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Do you have daughters but not sons? How about a kid with ADHD? Did you smile in your yearbook photo? Anneli Rufus on the strange ways science can predict a marriage’s success.
1. If you're a woman who got married before the age of eighteen, your marriage faces a 48 percent likelihood of divorce within ten years.
Age matters. Study after study shows that the younger the married couple, the riskier the bond. The risk drops to 40 percent for women who married at age eighteen or nineteen, drops further to 29 percent for women who married at age 20 to 24, and drops even further to 24 percent for women who married at age 25 or older.
Matthew Bramlett and Mosher, William (2000): First marriage dissolution, divorce, and remarriage: United States, Department of Health and Human Services/National Center for Health Statistics, Advance Data, 23, 7-8.
2. If you're a woman who wants a child—either a first child or an additional child—much more strongly than your spouse does, your marriage is more than twice as likely to end in divorce as the marriages of couples who agree on how much they do or don't want a child.
"One of the patterns we consistently see is that women tend to be more discontented in relationships than men are," says Stephanie Coontz, Director of Research and Public Education for the Council on Contemporary Families, "and women are the ones who tend to initiate separations and divorces." Here's one reason why.
Rebecca Kippen et al. (2009): What's love got to do with it? Homogamy and dyadic approaches to understanding marital instability. Paper delivered at the Household, Income, and Labour Dynamics Survey Research Conference.
3. If you have two sons, you face a 36.9 percent likelihood of divorce, but if you have two daughters, the likelihood rises to 43.1 percent.
• Anneli Rufus: Will You Ever Have a Baby?
• Anneli Rufus: 15 Ways to Predict Divorce These findings by Columbia University economist Kristin Mammen echo other studies linking the births of girls with elevated divorce rates. A bright spot in Mammen's research, however wan, is that after parents divorce, child-support payments show no gender disparity—girls receive no less child support than boys.
Kristin Mammen (2008): The effects of children's gender on divorce and child support. Paper presented at the American Economic Association's annual meeting.
4. If you're a man with high basal testosterone, you're 43 percent more likely to get divorced than men with low testosterone levels.
"This is something that evolutionary psychologists and everyday people should take account of," says Coontz. "Hypermasculinity is neither an evolutionary benefit nor an adaptive trait, especially nowadays, when the best predictor of a successful marriage is not the specialization into two separate roles"—stereotypically male and stereotypically female—"but rather a convergence and a sharing of roles."
Mazur, Allan. Lanham, MD: Biosociology of Dominance and Deference, Rowman & Littlefield, 2005, p. 125.
5. If your child has been diagnosed with ADHD, you are 22.7 percent more likely to divorce before that child turns eight years old than parents of a child without ADHD.
"ADHD is a very challenging diagnosis," says The Complete Divorce Handbook author Brette Sember, "and raising a child with this disorder is expensive, stressful, and emotionally consuming. It's definitely going to put a huge stress on a marriage."
Brian Wymbs and Pelham, William (2008). Rate and predictors of divorce among parents of youth with ADHD. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 76 (5), 735-744.
6. If you are currently married but have cohabited with a lover other than your current spouse, you are slightly more than twice as likely to divorce than someone who has never cohabited.
The same study by Ohio State University sociologists that produced this result also found that even those who cohabit only with their future spouses "are still 83 percent more likely to experience a marital disruption relative to those that did not cohabit prior to marriage." Cohabitation statistics are hot buttons, used by some pundits to decry premarital sex and "shacking up." A widely quoted 2003 study by Western Washington University sociologist Jay Teachman found that women who cohabit with anyone besides their future husbands face a raised divorce risk ranging from 55 to 166 percent, but that those who cohabit only with their future husbands face no elevated risk at all.
Anna M. Cunningham (2007): Premarital cohabitation and marital disruption across time: new results from the NSFH 3, paper delivered at the Population Association of America 2007 annual meeting.
7. If you didn't smile for photographs early in life, your marriage is five times more likely to end in divorce than if you smiled intensely in early photographs.
Two tests, the first involving college yearbook photos and the second involving miscellaneous photos taken during participants' youths, yielded this finding. "People who are optimistic— and that's what smiles tend to show in childhood—find it easier to get along with people," including the people they're married to, asserts Coontz, who is also the author of Marriage: A History. Optimistic types "also find it easier to put up with periods in life that might be difficult." Nonetheless, she warns: "Optimism is certainly not going to protect you from everything, so it's no guarantee."
Hertenstein, Matthew et al. (2009): Smile intensity in photographs predicts divorce later in life,
8. If your child has died after the twentieth week of pregnancy, during labor, or soon after labor, you are 40 percent more likely to divorce than if you had not lost a child.
