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Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

If you’re divorced, do you regret it?

135 replies

Magicmouses · 30/08/2023 15:06

Facing a possible divorce right now and wondering how many women regret it, down the line? If you could go back, would you stay married?

OP posts:
Grazyna80 · 30/08/2023 18:12

No. I’ve divorced at 30 . I’m now with a normal person.

Allthecheeseplease · 30/08/2023 18:15

It wasn't easy, for lots of reasons but 13 years on, no regrets.

Runrabbitrun2 · 30/08/2023 18:15

Together 18 years, divorced 5, 2 children were 12,14 at the time.
There were tough times, i left a very comfortable lifestyle, big house, part time working but 5 years down the line now and I can tell you it’s all worth it.
I met my soulmate 6 months after we separated and I’ve never known such happiness, worked hard on my career and now have my big house back but all off my own back and it belongs just to
me. Children have done well, my only regret is not being able to stay in the marriage for them because it did affect them a lot but abusive ex left me no choice.
Im still having to work longer and harder hours to claw my way back fully financially to get the security back most have my age but I like to think of it as a little ‘ girl power’.

Eleganz · 30/08/2023 18:16

He cheated on me. Don't regret it for an instant, only regret not doing it sooner and wasting time trying to fix something that was unfixable.

arethereanyleftatall · 30/08/2023 18:18

@TheGirlFromTomorrow

On reading your post I thought for the first time what my life would be like if we hadn't.

We'd be very well off, probably part retired (50 yo, 2 x good salaries for 25 years) we'd probably go on half a dozen holidays a year. I'd probably get a massage every week and he'd be on the golf course. Lots of fancy meals out.

And still. Nope. No regrets whatsoever.
In fact, I nearly threw up a bit typing that paragraph. Yuck.

Thank goodness he had an affair. Thank you Lord.

Lovelynames123 · 30/08/2023 18:21

No regrets here, I see xh several times a week for long periods and have never felt I did the wrong thing. I'm actually the best off financially I've ever been, love doing everything in my time frame, enjoy my alone time when dc not here...I should never have married him, but I could never regret it because I got my dc from it

LadyMacbethssweetArabianhand · 30/08/2023 18:24

He had an affair, tried to gaslight me and emotionally abused me so, no, I have never regretted getting divorced. I am a much stronger and happier woman without him. I miss having a companion and someone to talk to about the old days and family etc. But I don't miss him. Married for 19 years, divorced for 24.

SpringleDingle · 30/08/2023 18:32

Not at all, marriage was dead. I was a bit sad for what might once have been / should have been. However 5 years on I’m 100% confident it was the right decision. I have a lovely boyfriend, DD 12 is happy, just back from a fab vacation and life with exH was just so darn grey and miserable 😖

Soonenough · 30/08/2023 18:38

I wish I had done it sooner so I would have some chance of getting the life I expected. Found out he was cheating after 28 years . So retirement screwed up , alone when you could most use support. The loss of my family unit is a big disappointment. But I could never forgive and thought about what he'd done every time I looked at him.

Sclover23 · 30/08/2023 18:51

No regrets whatsoever- best decision I ever made.

Thetimeisnow12 · 30/08/2023 18:52

we are 4-5months into separating and him having moved out the house. It was a shitty marriage and he was/is angry. I wanted it for a long time. It’s early days but I’m super sad everyday I lost y family and my kids now have two homes.
it makes me cry a lot :( however I’m hoping to not alwways feel like this

StopStartStop · 30/08/2023 18:53

No.
Dd aged 4 used to look at me in despair when we heard his car approaching the house.
He tried to kill me. And other things.
No regrets.
He's been dead now, eight years. All I regret about that is that I didn't have the knowledge I have now, and had no support at the time, otherwise that bastard would have been in prison.

category12 · 30/08/2023 18:57

I have never regretted it once from when I made the decision. Not once.

I wish a little I'd had the courage to do it earlier but we do what we think is right at the time, don't we?

Gingerkins · 30/08/2023 19:02

Nope! He was a duplicitous twat who lied about meeting the OW and shafted me financially! I’m well rid.

perilady83 · 30/08/2023 19:03

I think its a taboo to admit regretting ir as mainly women instigate and seen as a 'woman power' narrative.

My parents in-laws aunts (around ten couples) all divorced women led in late 1990s. Narrative of female freedom from drudgery & better men out there

Twenty yrs done the line most have said to me (when drunk or sad!) they regret it. Was menopause induced, some met partners but even some of these 'settled' eg a younger former friend to avoid being alone

All are longer term poorer, half with no pension at all eek and yes not seeing adult kids as much inc xmas, sharing grandchild time, even weddinfs and family parties and never seeing lots of relatives again all feature.

Made my cousins and I very focuseed on making marriage work as huge repurcussions on every front and we all were worse off for several years due to it and still feel affects today.

coodawoodashooda · 30/08/2023 19:08

EauNeu · 30/08/2023 17:32

Regret yeah.. Regret not doing it 10 years earlier

Hahahaha!!!

SarahAndQuack · 30/08/2023 19:12

Not at all. I had repressed it quite hard (and there were other things wrong with the marriage; it wasn't why I thought I was getting divorced), but I'm gay, so it wasn't likely to work out. I'm not in touch with him any more, but I know he came out later on too. We were both fairly young. I know my parents still believe I threw away a wonderful secure future; we did have some lovely times, but it was never going to work out.

