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TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com readers...roll mouse over, click on Thanks to a seemingly unending barrage of studies and related media reports, most are familiar with the widely touted statistic that one in two marriages end in divorce.
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Decline
in divorce may be attributed to aging U.S.
population
Newswise — Thanks to a
seemingly unending barrage of studies and
related media reports, most are familiar
with the widely touted statistic that one in
two marriages end in divorce.
More recent data,
however, suggests that the widely touted
50/50 ratio is leaning more in favor of
marital success than it once did. Although
exactly why the numbers are shifting in
favor of marriage is not something most
researchers can precisely pin down, most
seem to agree that after more than 100 years
of rising divorce rates in the United
States, that number dramatically decreased
around 1980.
Dr. Janet Belsky, an
expert on lifespan development and professor
of psychology at Middle Tennessee State
University, said that one thing to consider
when surmising why the divorce rate seems to
be slowing considerably is the overall age
of the population.
“As food for thought,
perhaps a good deal of decline in the
divorce rate is just due to the aging of the
population,” she observed. “People tend to
get divorced when they are younger, so
naturally, you would have less divorce
happening if a higher percentage of people
are in their older years.”
According to one
reported cited in The New York Times,
researchers have said that about 60 percent
of all divorces ultimately come to an end
during the first decade of marriage.
However, per the same study, when it comes
to college graduates, the divorce rate for
this group during the first 10 years of
marriage has dropped to just 16 percent for
those who married between 1990 and ’94;
that’s down from 27 percent of those who wed
between 1970 and ’75.
Belsky is among those
who are not surprised by the possible
correlation between more education and the
decline in divorce numbers.
“As a lifespan teacher,
I always take a poll to see what percentage
of my (college) students have had parents
who divorced, or have grown up in a
single-parent family, because it’s typically
about 50 percent,” she said. “(My students)
are well aware of the depressing divorce
statistics and they’re vitally interested in
how can they choose the right person? How
can they make marriage last?
“One big change I see
is that students now feel that it’s not
appropriate to get married at a young age,”
she continued. “I see college students
expressing that you need to put off marriage
until you are well-established in your
career. In other words, today marriage
actually comes last as an adult transition,
and sometimes even well after a baby has
arrived.
“When you elevate
marriage as something to do after you ‘get
your life together,’” Belsky said, “I
believe you actually make it more important.
It’s then something that’s been carefully
considered. You just don't rush into having
a wedding for a weddings' sake.”
Consequently, reasoned
Belsky, having “a thoughtful approach”
toward marriage helps make one “more likely
to ‘stay the course’ and usually results in
being committed to staying married”—never
minding, of course, that “the research also
shows this results in a lower chance of
getting divorced.”
Nonetheless, per one
twice-divorced single mom, the lack of a
college education had nothing to do with her
divorces, she said, but prolonged
bitterness, repeated physical and emotional
abuse, and cheating did.
Now 42, Lorie Mitchell
admitted married young when she left high
school for California, where she wed her
first husband, David, then 20 and in the
military, only a month after she turned 18.
“We went to a month of
counseling classes before we got married to
make sure we were wanting the same things in
life, that we didn’t have different
agendas,” she said. “It really was helpful
and it made us think, and if you’re open to
it—and we both really were—it helped us be
able to go home and really talk about
things. We knew (marriage) wasn’t going to
be easy from the beginning, but we both
wanted it.”
In spite of their
youth, Mitchell said, both she and her
husband initially were “very committed to
the marriage.” Looking back now, though, she
said she was “too idealistic and too willing
to forgive things I shouldn’t forgive over
and over and over again.”
After the couple had
children, Mitchell was torn between
preserving the marriage for the sake of
their two young sons or living with
behaviors she found difficult to endure.
“We did bring up the
idea of marriage counseling again, but by
the time we did, it was too late then. There
was too much water under the bridge, we’d
said too many nasty things,” she recalled,
“You can’t take that stuff back, but I think
if we had gone (to counseling again) sooner,
before the bitterness set in so deeply, it
would have made a big difference.”
In her mid-20s,
Mitchell married again and had another son
during that marriage, but unfortunately, it
was a far more tumultuous union than her
first. In fact, if not for a rapid rescue by
her oldest brother John, who is now a
sheriff’s deputy, Mitchell is adamant that
she most likely would have lost her life as
a result of the extreme abuse she suffered.
“I won’t forgive
endlessly now, but when I was young, I put
up with more,” Mitchell said. “Having
children made me more forgiving, because I
wanted my children to have a father, but at
the same time, after I had children, my
sights were set higher in regard to
relationships and who I would want around my
children.”
A single parent for the
past 10 years, Mitchell’s youngest son
graduated early, at 17, in May. And it’s
only quite recently, she said, that she’s
begun to steal time away from parenting to
date again.
“I’m older now, and I’d
be just as committed to a romantic
relationship today as when I was younger,
but my heart is harder,” she conceded.
Additionally, not unlike many single women
her age, Mitchell isn’t so sure marriage is
something she’d ever do again.
“I’ve been married
twice and it didn’t work in spite of my
dedication to it, so my view now is the
paper, the marriage license, doesn’t make a
difference,” she said. “Plus, I expect more
now, because I’ve accepted some really bad
behaviors in the past. … I even did
individual marriage counseling—counseling on
my own when my husband wouldn’t do it—but I
really don’t see a need in marriage for me
anymore.
“I am still a big
believer in counseling,” she added, “and you
have to be totally honest to do any kind of
counseling, and I believe in marriage, but
for me, I don’t see a need.
“If my kids were
younger and still needed a significant male
in their lives, then I’d consider it, but
they are already grown,” she reasoned. “I’m
not looking for a father and for a mate, I
am looking only for me at this point. My
children will be friends with someone I
chose to have a relationship with, but he
would not be their father.”
With two failed
marriages and three grown children added to
her life experiences, Mitchell—as well as
many others—“are more practical and
knowledgeable” when it comes to weighing the
pros and cons of marriage these days, Belsky
said.
“For instance,” the professor observed,
“while my students still want to find their
passionate soul mate, they really understand
that passion wanes after the first few
years. They also understand that you have to
marry someone who shares your values, and
it’s important to find a person who is
together and knows how to love. Plus, when
you get married in your late 20s or 30s, you
are more likely to stay with a partner
simply because you have had ample time to
have those horrible dating experiences--you
don't have a fantasy about who or what is
waiting out there in terms of the single
life.
Today’s 20somethings,
Belsky said, realize “ that just being
carried away by romance is a total no-no.
And don't neglect the role here of peer
pressure. After all, your friends will think
you are an idiot for making that
irresponsible choice.”
Still, suggested the
professor-turned-author, “In the long run,
there may be fewer divorces because people
are more reluctant to get married in the
first place; they don't feel they ‘have to
get married’ just to be married. Today,
there are so many alternatives such as
living together, so people put the bar much
higher for entering that (marital) state.”
Baby boomers
especially, she said, may be reluctant to
wed if they’ve already “been there, done
that” and have children.
“Getting married in
your 50s, and particularly for women, really
doesn't make all that much sense to some.
You are either used to the single life or,
for both men and women, it makes much more
sense to just live together,” she said,
“because there is no reason—such as
children--to actually get married at all.”
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