Few catastrophes throw relationships into chaos like the death of a child. Distraught parents blame each other, says Susan Pease Gadoua, author of Stronger Day by Day: Reflections for Healing and Rebuilding After Divorce. When a child dies right before or after being born, "the woman who was carrying the child often gets told that she should have 'taken better care' of the child. What's really happening is that these couples haven't dealt adequately with their grief and they can't form a bond anymore because this huge ball of grief is standing in the way like a barricade."
Katherine Gold et al. (2010). Marriage and cohabitation outcomes after pregnancy loss. Pediatrics, 125 (5).
9. If you're a woman who has recently been diagnosed with cancer or multiple sclerosis, your marriage is six times more likely to end in divorce than if your husband had been diagnosed with those diseases instead.
A study of "partner abandonment" revealed that husbands are six times more likely to leave sick wives than wives are to leave sick husbands. "Men have a much harder time being caretakers than women do," Sember observes. "Men find it hard to juggle that kind of responsibility, particularly if the wife has always been the one to fill that role." Moreover, "often women are more able to take time off from work to care for an ill spouse than men are."
MJ Glantz et al. (2009). Gender disparity in the rate of partner abandonment in patients with serious medical illness. Cancer, 115 (22).
10. If you're a Caucasian woman and you're separated from your spouse, there's a 98 percent chance that you'll be divorced within six years of that separation; if you're a Hispanic woman, the likelihood is 80 percent; if you're an African-American woman, the likelihood is 72 percent.
This doesn't surprise Coontz. "Unfortunately, women tend to let their anger and disappointment build up for too long before expressing it. They hint at what's bothering them rather than being direct. By the time they're mad enough to separate, something has died." This gloomy news about separations, Coontz says, "tells women to be very direct about what they want and need to change, and tells men to listen to them."
Matthew Bramlett and Mosher, William (2000): First marriage dissolution, divorce, and remarriage: United States, Department of Health and Human Services/National Center for Health Statistics, Advance Data, 23, 7-8.
11. If you're a dancer or choreographer, you face a 43.05 percent likelihood of divorce, compared with mathematicians, who face a 19.15 percent likelihood, and animal trainers, who face a 22.5 percent likelihood.
Radford University industrial psychologist Michael Aamodt devised a formula for calculating the probabilities of marital success and failure based on the career of one of the spouses. "The Internet is rife with statements regarding occupations with high divorce and suicide rates," says Aamodt, "but most of these statements are not based on research." The study also found that massage therapists face a 38.22 percent likelihood of divorce, dentists face a slim 7.75 percent likelihood, and bellhops face a 28.43 percent likelihood.
Shawn McCoy and Aamodt, Michael (2010): A comparison of law-enforcement divorce rates with those of other occupations. Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology, 25 (1), 1-16.
12. If you're a farmer or rancher, you face only a 7.63 percent likelihood of divorce, joined by other low-risk occupations such as nuclear engineers, who face a 7.29 percent likelihood, and optometrists, who face a mere 4.01 percent likelihood.
In the Radford University study calculating divorce probabilities associated with occupations, the absolute safest marriages are those of agricultural engineers, who face a minuscule 1.78 percent chance of divorce. "Though occupational differences in divorce rates can result in some interesting discussions and theories," says Aamodt, "the differences are most likely due to such non-occupational factors as age, race, income, and personality rather than the occupation itself."
Shawn McCoy and Aamodt, Michael (2010): A comparison of law-enforcement divorce rates with those of other occupations. Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology, 25 (1), 1-16.
13. If either you or your spouse have suffered a brain injury, your marriage faces a 17 percent chance of ending in divorce.
This is encouraging news, considering the high divorce rates associated with illness and other traumatic events. It's not an eventuality that anyone wants to contemplate, but the researchers conclude, "The rate of divorce after brain injury may, in fact, be much lower than divorce rates for the general population."
Jeff Kreutzer et al. (2010). The truth about divorce after brain injury. The Challenge, Winter 2010.
14. If you're an African-American woman, your first marriage has a 47 percent likelihood of ending in divorce within ten years; for Hispanic women, the likelihood is 34 percent; for Caucasian women, it's 32 percent; for Asian women, it's 20 percent.
According to the US Department of Health and Human Services study that produced these findings, one-fifth of first marriages end within five years and one-third end within ten years, across the board.
Matthew Bramlett and Mosher, William (2000): First marriage dissolution, divorce, and remarriage: United States, Department of Health and Human Services/National Center for Health Statistics, Advance Data, 23, 7-8.
15. If you're a woman serving actively in the military, your marriage is 250 percent more likely to end in divorce than that of a man serving actively in the military.
