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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

Jumping straight into a relationship after divorce

36 replies

Stillstrugglingon · 08/10/2023 06:58

I’m almost divorced now after the most excruciatingly painful two years of my life. I found out ExH was a serial cheat, lost my in-laws and went through a court battle to protect my home which I paid for using a inheritance.

I have two teenage sons who I have focussed on since the split, a crazy dog and some wonderful friends who have kept my spirits up.

What I’ve noticed is that a number of acquaintances around the same age to me (early 40’s) have recently left long-term marriages/relationships too and nearly all of them are with a new partner within months (including ExH). I just don’t get it - but each to their own.

Their social media is filled with date night pics and holidays together after a few months and I get excited over a long dog walk and a glass of wine.

Am I weird?! Friends are worried that I’ll become ‘left behind’. What if I’m never ready?

OP posts:
Nelly10 · 08/10/2023 07:06

Im 12 months in I’m not divorced as yet. I’ve dated etc but nowhere near wanting a relationship, I just do not feel ready at all.

Don't put any pressure on yourself just live your life how you want too.

You’ll know when you are ready.

I get the date night couples too personally I think it’s all abit ott probably trying to convince themselves they’re really happy it’s like putting a sticking plaster on. Just go at your own pace that’s what I’m doing.

Smooshface · 08/10/2023 07:08

There is a difference in how you feel if you gradually drifted apart then if you had your heart ripped out by infidelity.

I'm 3 years since discovering affair, 2 and a half years since we split, and I'm single and okay with that. I've tried dating, at first i just wasn't ready and now i just haven't found anyone that I've gelled with enough.

3 friends i had that split at a similar time are happily loved up, two have moved in with partners. They were the main instigators in ending the relationships and it was a long time coming. The third was also blindsided (but not infidelity) but is now doing great and moving on.

These things take as long as they take. You might be happy alone forever.

BearFacedCheekGrylls · 08/10/2023 07:13

I never thought I’d be ready. Within 9 months EXH had met someone, had met all her family including kids.

I dated a bit, but there was no way I was going to settle. after a good two years I met someone online and we just clicked. Still early days but I’m happy with the slow pace.

Yettisrus2 · 08/10/2023 07:35

I separated 6 years ago. Whilst my ex dated straight away(within weeks he was picking up women), it took me about 2 years to actually rebuild myself as I was a shell of who I was(he was physically and verbally abusive and belittled me almost every day). Then covid struck, and dating wasn't really something you could do. I spent time on me, sorting myself out, getting fit, and just enjoying life.

I did meet someone a couple of years ago, but it never went anywhere. But he did show me that good men are out there and I don't have to pretend to be someone I'm not (I don't have to be ashamed that I'm well educated for instance, my ex hated that).

Now, I just can't find anyone that I like/trust enough to put my happiness in the hands of even though I get lonely at times. I'm very protective of the life I have now.

minieggsandmaltesers · 08/10/2023 07:58

2 years and I'm single.
I can't work out if it's me not being ready or just that there's nobody out there.
I hate OLD and end up deleting my profile repeatedly.
That's said, if someone I liked appeared in real life, I think I'd be ready.
If that makes sense.

Zanatdy · 08/10/2023 08:05

I don’t get it either. My brother who was devastated by his wife leaving him was in a relationship with a colleague within 5 months. They are now married and have a child but I thought it was very quick. Especially since the first 2 months of the separation they were still in talks to see if could work it out (though his ex wife was seeing someone else - who she is also married to now so very unfair)

Stillstrugglingon · 08/10/2023 08:11

@Zanatdy agreed! My ExH begged me to take him back, threatened suicide and put me through hell. A few months later he’s met the love of his life…..
I also don’t understand how women are
so desperate for a man, they move the new guy in, with no regard to their children.
This does seem to be the norm though and maybe it helps people heal and move on. I feel like the weird one.

OP posts:
KajsaKavat · 08/10/2023 08:15

Divorced 12 years and not in a new relationship, I never want to be but every single one of my friends who became single at some point during this time went quite quickly right back into living with another man.

I date sometimes, always hoping for a little fling but find that most people want more (or less).

Oldthyme · 08/10/2023 08:21

Take your time. Learn about yourself during this time. Be selfish and look after No 1.
You’ll know when you’re ready. Took me 12 years!

