T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
187.2 | | CLAB8::ENO | Bright Eyes | Mon Jan 19 1987 08:46 | 5 |
| Speaking only from my own experience, I did instigate the end of
most of my "courting" relationships. The reason: usually I was
treating the man better than he was treating me!!
G
|
187.3 | | REGENT::KIMBROUGH | This is being hostessed | Mon Jan 19 1987 09:09 | 10 |
|
I have broken up my fair share of relationships too... but usually
out of a fear of getting involved when I was not ready to do so.. or
even more letting someone give of themselves to me before I was ready
to give back... so you break and run!
but when the right one came along I did not run.. infact I was down
right pushy!!!!!!!!!! :-)
gailann
|
187.4 | Hmmm... Time to write a song? | DEBET::FOLEY | Rebel without a clue | Mon Jan 19 1987 09:23 | 17 |
|
I always thought the girls had it easier a number of years ago.
It seemed to me that they almost kinda ran the show. "Girls
always are the ones to break it off" I thought. It seemed so
easy to them! But then about 3 years ago I was dating someone.
We got along very well but "it" just wasn't there. I wanted
to stop the relationship before we got too involved and feelings
would be deeply hurt. I broke it off. For the first time I felt
in control. It was really weird!! Now, after several more
relationships in which I broke it off I find it almost (but
not quite) gets easier. Thinking about my own happieness and
the fact that I won't settle for unhappieness helps alot.
Breaking up is hard to do.
mike
|
187.5 | No stereotypes....please! | AKOV05::GALVIN | ALPHA.......works for me | Mon Jan 19 1987 10:37 | 16 |
| Andy.......
Maybe more women take the first step toward court action but, did
you ever stop to think that maybe it was the man that drove them
to it? I know a lot of women that asked for the divorce.........
after they found out that their husband was cheating on them with
a younger woman, or any woman for that matter. Do you expect us
to live with a man that can't be true?
My husband didn't want a divorce but, he didn't want to give up
his girlfriend(s) either.
Please don't stereotype women, some of us fall too easily and too
quickly also, I know I do. I never see any wrong in a person until
it's too late. I think there has only been 3 or 4 people that I
have disliked on first meeting in my whole life.
Fran
|
187.7 | | RDGENG::LESLIE | Andy `{o}^{o}' Leslie, ECSSE. OSI. | Mon Jan 19 1987 11:07 | 5 |
| I AM NOT TRYING TO STEREOTYPE ANYONE.
Statistics are just saying that n% of the time something happens
and (100-n)% of the time, something else happens.
|
187.8 | symptoms... | YODA::BARANSKI | Laugh when you feel like Crying! | Mon Jan 19 1987 14:43 | 8 |
| I don't think that women end relationships because men give them cause to.
At least half of the time, being unfaithfull is a symptom of a deeper problem.
Ask yourself, why does a/your man want another women? What is it that he is not
recieving from you, or that you are not giving him, that he wants another women?
I am not implying that it is the women's problem/fault.
Jim.
|
187.10 | Not all desperation | VINO::MCARLETON | Reality; what a concept! | Tue Jan 20 1987 13:44 | 18 |
| Re .0
> In several recent studies, 80% of 'courting' relationships were
> broken up at the instigation of the woman.
> ... Men, on the other hand, fall in love quickly and
> hang on in desperation when love dies.
I don't think that it is obvious that the men are hanging on in
'desperation'. I think that in a lot of cases the man has no reason
to break off the old relationships. He may be very willing to love
more than one woman at a time. It is the woman that finds the addition
of new women in her men's life are cause for a breakup. Thus the
statistic the women instigate the break-up 80% of the time.
No pain on the men's part is necessarily implied.
MJC O->
|
187.11 | I'm the dumper, he's the dumpee. | OWL::LANGILL | | Tue Jan 27 1987 17:03 | 41 |
| My Opinion: It IS harder for men to let go of a relationship than
women. I also believe that more women do break off the relationships,
mainly because they are also the ones that are working harder to
keep them going (the old concept of home, husband and family).
Being married the first time for 17 years, it seems obvious that
the idea of letting go wasn't exactly foremost in my mind either
and yet I, the woman, was the one to initiate the breakup. It may
have taken me longer because, I was brought up to believe that the
marriage SHOULD be forever, we have five kids and I did not see
a way that I could support them on my own (believe it or not the
concept of child support never occured to me), maybe I thought that
this marriage was what I deserved. In retrospect I really can't
explain why it lasted so long.