A Rand Corporation study found that while 6.6 percent of military women's marriages dissolved, only 2.6 percent of military men's did. In every branch of the service and consistently over time, "rates of marital dissolution are substantially higher for women than for men," write the study's authors, who speculate that perhaps "the military selects for women whose marriages would be at increased risk regardless of their service."
Benjamin Karney and Crown, John (2007). Families under stress: an assessment of data, theory, and research on marriage and divorce in the military, Rand Corporation monograph prepared for the Office of the Secretary of Defense/National Defense Research Institute.
Anneli Rufus is the author of many books, including Party of One: The Loners' Manifesto and the Nautilus Award-winning Stuck: Why We Don't (or Won't) Move On, and the coauthor of still more, including Weird Europe and The Scavengers' Manifesto. Her books have been translated into numerous languages, including Chinese and Latvian. In 2006, she won a Society of Professional Journalists award for criticism.
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Little Birdy
What's really tragic about this story is the fact that taxpayer money went for this garbage.
Maezeppa
It's data, not "garbage". Shame on you.
beastyjay
It's 'stimulus' not 'taxpayer money'. Shame on you. ; )
RealDeal336
hahahahaha *cough* sorry i choked.. hahahahaha
Chittagong
Most of this article is nonsense the only real predictor of whether
you will divorce or not is if both people in the marriage strongly believe
that there is no other person out there who will care for them, love and commit
to them like the marriage partner they currently have.
The stats based or racial ethincity is interesting and is based on the female
in the marriage... doesn't say anything about women whose ancestary
stems from the indian sub continent or middle east.
andygirl
Yeah and of course doesn't say anything about religion and how likely people are to stay married because of the fear of hellfire and damnation.
I wanted to see the stats on women who marry lying cheating cheaters. How likely are *they* to get divorced?
lordmi
it is until after You will find Your situation and check with Your case.
Chittagong
Its obvious that the number one reason why a couple would divorce
is if one of the partners in the relationship commits adultery or has some
kind of physical sexual intimacy with someone outside of the marriage.
That goes completely against love, commitment and caring for one's
partner it is also lying and deception. In some cultures divorce
is not even recognised unless one of the partners in the relationship
has had physical sexual intimacy with someone outside the marriage.
lordmi
Statistic data are alway informative.
I am sorry, Your chicken brains good not go so far.
relax, You still may read cook books and even write reviews,
but, please, leave politics alone.
NotaHawk
WOW, I was really buying in to this until I read the last one, #15.............Instead of reporting the extremely LOW incidence of divorce of our military personnel, "while 6.6 percent of military women's marriages dissolved, only 2.6 percent of military men's did." the headline was about the 250% difference by gender. WOW! Why not give credit where credit is due.......that even though these men and women go through hell and back while they are deployed around the world defending our freedom, collectively (4.6%) they have the second lowest risk of divorce of any profession!!!!!!!! Just go back to "sign 12"; "If you're a farmer or rancher, you face only a 7.63 percent likelihood of divorce, joined by other low-risk occupations such as nuclear engineers, who face a 7.29 percent likelihood, and optometrists, who face a mere 4.01 percent likelihood." WOW is it possible that this psudo reporter has an agenda and instead of "reporting" that loyalty and sacrifice to one's country is a binding agent instead of a separating agent, she wants to disparage either men or her country?! KUDOS to the men and women who stand by their man or woman who have sacrificial ideals......and live up to them!
GReen82
... If you haven't noticed the story was on the frequency of divorce as they pertain to 'certian' specific factors. I am a male military spouse who's wife serves in the U.S. Army. #15 is the truth, and it is no way undermining the efforts of service men and women. The fact is the military is largely male, females are the minority. In this situation it is sometimes very difficult for spouses, specificly males, to deal with the fact that most of his wife's associates are males. Add this to the strain that things like deployments, and it takes a strong bond to keep a marriage together in this situation. I love my wife very much and we have a very good, long,standing (overe 1/2 of both of our lives) relationship. But, it would be a lie if I denied the fact that her service to our country has never put a strain on our marriage. Only speaking from experience.
JohnnyCakes
Sounds like you could just about add anything to the list seeing as how marriage is declining in general. "...if you like green beans but hate to wait in line, you are 35% more likely to get divorced.