Findingmeagain · 08/10/2023 08:21

Just as previous posters have said, you will know when you feel ready and there is no rush. I spent 12 months completely single and focusing on the children, home, pets etc. Wouldn't have crossed my mind to look at dating. Couldn't understand how my ex moved on so fast. When I did feel ready I was so worried about being physically with a different person. But when I met the right one it did just click. When exs move on fast it doesn't mean they've healed quicker, it's sometimes just a distraction from their feelings, or trying to prove they are over it and better off now. Its much healthier to spend a bit of time on your own. And dating after divorce is tricky !

LividGas · 08/10/2023 08:25

I’m giving myself a full year before I’m even ready to have sex again, and I am NEVER having a relationship again.

Dalliances only. Two divorces behind me and I’m not about to be lured in a third time.

Plus now I have a toddler which means I have to protect him from nonsense.

(unlike ex, who had a six month relationship within a couple of weeks of being kicked out)

Zanatdy · 08/10/2023 08:26

Stillstrugglingon · 08/10/2023 08:11

@Zanatdy agreed! My ExH begged me to take him back, threatened suicide and put me through hell. A few months later he’s met the love of his life…..
I also don’t understand how women are
so desperate for a man, they move the new guy in, with no regard to their children.
This does seem to be the norm though and maybe it helps people heal and move on. I feel like the weird one.

We were separated years before he did this, but my ex went to work overseas from a few years and then brought back a woman and her teenage son to come and live in his house. My children had met them twice. Now he’s wondering why his daughter is not going to stay, was 50-50, she’s been at mine a few weeks now. I mean it was so predictable now he acts all upset and hurt

SamW98 · 08/10/2023 08:28

I dated within a few months of my split after a 25 year relationship and it was biggest mistake of my life. I wasn’t ready and ended up in a toxic rebound that broke my self confidence and made me doubt myself.

I came out of that relationship in 2020 and been single ever since. I’m not sure i ever want to cohabit again. Maybe just a fairly laid back relationship where we have our own lives but meet in the middle but it’s been impossible so far.

WedRine · 08/10/2023 08:28

I split up with ExH about 8 months before covid was a thing and still am just enjoying this time being on my own.

OneQuestionBefore · 08/10/2023 08:40

They sound co-dependent & scared to be alone.
That’s not love.
You don’t want to be like these people.
And no, it doesnmt make you weird, they are the weird one’s, why wouldn’t take time and enjoy some peace for change 😂?

Didsomeonesaydogs · 08/10/2023 08:48

I think some people just can’t be alone and will overlook yellow or even red flags because they’d rather be in any relationship than be on their own. My mother was one of those people. She put us in some very “suboptimal” situations because she couldn’t be alone. For example, when I was 12 her 2nd marriage broke down in the May (due to infidelity and a bunch of other issues including DV), she met someone in September, moved us in with him in November having known him around 8 weeks (I’m not even joking), and married him within a year of meeting him. He turned out to be an abusive bully (surprise surprise) who she has wasted the last 35 years of her life with. I’m sure on the surface her life looks fine. But she’s lost contact with both her children and her wider family because of his behaviour.

After a divorce or break up of a long term relationship, getting into a new one proves to yourself and everyone else that you were not the “problem” in the marriage. So I think there could be an element of optics and boosting self esteem by proving that you are worthy of being loved.

I also think the economics of living alone long term can be difficult to afford and hard to justify - it’s a lot easier to raise your standard of living when you’re partnered and share all those costs of running a household.

I know some people will say they grieved their marriage while they were still in it, and I thought that made sense, until I got out of mine and realised I had an awful lot of grieving and other processing still to do. I just can’t see how jumping into another relationship within months is healthy.

For context, I’m 16months out from our decision to separate and 10months into living alone. I don’t feel anywhere near ready to date. I have got to the stage where I love my life now and I can’t imagine going back to accommodating anyone else’s choices.

Initially, I promised myself a window of one month per year of the relationship to get my head straight before considering dating, so I’m still only half way through that anyway (and when that’s come to an end I might just double it for good measure!), but after spending 23 years putting other people first, it’s my time now. I figure if I look after myself I’ve got another 30-40 good, independent and active years to enjoy life on my terms. My bestie is a warden in a retirement village and her residents are my inspiration.

