Buretsu said:
People are getting married, simply because they don't want to not be married. Culturally, we tend to attach a stigma to anyone who isn't married past a certain age, implying that there's something wrong with them.
TestECull said:
People marry for the tax breaks these days. They do it because they're supposed to do it. They do it because society wants them to.
People have
always married for those reasons. (Well, not the tax breaks, but the other two.) In fact, the pressure from society to marry is
less now than it was in the past. So none of those reasons explain the rise in divorce. People marry
later now than they did in the past, and after knowing each other for a far longer time.
Eri said:
Why do you think the rates are so high?
Expectations about marriage are generally higher than they used to be, and divorce has far less stigma associated with it. This is not necessarily a good
or bad thing; it depends entirely on your point of view.
When my grandmother got married in her late teens, she didn't expect to always be happy in her marriage. In fact - in sixty years of being married to my grandfather - she put up with a lot of crap. Put nicely, my grandfather had a somewhat "fiery" temperament. Put less nicely, he could erupt in rage without warning. My mother described him as "a child throwing a tantrum" but in the body of a grown man. Even as a teenager, it terrified her.
If my grandmother was just starting out in married life
now, I have no doubt she would divorce my grandfather pretty quickly. But, in reality, she remained married to him until he died five years ago. Because, no matter how bad it could get, divorce never occurred to her. Leaving a husband (at least, one who wasn't actually
beating you) just wasn't
done in Wales when she was young.
I don't know how much my grandmother "loved" my grandfather when they got married. I don't know whether she ever regretted that decision in the early years. What I
do know is that the only time I have seen my strong, Welsh grandmother completely break down was in the graveyard where we buried my grandfather's ashes. And that - even now - she will not hear
one word against him.
The infatuations of the young cannot hold a candle to the bond between two people who have spent six
decades together. And
no partnership that lasts that long is going to be all sweetness and joy. There's always going to be some ugliness.
Like I said, this change in attitudes can be seen as a good
or bad thing. I
hope to be with my current boyfriend until one of us gives up the ghost. What I
can't guarantee is how much ugliness I'm prepared to face in order to achieve that.