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Marni Battista

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The Scarlet Letter: Overcoming The Stigma Of The Big 'D'

Posted: 09/11/2012 12:40 pm

When you have to tell someone that you're divorced, it feels like admitting that you failed at something. You've experienced a great loss, and you may feel shame at having gone through the "Big D": divorce.

Some statistics suggest that half of all marriages end in divorce. Those statistics do not, however, show what it's like to live with divorce. You are not alone. None of us need judgment while we're going through the often painful steps of divorce, or when we talk about if afterwards. Nobody needs to hear about how hard it must be on your kids, or that all marriages are hard.

While society can be the driving force behind the negative stigma of divorce, often it is we who place that stigma on ourselves. How can we overcome it?

Here are three places to start:

1. Find support.
When you're going through a divorce, one of the most important steps is to set up a support system. Try to be open with your family and friends. If you separate yourself, it will be hard for people to know that you want their help. Most family and good friends are going to be much more supportive than they are judgmental. Also, with divorce rates as high as they are, it's likely some of your friends and family have gone through the exact same thing.

You should also consider joining a professional support group. The act of talking about what you're going through with people who are having similar experiences is extremely helpful.

What's more, it may be true that you can tell who your "real" friends are by who shows up for you and who stays away. In fact, if you find that some of the folks in your married crew stay away as if divorce is contagious, understand that it's a reflection of their fear and not about you.

Tell your friends how you're feeling and let them know how they can support you. Whether it's just a movie night or sharing a mani/pedi moment, assuring your friends that they aren't responsible for fixing you or taking away your pain can set your relationship in the right direction.

2. Take this opportunity to reinvent yourself.
Instead of mulling over the "pity" looks you think all the neighbors or moms at school are giving you, take this time to focus on yourself. In reality, it's probably you who are giving yourself those looks in the mirror. How you define yourself impacts what you do and how you do it, so now is the time to get really clear on removing the labels you've put on yourself that are getting in the way of your moving forward.

It is now time to make a plan to reclaim your life and rediscover (or discover) those things that make you happy. I like to call this plan the "Whole Life Reinvention Plan," and it ensures that you have action steps to take care of your emotional, physical, intellectual and spiritual needs.

Make sure you set yourself up for a solid future in which loving you is the focus. Whether you start with a new haircut, fitness regimen, healthy eating plan or learning how to pole dance, make it about you and being kind and loving to yourself.

The best way to get over someone is not to get under someone else. Make sure you don't try to cure your loneliness and fear by getting into a new relationship immediately. Before you date, get clear on your dating and relationship goals so that you're dating from a place of confidence, fun and ease. Dating to find a replacement relationship is a recipe for disaster.

3. Let go.
It's very easy to stew over the fact that you're the only divorced person you know and hold resentment toward your former spouse for the position you're currently in. You can also harbor bitterness toward all the happily married couples you know who are still in marital bliss, envious of their domestic happiness.

Or you can do the opposite of that and let go.

There's no way for you to pave a path for your new life if you cannot let go of these feelings of animosity. Divorce is truly a process, and being patient with the transition (as well as with yourself) will ensure that you don't fake your way through looking good on the outside. Forcing happiness or trying to think your way out of your thoughts will only cause you to beat yourself for not getting over it faster.

The truth is, you can't simply get rid of your thoughts or you would have already. Instead, focus on what it would like to truly be over it. Ask yourself what it would take to truly let it go. Write a journal about what it costs you to stay hooked into the past. Ultimately, remind yourself to stay in what's true now whenever you find yourself questioning the past or catastrophizing about the future. Stay present to let go of the past.

Nobody is in the position to judge the outcome of your life but you. Take control of your life, refocus your energy and take care of yourself. Don't hesitate to reach out for help. If you think you may need more assistance to find out what you want out of your life, consider a private coaching session with a dating coach to break out of the post-divorce rut and get back on track.

 
FOLLOW DIVORCE
When you have to tell someone that you're divorced, it feels like admitting that you failed at something. You've experienced a great loss, and you may feel shame at having gone through the "Big D": di...
When you have to tell someone that you're divorced, it feels like admitting that you failed at something. You've experienced a great loss, and you may feel shame at having gone through the "Big D": di...
 
 
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10:04 AM on 09/14/2012
I couldn't have picked three better pieces of advice. I think the opening up part is key. My ex and I went in opposite paths on this. I opened up to just about everyone about the divorce because I needed the support. She chose to keep it as private as she could. In relation to reinventing yourself and letting go, I started writing a blog so I could explore my feelings, share them with whomever read the blog and get myself into a pattern of writing so that I could someday write a book. Writing a blog is a great exercise in creating writing habits. I think it has paid off in spades. I have touched other people going through the same things (they have reached out to me about it), I have shared my feelings with those reading the blog, I have reinvented myself because I am writing more than I ever did while married, and I am letting go of my past by exploring my current and future selves within the blog.

