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The Divorce Gap [TheAtlantic.com]

 

A 38-year-old woman living in Everett, Washington recently told me that nine years ago, she had a well-paying job, immaculate credit, substantial savings, and a happy marriage. When her first daughter was born, she and her husband decided that she would quit her job in publishing to stay home with the baby. She loved being a mother and homemaker, and when another daughter came, she gave up the idea of going back to work.

Seven years later, her husband told her to leave their house, and filed for a divorce she couldn’t afford. “He said he was tired of my medical issues, and unwilling to work on things,” she said, citing her severe rheumatoid arthritis and OCD, both of which she manages with medication. “He kicked me out of my own house, with no job and no home, and then my only recourse was to lawyer up. I’m paying them on credit.” (Some of the men and women quoted in this article have been kept anonymous because they were discussing sensitive financial matters, some of them involving ongoing legal disputes.)

[For more of this story, written by Darlena Cunha, go to http://www.theatlantic.com/bus...-divorce-gap/480333/]

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That sort of thing would be highly stressful, if not traumatizing. I see a difference between little "t" and big "T" trauma. I think there is a lot of "t" trauma caused by chronic stress, and a divorce like this would cause it.

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