I have been away from my ex for four years now, have been with my
present husband for three and feel that I have become "healthy"
in that period of time. My ex on the other hand still hangs on
to the anger and hatred that he holds for me because "I broke up
our happy home" even though he has lived with another woman for
the last couple of years. We do not speak, mainly because I will
not accept from him the pain and punishment that he wants to dish
out, and made this very clear to him in a letter last year. Since
then he has pretty much left me alone for which I am very grateful.
He also has a very rocky relationship with the kids (I have full
custody from the court because it was determined that he was so
angry that he needed psychiatric help) and tries his best to undermine
my relationship with them when he does see them. If I could see
any kind of improvement in his attitude possibly I might relax about
the situation, but so far there has been none. It is very difficult
at times to hold my tongue about the way he acts, but I feel no
real need to make him look bad. His actions and words speak for
themselves.
Also I might add that in the interim period between divorce and
remarriage I had a couple of relationships that could have become
permanent with some encouragement, but I shied away if it looked
like it was becoming too serious as I knew I wasn't ready and they
were not the right people. When I met my present husband, instinct
alone told me it was the right one.
|
187.13 | I understand the statistics! | MMO01::CUNNINGHAM | | Thu Feb 12 1987 12:44 | 25 |
| In my opinion, I think .11 clearly illustrates the reason married
men with children would be more reluctant and angry about the ending
of the marriage. She gets the kids and the child support, he gets
the shaft. Take it from a man who has been there, there is no justice
when it comes to the courts. And of course since she gets the kids,
she also gets the house and the furniture and etc.
I am also tired of hearing how women lose in a "traditional"
relationship. My wife stayed home while I worked two jobs to support
the family. Who was it that enjoyed the lions share of the environment
I worked to provide? Education occurs when people want to learn,
not just in college, and who was it that read the encyclopedia and
the classics while I was at work teaching electronics, a subject
I had to focus on for eight hours a day whether I wanted to or not,
or selling stereos at night, regardless of what else I wanted to
do. After a while I felt I had an investesment that I saw crumble
when we were divorced. By the way, child support is not tax
deductable, nor does she have to claim it as income. My support
payments were 60% of my income, and after taxes I had 20% left to
live on. I rented a room in a communal house in Newton, while she
had her own house in Memphis. She took the one car while I hitchiked
for months till I could afford a used motercycle. I stayed while
she eventually left the state for Tenn. guess what I heard from
the kids? Why did you leave us! Women break up more often because
they have less to lose.
|
187.14 | Expression of sympathy | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Feb 12 1987 15:51 | 16 |
| re .13: that's a sad and too-common story, and I feel for you.
When my first husband moved out and moved in with his girlfriend,
I kept the house - but I had paid for it, and done all the repairs
on it. I even continued to pay the payments on his car (I had paid
cash for mine) after we got divorced. It is the partner with the
MONEY that gets shafted in a divorce, and because of the way our
society works, that is usually the man. In my case, it wasn't.
It's a good thing I didn't have children!
The funny thing about my story is that the girlfriend married my
ex, divorced him three months later (he had gotten a good-paying
job; in fact, he told me he was leaving the day the job offer came
through!), and got alimony from him! Sigh.
There are rotten things in the world. Don't let them get to you.
|
187.15 | WHAT'S THE REAL TRUTH? | OURVAX::JEFFRIES | | Thu Mar 12 1987 10:06 | 9 |
| I ended my first engagement because he wanted his mothe to live
with us when we got married. His mother was a young strong healthy
woman at the time and very opinionated. I didn't feel a new marriage
could survive that so I ended it.
I ended my marriage because he had several open relationships with
other women and couldn't understand why I was upset. The children
and I were no longer a priority.
I am sure that my ending two relationships affects the stats., but
do you really think that the percentages tell the whole story?
|
187.16 | | FOLES::FOLEY | Rebel without a clue | Thu Mar 12 1987 22:06 | 5 |
| RE: .15
For what it's worth, You did the right thing..
mike
|
187.17 | but what about non-marital relationships ? | HANNAH::OSMAN | see HANNAH::IGLOO$:[OSMAN]ERIC.VT240 | Mon Oct 12 1992 17:10 | 12 |
|
The awful court stories might explain why more women than men instigate the
broken *marriages*, but what about non-marriage non-children situation.
Certainly in my case last Feb., it was my woman partner that finally decided
we should break up, not me, even though we both agreed we were floundering.
So I'm wondering about some other reasons than those given so far. For instance,
maybe something about the way females are trained as children vs. males???
/Eric
|