Inventing the Rest of Our Lives by Suzanne Braun Levine
Author:Suzanne Braun Levine
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
Published: 2005-10-15T00:00:00+00:00
Moving On
Some marriages canâtâand shouldnâtâbe saved. Many women need to literally walk away from their earlier lives in order to make room for themselves. Almost one-fifth of women in their fifties and sixties are divorced or separated. Increasingly women are initiating divorce, and regretting it less, even though they know it will be hardâemotionally, financially, and socially. It is a trial by fire. âDivorce reconfigures identity,â writes Ashton Applewhite in Cutting Loose: Why Women Who End Their Marriages Do So Well. âIt requires that women come up with new ways of seeing themselves and road-test them under grueling circumstances.â The challenge to a womanâs ability to establish her own authority, and the enormity of the space she is carving out for herself by doing that can be overwhelming.
âThe money stuff is the worst,â several women told me. If ever the bag lady syndrome is out to get you, it is in these vulnerable circumstances. But once the divorce is over, most women emerge energized by the knowledge that they will never be so dependentâfinancially or otherwiseâagain. Lenore J. Weitzman, who conducted over 200 interviews for her landmark book The Divorce Revolution, found that âeven the longer-married older housewives who suffer the greatest financial hardship after divorce (and who feel most economically deprived, most angry, and most âcheatedâ by the divorce settlement) say they are âpersonallyâ better off than they were during marriageâ¦They also report improved self-esteem, more pride in their appearance and greater competence in all aspects of their lives.â
It turns out they are also in better health. The conventional wisdom that marriage is good for youâthe so-called marriage benefitâis being called into question. While it is true that married people, especially men, live longer than their unmarried counterparts, new studies are showing that a bad marriage is bad for oneâs health, particularly for women. Power, or lack of it, is an especially significant indicator. A fifteen-year Oregon study found, for example, that having unequal decision-making power was associated with higher health risk for women, but not for men (maybe because women donât have the other opportunities to exercise power that men traditionally do). Powerlessness is a major contributor to stress and depression. Tension and arguing can cause high blood pressure, reduce immune protection, and slow healing from injury and even from heart attacks. Dr. James Coyne, who studied the effects of marriage on recovery from congestive heart failure, told the New York Times (October 22, 2002), âSome of these people, if their spouses said, âBreathe for the next half-hour,â theyâd try to hold their breaths,â he says. âIt can get that stubborn in a bad marriage.â The many women who say they initiated a divorce to save their lives may be literally right.
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