If a lovely man who considers me an equal drops into my lap then happy days but I think they’re pretty rare and I feel the many potential downsides outweigh the positives at this point. I’m enjoying my life too much to spend time looking for needles in haystacks when I have no desire to do any needlework!

peacock2 · 08/10/2023 08:56

I've had three years single after splitting from my partner. I simply never even come across single men I find attractive. To be honest I come across very few single men per se. I don't feel I have the time or motivation for internet dating and just don't meet single men in the course of my social or working life. I'm conscious that in my early 50s I am reasonably fit and attractive and this may not always be the case in the future, but with a busy work life, parenting 2 teens and my friendships, I can't see how I can do much about it right now. I wouldn't really want to live with another man again though.

millypeggyandpandora · 08/10/2023 08:57

Didsomeonesaydogs, what a well written and insightful post. I wish I had read your post 5 years ago, I wouldn’t be trying to muster the courage to leave a kind man I don’t love, if I had !
OP… you are doing the right thing xxx

Banana1979 · 08/10/2023 09:04

Don’t look at social media pictures and assume that everything is RosY Some of these pictures are just dates and that’s all that they are
lots of people like to date after a divorce because they want to satisfy sexual or emotional needs. Some people meet somebody and some people don’t
I was in a long term relationship for 14 years When I found out my partner was cheating we might as well be married. He was cheating with one of the school mums that I saw every day I was absolutely mortified.
we never married thank God, otherwise he would’ve been entitled to live in my rented flat and the tiny tiny savings I would’ve had would have been spent divorcing him.
but obviously I kept my flat and he had to move in with his Mum which he has remained A year later
we have a nine-year-old together
divorced or not it was just as devastating I did meet somebody for a few months because I was so lonely and it was a rebound but It didn’t last he couldn’t meet DD as too soon and most nights I’m now sat on the sofa watching bloody Netflix when she’s in bed
it’s hard to go out to meet People because obviously I’m looking after DD and I don’t like online dating
you will meet someone else eventually it will come at a time you least expect it but for now just try to do things that interest you and build your friend network x

Banana1979 · 08/10/2023 09:05

Forgot to add, I am 44

crumpet · 08/10/2023 09:07

It was 10 years before I met someone else. I wasn’t even looking - work, kids, etc were the focus. I also had a good circle of friends, so frankly I wasn’t interested in adding anything else to the mix. But I agree, several people I knew who did divorce were very keen to partner up again.

Nurt · 08/10/2023 09:09

I made this mistake. Dating shortly after a divorce is a receipt for disaster if the person you are dating is also out of a divorce. If it ends it absolutely breaks your heart, even more than the marriage split did as you just feel a complete failure and unloveable. It took my heart 3 years to recover from that.

I think that as humans, we are socially conditioned to seek a coupling otherwise dating sites wouldn’t exist. We have a need to be wanted and loved.

I think what you are doing is the right thing. Focus on the kids and your dog and to be honest just stay single as long as you like. There is nothing wrong with being single. It has many positives and very few negatives.

Darhon · 08/10/2023 09:11

My 2 decades partnership had been seriously dissolving for 3 years before the split. In the last year there was no sex and I was staying for the kids. I’d done lots of reading and processing and was ‘over’ my partner. So when it ended I dated again for a number of reasons. That said, I managed the real ruction in that time which was the loss of my settled life and moving to seeing my kids 50:50. That was a massive loss. I knew my full financial separation would take years and that there wouldn’t be this neat package at the end where my life was rosy. So waiting for this perfect point wouldn’t happen. All that was true, finally sold the joint properly 3 years on. I’ve been with someone for more than 2 years. I can’t ever embark on a relationship baggage free now.

SunsetsInVenice · 08/10/2023 09:13

I know a guy who did this. Wife left him and he was an absolute wreck. Then, after 6 months, he was with someone else, blissfully happy. Still together now 6 years on but then they only see each other of weekends and are always doing fun things with lots of disposable income which always helps!
I don't understand how people can jump from one relationship to the next especially when not even divorced. Not fair on the kids involved either.

SallyWD · 08/10/2023 09:13

It depends on how the marriage ended. Maybe their relationships were essentially dead for years before they split. I wasn't married but was with my ex for 10 years. The last couple of years were awful. We were living separate lives and there was no love or affection between us. When we finally split I did get together with my now DH within weeks but it didn't feel like it was rushed as me and the ex had been over (but officially still together) for so long.
Me and DH have now been together for 21 years so clearly I made the right decision.

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