The
Top
Ten
Myths
of
Divorce
Discussion
of
the
most
common
misinformation
about
divorce
David
Popenoe
1
Because
people
learn
from
their
bad
experiences,
second
marriages
tend
to be
more
successful
than
first
marriages.
Although
many
people
who
divorce
have
successful
subsequent
marriages,
the
divorce
rate
of
remarriages
is in
fact
higher
than
that
of
first
marriages.1
[Sources]
2
Living
together
before
marriage
is a
good
way
to
reduce
the
chances
of
eventually
divorcing.
Many
studies
have
found
that
those
who
live
together
before
marriage
have
a
considerably
higher
chance
of
eventually
divorcing.
The
reasons
for
this
are
not
well
understood.
In
part,
the
type
of
people
who
are
willing
to
cohabit
may
also
be
those
who
are
more
willing
to
divorce.
There
is
some
evidence
that
the
act
of
cohabitation
itself
generates
attitudes
in
people
that
are
more
conducive
to
divorce,
for
example
the
attitude
that
relationships
are
temporary
and
easily
can
be
ended.2
[Sources]
3
Divorce
may
cause
problems
for
many
of
the
children
who
are
affected
by
it,
but
by
and
large
these
problems
are
not
long
lasting
and
the
children
recover
relatively
quickly.
Divorce
increases
the
risk
of
interpersonal
problems
in
children.
There
is
evidence,
both
from
small
qualitative
studies
and
from
large-scale,
long-term
empirical
studies,
that
many
of
these
problems
are
long
lasting.
In
fact,
they
may
even
become
worse
in
adulthood.3
[Sources]
4
Having
a
child
together
will
help
a
couple
to
improve
their
marital
satisfaction
and
prevent
a
divorce.
Many
studies
have
shown
that
the
most
stressful
time
in a
marriage
is
after
the
first
child
is
born.
Couples
who
have
a
child
together
have
a
slightly
decreased
risk
of
divorce
compared
to
couples
without
children,
but
the
decreased
risk
is
far
less
than
it
used
to be
when
parents
with
marital
problems
were
more
likely
to
stay
together
“for
the
sake
of
the
children.”4[Sources]
5
Following
divorce,
the
woman’s
standard
of
living
plummets
by
seventy
three
percent
while
that
of
the
man’s
improves
by
forty
two
percent.
This
dramatic
inequity,
one
of
the
most
widely
publicized
statistics
from
the
social
sciences,
was
later
found
to be
based
on a
faulty
calculation.
A
reanalysis
of
the
data
determined
that
the
woman’s
loss
was
twenty
seven
percent
while
the
man’s
gain
was
ten
percent.
Irrespective
of
the
magnitude
of
the
differences,
the
gender
gap
is
real
and
seems
not
to
have
narrowed
much
in
recent
decades.5
[Sources]
6
When
parents
don’t
get
along,
children
are
better
off
if
their
parents
divorce
than
if
they
stay
together.
A
recent
large-scale,
long-term
study
suggests
otherwise.
While
it
found
that
parents’
marital
unhappiness
and
discord
have
a
broad
negative
impact
on
virtually
every
dimension
of
their
children’s
well-being,
so
does
the
fact
of
going
through
a
divorce.
In
examining
the
negative
impacts
on
children
more
closely,
the
study
discovered
that
it
was
only
the
children
in
very
high
conflict
homes
who
benefited
from
the
conflict
removal
that
divorce
may
bring.
In
lower-conflict
marriages
that
end
in
divorce—and
the
study
found
that
perhaps
as
many
as
two
thirds
of
the
divorces
were
of
this
type—the
situation
of
the
children
was
made
much
worse
following
a
divorce.
Based
on
the
findings
of
this
study,
therefore,
except
in
the
minority
of
high-conflict
marriages
it is
better
for
the
children
if
their
parents
stay
together
and
work
out
their
problems
than
if
they
divorce.6
[Sources]
7
Because
they
are
more
cautious
in
entering
marital
relationships
and
also
have
a
strong
determination
to
avoid
the
possibility
of
divorce,
children
who
grow
up in
a
home
broken
by
divorce
tend
to
have
as
much
success
in
their
own
marriages
as
those
from
intact
homes.
Marriages
of
the
children
of
divorce
actually
have
a
much
higher
rate
of
divorce
than
the
marriages
of
children
from
intact
families.
A
major
reason
for
this,
according
to a
recent
study,
is
that
children
learn
about
marital
commitment
or
permanence
by
observing
their
parents.
In
the
children
of
divorce,
the
sense
of
commitment
to a
lifelong
marriage
has
been
undermined.7
[Sources]
8
Following
divorce,
the
children
involved
are
better
off
in
stepfamilies
than
in
single-parent
families.
The
evidence
suggests
that
stepfamilies
are
no
improvement
over
single-parent
families,
even
though
typically
income
levels
are
higher
and
there
is a
father
figure
in
the
home.
Stepfamilies
tend
to
have
their
own
set
of
problems,
including
interpersonal
conflicts
with
new
parent
figures
and a
very
high
risk
of
family
breakup.8
[Sources]
9
Being
very
unhappy
at
certain
points
in a
marriage
is a
good
sign
that
the
marriage
will
eventually
end
in
divorce.
All
marriages
have
their
ups
and
downs.
