for
you it is now.
While your husband’s approach is arguably
admirable -- the idea of sacrificing his own happiness for the wellbeing
of his children -- it is also a dangerous approach for a few important
reasons. First, if you are both truly unhappy and the marriage is over,
your children at 12 and 16 are likely aware of this, and it is only a
matter of time until they become negatively impacted by it. You write
that you experienced “yet another cold and loveless holiday season,” and
the concern then would be that your children observed or experienced
the same thing for themselves. Second, as parents we are teachers and
our children learn from what we model. If your children are being raised
in a home where “cold and loveless” is normal, than they are vulnerable
to experience and repeat that for themselves in later relationships.
And
third, you are only human, and if you remain unhappy long enough,
larger problems could occur for you and/or your husband -- a higher rate
of stress/anxiety, depression or acting-out behaviors (e.g., excessive
drinking or infidelity).
Domestic abuse, child abuse, infidelity,
financial problems, personality disorders or mental illness, alcoholism
or drug abuse, and blended family struggles are several of the main
reasons for why marriages end. Sometimes the reasons for falling out of
love are less clear; a once happy and healthy marriage can become
challenged by having or raising children or by the changes that come
with age and time. The factors contributing to your unhappiness are not
clear to me based on what you have written -- and the factors may or may
not even be entirely clear to your husband or you as well.
I
recommend that you and your husband meet with a well-trained and
experienced mental health professional in your area of need. A good
couple’s therapist should be able to help your husband and you to get on
the same page and to provide you both with the roadmap you need to
negotiate things moving forward.
I would encourage both you and
your husband to have an open mind should you choose to meet with a
therapist. Struggling couples can sometimes declare that their marriage
is over and that they need a therapist’s guidance to end it correctly
for themselves and their children. However, with great effort, changes,
and time, sometimes these sorts of couples end up addressing their
problems and recreating a happy and healthy life together. In contrast,
other married couples sometimes seek therapy with the strong hope that
the therapist and therapy process will help them to save their marriage.
However, even with great effort, sometimes the changes are slow to come
or not meaningful enough and sometimes divorce then ends up being the
best outcome for these sorts of couples.
In the end, the decision
to divorce (or to not divorce) is a very important one; the impact it
will have on your husband and you and your children will be life long,
so you want to do everything you can to get it right -- before, during
and after. Therapy should give you the insight and self-awareness and
the tools to make the best decision for you and your family -- the end
goal being one happy home for all involved or two happy homes for all
involved.
Source:
http://patch.com/virginia/ashburn/divorce-new-years-resolution-0?