Divorce Articles
DivorceArticles.net
"Your Best Source For Divorce Advice and Divorce Help!"

Broken homes, and hearts

Author: National Review

Between Two Worlds: The Inner Lives of Children of Divorce, by Elizabeth Marquardt (Crown, 191 pp., $24.95)

THE story told by first-time author Elizabeth Marquardt could easily have descended to the maudlin: just one more Gen-Xer relating the sad but not especially tragic course of her life. What saves her book, and turns it instead into a fresh, cogent, and compelling testimony, is the bonding of the author's personal story to solid, new social research. Marquardt shows "just how radical divorce really is," how it "powerfully changes the structure of childhood itself," and how growing up in a divorced family "is like growing up in a different culture." Indeed, in the wake of the no-fault-divorce revolution of the late 1960s and 1970s, one-quarter of all American young adults are now the children of divorce. She gives these hitherto silent millions a needed public voice.

Among the children affected by it, divorce has long been linked to significantly higher rates of school dropout, teenage pregnancy, illegal drug use, poor health, suicide attempts, and depression. Child abuse also thrives on divorce; research shows that having a step-parent in a child's home is "the most powerful predictor of severe child abuse." By intent, however, Marquardt gives relatively little attention to these deep pathologies. Instead, her focus is on the seemingly successful children of "good divorces." These are cases where parental conflicts over the children were minimal, where both parents stayed actively involved in their children's lives, and where the children went on to college. Alongside her own experience, she builds her argument on direct interviews with 71 young adults (ages 18 to 35), roughly half of whom grew up in divorced families and half in intact homes. She adds to this the results of a telephone survey (developed in cooperation with noted University of Texas sociologist Norval Glenn) of another 1,500 young adults, divided in similar fashion.

Marquardt's findings are persuasive, and disturbing. She blows the myth of the "good divorce" out of the water, labeling as "lies" the prevailing arguments that children are resilient and do just fine in a "low conflict" divorce or thrive in the pleasant diversity of "blended families." She shows that the children of "good" divorces "typically experience painful losses, moral confusion, spiritual suffering, [and] strained relationships." "Happy talk" about divorce, exemplified by Constance Ahrons's 1994 book The Good Divorce, exists to soothe adult consciences--those of therapists, lawyers, judges, and the divorcing parents themselves. For the children, however, the reality is pain and a deafening cultural silence.

...

FOR WOMEN ONLY: I recently ran across the ABSOLUTE BEST resource I've ever found for helping you prepare for and protect yourself during a divorce.

This eye-opening book called, “Divorce Secrets: What Every Woman Should Know”, was written by Cathi Adams. Cathi shares her powerful step-by-step plan that she used to successfully escape her unhappy marriage (while keeping her son, house AND not having to reduce her lifestyle.)

I give this great resource my HIGHEST recommendation. (She even shows you how to get your husband to pay for YOUR attorney costs!)

So if you’re a woman even thinking about the possibility of divorce, you owe it to yourself (and your kids) to get your hands on this amazing system right now!

Click Here to Learn More About “Divorce Secrets” Right Now!

2006 UPDATE: Cathi just released an FREE BONUS for her system that contains the audio from an AMAZING 83 minute interview she recently did. In this audio she shares her latest and most up-to-date divorce success strategies and so much more…

You HAVE TO get your hands on this amazing interview right now (before she comes to her senses and starts selling this audio as a separate product!)

Click Here to Get “Divorce Secrets”
(and get your FREE audio bonus) Right Now!

 

Related Articles:

  • Is Your Marriage Problem Severe Enough To Warrant Getting A Divorce?

    Having a marriage problem can be agonizing especially if you're trying to do all you can to make your marriage work. Depending on how your marriage was prior to thinking that you had a marriage problem, you could be in for a hurtful time if you don't take a step back and look at your marriage problem from a "helicopter" viewpoint. To do that, you're going to need to try to limit your emotional stake in the situation which admittedly is a difficult thing to do.

    The first step in getting ...
    Author: Karl Augustine
    CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE

  • Joint Bank Accounts and Divorce

    Here are some useful tips on joint bank accounts and divorce. If you've recently been through a divorce - or are contemplating one - you may want to look closely at issues involving joint bank accounts.

    Joint Bank Account: Your income, financial assets, and credit history - and your spouse's - are considerations for a joint account. No matter who handles the household bills, you and your spouse are responsible for seeing that debts are paid. A creditor who reports the credit history of ...
    Author: John Mussi
    CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE

  • Marriage Hints for Women
    If you are in need of Marriage Hints for Women then you will want to read everything in this critical article.

    As a woman facing the possibility of divorce, you have the responsibility to ensure that you and your children are prepared in the event that a divorce occurs...
    CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE


    Back To Divorce Article Summary's
    Back To Divorce Article List

  • Divorce Advice For Women



    Divorce Articles | Divorce Articles List | Divorce Blog