Recent
research
using
a
large
national
sample
found
that
eighty
six
percent
of
people
who
were
unhappily
married
in
the
late
1980s,
and
stayed
with
the
marriage,
indicated
when
interviewed
five
years
later
that
they
were
happier.
Indeed,
three
fifths
of
the
formerly
unhappily
married
couples
rated
their
marriages
as
either
“very
happy”
or
“quite
happy.”9
[Sources]
10
It
is
usually
men
who
initiate
divorce
proceedings
Two-thirds
of
all
divorces
are
initiated
by
women.
One
recent
study
found
that
many
of
the
reasons
for
this
have
to do
with
the
nature
of
our
divorce
laws.
For
example,
in
most
states
women
have
a
good
chance
of
receiving
custody
of
their
children.
Because
women
more
strongly
want
to
keep
their
children
with
them,
in
states
where
there
is a
presumption
of
shared
custody
with
the
husband
the
percentage
of
women
who
initiate
divorces
is
much
lower.10
[Sources]
Also,
the
higher
rate
of
women
initiators
is
probably
due
to
the
fact
that
men
are
more
likely
to be
"badly
behaved."
Husbands,
for
example,
are
more
likely
than
wives
to
have
problems
with
drinking,
drug
abuse,
and
infidelity.
Sources
1
Joshua
R.
Goldstein,
“The
Leveling
of
Divorce
in
the
United
States”
Demography
36
(1999):
409-414;
Andrew
Cherlin,
Marriage,
Divorce,
Remarriage
(Cambridge,
MA:
Harvard
University
Press,
1992)
[back
to
text]
2
Alfred
DeMaris
and
K.
Vaninadha
Rao,
“Premartial
Cohabitation
and
Marital
Instability
in
the
United
States:
A
Reassessment”
Journal
of
Marriage
and
the
Family
54
(1992):
178-190;
Pamela
J.
Smock,
“Cohabitation
in
the
United
States”
Annual
Review
of
Sociology
26
(2000)
[back
to
text]
3
Judith
Wallerstein,
Julia
M.
Lewis
and
Sandra
Blakeslee,
The
Unexpected
Legacy
of
Divorce
(New
York:
Hyperion,
2000);
Andrew
J.
Cherlin,
P.
Lindsay
Chase-Landsdale,
and
Christine
McRae,
“Effects
of
Parental
Divorce
on
Mental
Health
Throughout
the
Life
Course”
American
Sociological
Review
63
(1998):
239-249;
Paul
R.
Amato
and
Alan
Booth,
A
Generation
at
Risk
(Cambridge,
MA:
Harvard
University
Press,
1997)
[back
to
text]
4
Tim
B.
Heaton,
“Marital
Stability
Throughout
the
Child-rearing
Years”
Demography
27
(1990):
55-63;
Linda
Waite
and
Lee
A.
Lillard,
“Children
and
Marital
Disruption”
American
Journal
of
Sociology
96
(1991):
930-953;
Carolyn
Pape
Cowan
and
Philip
A.
Cowan,
When
Partners
Become
Parents:
The
Big
Life
Change
for
Couples
(New
York:
Basic
Books,
1992)
[back
to
text]
5
Leonore
J.
Weitzman,
“The
Economics
of
Divorce:
Social
and
Economic
Consequences
of
Property,
Alimony,
and
Child
Support
Awards”
UCLA
Law
Review
28
(August,
1981):
1251;
Richard
R.
Peterson,
“A
Re-Evaluation
of
the
Economic
Consequences
of
Divorce”
American
Sociological
Review
61
(June,
1996):
528-536;
Pamela
J.
Smock,
“The
Economic
Costs
of
Marital
Disruption
for
Young
Women
over
the
Past
Two
Decades”
Demography
30
(August,
1993):
353-371
[back
to
text]
6
Paul
R.
Amato
and
Alan
Booth,
A
Generation
at
Risk
(Cambridge,
MA:
Harvard
University
Press,
1997)
[back
to
text]
7
Paul
R.
Amato,
“What
Children
Learn
From
Divorce”
Population
Today,
(Washington,
DC:
Population
Reference
Bureau,
January
2001);
Nicholas
H.
Wolfinger,
“Beyond
the
Intergenerational
Transmission
of
Divorce”
Journal
of
Family
Issues
21-8
(2000):
1061-1086
[back
to
text]
8
Sara
McLanahan
and
Gary
Sandefur,
Growing
Up
With
a
Single
Parent
(Cambridge,
MA:
Harvard
University
Press,
1994);
Alan
Booth
and
Judy
Dunn
(eds.),
Stepfamilies:
Who
Benefits?
Who
Does
Not?
(Hillsdale,
NJ:
Lawrence
Erlbaum,
1994)
[back
to
text]
9
Unpublished
research
by
Linda
J.
Waite,
cited
in
Linda
J.
Waite
and
Maggie
Gallagher,
The
Case
for
Marriage
(New
York:
Doubleday,
2000):
148 [back
to
text]
10
Margaret
F.
Brinig
and
Douglas
A.
Allen,
“’These
Boots
Are
Made
For
Walking”:
Why
Most
Divorce
Filers
Are
Women”
American
Law
and
Economics
Review
2-1
(2000):
126-169
[back
to
text]
|