Great advice.

http://marriedtosingle.blogspot.com/
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Greg Albright
05:10 PM on 09/13/2012
Herm... The gender double standard rears its ugly head once again. There very definitely is a stigma for being a divorced man. It presents by everyone assuming that you have an onerous alimony and child support obligation.
12:51 PM on 09/17/2012
Both sides are bad. On the other side, there is the assumption you did not do xyz to keep your man, and that you are leeching your ex. The above 3 points are gender neutral to a sucky situation, imo.
11:17 AM on 09/13/2012
50% of people may be divorced, but where are they? If you are a single mom stuck in the suburbs so your kids can stay in their schools, you are surrounded by in-tact "typical" families. Maybe this is different in cities or in other areas but in most upper middle-class suburbs on the east coast, I think the stigma and isolation is still alive and well.
12:41 PM on 09/17/2012
Amen sister. How about the families who don't want their kids playing with kids from single parent homes?
02:15 PM on 09/17/2012
You have to be kidding! I have not heard of that one. What are people afraid of?
09:21 AM on 09/13/2012
Here's my advice.

If someone has a problem with you being divorced, you say "shut your mouth, mind your own business and piss off"
06:08 PM on 09/12/2012
I don't see much stigma as long as you are old enough that you are mostly dating divorced people. There is an assumption (that the statistics back up, I am afraid) that if you get divorced once you are likely to get divorced a second time (and often much quicker than the first time, from what I have seen). This means that if you are 24, divorced, and dating people who were never married, you might see the stigma more.
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05:01 PM on 09/12/2012
4. Have sex. Lots of it. Your Divorce Journey is about awakening, revelation and discovery. Those are the results of experimentation, sensual exploration and breaking bonds that held you back. Consider new sexual positions, situations and greater frequency of sexual activity. By exploring your Inner Self, you attain a wisdom that can only be obtained through Sensual Self-Exploration.
01:58 PM on 09/12/2012
With divorce so common now is there truly a huge stigma attached to it? I've run into more people who think it's more scandalous to be unmarried past a certain age rather than divorced.
12:42 PM on 09/12/2012
I don't know how to tell my friend that when she posts things on her "fakebook" that everyone knows already that she is separated and no longer with her husband and that she is NOT fooling anyone. She is so afraid of being divorced and having the so-called stigma of being divorced.
12:09 PM on 09/12/2012
"Take control of your life, refocus your energy and take care of yourself."

Great advice, it's working for me!
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anitaj
03:32 PM on 09/13/2012
Good advice for anyone, regardless of marital status.
08:22 AM on 09/12/2012
Some interesting thoughts. I like to think of being in "transition"-- a major change in one's life leading to another. Using this definition, I find that I can relate to women who have lost a spouse, recently been unemployed after many years or have become empty nesters. We are going through change, and have to reset our way of thinking and begin to create and live our own dreams.

When Dorothy Parker stated--"the easiest way to get over a man is to get under another"--I wouldn't knock it-- if that is what you need to make your transition-- just practice safe sex and do what you need to do (hopefylly enjoying it along the way!).
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DJPotterWriter
04:31 AM on 09/12/2012
Approximately 50% of marriages end in divorce. I've never noticed any stigma. If anything, the opposite is true: people go out of their way to make divorcees feel good about themselves, and the notion of fault is hardly recognized at all. If the worst thing about your divorce is a little sense of disapproval from the few remaining people who think of divorce as shameful or scandalous or immoral, you're doing as well as you could reasonably hope.
03:40 AM on 09/12/2012
Nice tips. Speaking of recovering, there are more surviving tips and strategies I want to share to help us cope with this painful divorce: http://www.harrisfamilylaw.com/updates/tips-for-suviving-your-divorce. I would have to agree that all of these lie on us, and we need to help ourselves on the road to recovery.
11:03 PM on 09/11/2012
Never really thought that there was any stigma connected to divorce. When I was single, married and divorced never applied a stigma or felt like there was one applied to me. Everyone I ever hung around with I never remember any of them making disparaging remarks about divorced people. I think people are putting way to much into this.
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DJPotterWriter
04:32 AM on 09/12/2012
Unfortunately, grown adults are extremely sensitive to the slightest criticism these days.
09:15 PM on 09/11/2012
#4) Admit to your parents and friends they were right and renew the bonds with people who cared enough to try and warn you he was bum.
11:43 PM on 09/11/2012
Or she.
07:33 AM on 09/12/2012
Sauce for the goose...agreed.
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Stuart Hamilton
American Socialist Party
02:34 AM on 09/12/2012
I don't want to sound insensitive, but doesn't that qualify as a self-fulfilling prophecy? Being told by friends and family your spouse is lousy probably has a marked affect on your perceptions of them.

I would never apologize to anyone if their predictions of my marriage came true, because their opinion should have no bearing on how look at my wife, and if it does then what does that say about me?

Divorce is bad enough without "I told you so." Seriously.
07:36 AM on 09/12/2012
Optimism is fine but there is also denial. Love is blind.  I talking about...every notice how much he drinks...so how much money does he owe...where did those buises come from...kinda things. Real friends speak up. Foolish pride will keep people away from their friends after divorce.
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osofar
America once was exceptional, and could be again,
09:03 PM on 09/11/2012
I thought the Scarlet Letter was about (A)dultery.