Gahhhhereheisagain · 30/08/2023 19:14

@perilady83 those were different times. I must admit I roll my eyes at the lack of thought about the realities that the 'LTB' crew give. It ain't easy!
You will be skint (at least for a while)
You will be exhausted
You might have to move
Your kids might have to move schools
They might not get it
They might be very upset or angry
You might feel overwhelmed or suicidal
You could never meet someone again
You might well feel lonely
You will miss your kids when they're with their other parent.
You might miss your old life/ in laws
You might lose friends
You will have less time for you
You could be limited in the jobs you can do

But
It's so worth it. Slow death by abusive, toxic, sexless, passionless, relentless, frustrating marriage? No thanks.

echidna1 · 30/08/2023 19:14

Married at 41, parent at 42, divorced by 49.

Alcoholism killed our marriage - I tried everything to save us (and him!). His behaviour escalated as I worked on myself; behaved very badly in front of our child. I detached from his behaviour so I could divorce with a clear head.

Totally single parented all our Teen's life (19), no maintenance, remortgaged (8 years left), still working (62).

It has been very unfair financially as I had to pay him off (lost his job through his alcoholism); his very wealthy parents took him back home.
He died when our child was 15; never found sobriety.

Do I regret divorcing? Definitely Not!!
It was the right thing to do.
I have had a totally serene life on my own ever since.

Gahhhhereheisagain · 30/08/2023 19:17

@echidna1 sending so many hugs, very similar situation but mine is still alive. Trying to remember the mantra that I didn't cause it, I can't change and he needs to want to.

echidna1 · 30/08/2023 19:26

@Gahhhhereheisagain thank you.
Feel free to pm me if you need to

suburbophobe · 30/08/2023 19:30

Nope.

Best thing ever.

Yes, I brought my kid up alone,

And he is so much more mature than his dad ever was, adult now.

I asked him, did you miss having a dad around. He said, spoke to a friend about that who said "Dads are over-rated".

Well, that was an eye-opener.

Depends on the dad of course....

But the truth is, a lot of them can't be bothered. Leave it to the woman to sort it all. and run off to a new one

Wyksi · 30/08/2023 19:42

No regrets other than not doing years earlier

I’m living my best life

I have two children still living at home with me. One has just finished college and the other is in primary school. The youngest goes to her dad for half of all school holidays and every second weekend

Life has never be easier

C152 · 30/08/2023 19:43

Nope. Should have done it years earlier.

snowdrop2011 · 30/08/2023 19:48

Appleofmyeye2023 · 30/08/2023 17:28

Divorced after 30 years around 2.5 years ago. Not my choice but necessary for unreasonable behaviour

it’s not always easy. There are things I miss. - no one tells you that you’ll see less of your children even if they’re independent, left home and late 20s. They only have so many free weekends and now split that time between ex and I 🙄🥺.

there’s the whole the money part- I am, fortunate that we had enough to live reasonably comfortable lives (we were both retired) , but I feel constantly insecure not to have the a large cushion of joint life savings I worked so hard for, and have to be careful - a bit hard to take when he didn’t work for last 15 years of our marriage and I was sole breadwinner- but that’s price you pay

. I also struggle with random things like dealing with male trades who can be bloody nasty frankly to “older” women , and dealing with making key decisions where there’s no one to validate your thinking. My ex was a good sounding board when not behaving irrationally.

I also still think my ex was the love of my life. He and I had so much in common and thought about the important things in life the same way. So, yes I miss that companionship. But, we could simply no longer live together for reasons not entirely either of our faults. So it is sad. But it was still the right thing to do, frankly the only thing without it becoming a safeguarding issue.

but you balance that with the positives:
I’m not lonely. In fact I’m not lonely anymore I should say. I’ve worked hard at that as it didn’t come easy, but I do now have a great social life and support network. marriage can isolate you more than anything else.

I enjoy not having to second guess someone else’s opinions, views, needs and wants. Especially as they were unpredictable, difficult and unpleasant at times. I’m not walking on egg shells anymore.
I can now wake up in the morning knowing I’ll end the day roughly in same moods as I started and that mood is down to just my interactions with the outside world , or maybe the odd hormone swing still. Im not being dragged down by someone else’s moods, by someone else projecting their emotions onto me, or holding me responsible to fix everything that’s making them unhappy, angry or even just bored.
I can choose precisely what I want to do and when - ok, that’s helped by fact I’m retired!🤷🏼‍♀️

im more at peace I’d say, rather than happier. But then I’ve never been one to think happiness is a transient emotion and chasing happiness is an utter waste of time- we have moments of joy, happiness and excitement but can’t expect to feel those things constantly.

so no regrets. It was sad, yes, but the right decision for both of us.

@Appleofmyeye2023 your description of being the owner of your day and of your moods has made the hairs on the back of my neck stand up.
I am 2 weeks into separation (my choice) and feel absolutely this way

It being so recent, I am simultaneously 100% sad and 100% happy. But all of my feelings, no matter how irrational, illogical, ebullient, are mine and I have only myself to hold to task for how I feel. As another poster has said, I feel freed from living someone else’s life, both practically and emotionally.

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