On the other hand, if you are a happy person with a tendency towards meaningful relationships you are only 27 % more likely to divorce." whatever. "If you are a person who uses list-writing as a way of deciphering your life, you are 57% more likely to uhhh...I'm bored.
dannyboy547
Here are simple statistics predicting divorce that aren't related to the number of hairs on the knuckle of the big toe on your left foot:
50% percent of first marriages, 67% of second and 74% of third marriages end in divorce, according to Jennifer Baker of the Forest Institute of Professional Psychology in Springfield, Missouri.
andygirl
You mean if I have hairs on the knuckle of the big toe on my left foot I'm more likely to get divorced? Eek!
dannyboy547
Not if you get up early in the morning and pluck them out each and every day before your husband wakes up.
missylovesrobby
naa that probably would mean that you werent likely to have found a man to marry you in the first place...LOL
andygirl
Riiiiight. And this is why I'm single, then, I simply don't care enough to do that. :D
whk2004
I can't believe I just waisted my time reading this garbage.
onefastsailor
Did you get fat reading this? Or, did you mean wasted?
whipmawhopma
0. If you never marry there's a 100% probability that you will never divorce.
16. If you are a Caucasian women named Anneli Rufus there's a 99.99% chance that you make a living writing stuff like this and hope someone will buy one of your books based on reading this stuff.
17. If you are a man looking to date Anneli Rufus there's a 99.99% chance that you should give it up, unless you are extremely attractive, a sexual athlete, affluent and willing to give into her legion of demands. In which case there's a 99.98% probability that it would be wise to have a prenuptial in place and a 99.99% probability that Anneli Rufus will start a new series of books about you that are really about her, as it should be.
andygirl
haha! *snort*
JennLitz
Sounds like whipma speaks from experience.
erinelizabeth11
I don't know why everyone is so enraged about this. I think it's pretty valid from the relationships I've seen disintegrate.
I am also pretty certain that the military statistic involves divorcing WHEN those individuals are actually in the military and the statitstic does not speak for the majority of their lives when they are not in the military. A much higher percentage than 4.6% collectively of military families that I know have been through at least one divorce. I'm pretty sure she was referencing an actual divorce while the individual is in the service which is for many 4-5 years and for some 20-30.
It all makes sense to me. Optomertrists, mathematicians, engineers and the like all lead relatively boring stable lives. You get what you sign on for and are probably unlikely to divorce them because nothing shocking happens during your relationship. Not to mention that there is a lot of job stability in the medical field, government jobs and such, so there wouldn't be much of a fight over money. Choreographers are constantly dealing with gorgeous, young, new clientelle so cheating would be a large factor in their divorce as well as job instability and loss of income. Farmers, are often strongly religious with strong moral values and probably don't leave each other often. Men tend to value different things in a relationship so I certainly don't find it shocking that men would leave their sick spouse 6x more.
I find nothing ground-breaking or particularly valuable about this article. It is easy to skew statistics, but I doubt that these statistics are the actual relevant reason as to why people divorce each other. Many of them are accurate, in my opinion, but the reasoning behind them is what really matters. If people want to make a marriage work, I would encourage finding a like minded individual and praying you don't get sick, have a child with ADHD, lose a child, or marry someone who doesn't smile in their school photos.
andygirl
Sooo, I'm a dancer (not exotic, stop looking at me like that, pervy) so I shouldn't bother getting married then? And what if two higher risk careers marry? Are they doomed?
You know what I say to that? Bushwah. That's right. You heard me. Bushwah.
dickn2000b
No Maezeppa... it's garbage! Trust me. Every negative point in this article fits my profile and I've been happily msarried for 35 years.
crystalcat
*sigh* This whole article is about statistics and risks -- why not actually quote figures in a meaningful way? In what sense can it be true that you are 5 times more likely to divorce if you did not smile in early photographs?
The ENTIRE POINT of the article is to quote some interesting and quirky research findings -- why mangle the figures so that the article becomes mostly impossible even to interpret? Why not actually quote these entertaining research findings in a meaningful way?
Shoddy, Just shoddy.
VeryReal
A sign you'll get divorced: you kidnap your stepkid.
klpptrs
i just read a article about glorifying gangsters and goons. we need new heros.cant we all get along
longtimemarried
Wow, I really am not the norm! Let see I have been married to a wonderful man for over 23 years that I met on a blind date when I was in my mid twenties. We came from different religious backgrounds, and ethnic backgrounds. We only have daughters. The first one was born with a rare heart problem, received open-heart surgery for a heart valve replacement at age 17. The youngest one is ADHD and dyslectic. If such a study would focus more on the personalities of the couple, maybe, just maybe, we could get some research that would make a difference, instead of a blog spewing web smog!
maddymappo
Seems all to sad but true for me, My child had ADHD and we divorced when she was four, and I did not smile in photos, certainly not graduation.
Jamie Loud
This article was amusing. I don't know how anyone would actually use this information in a meaningful way. But I didn't feel outraged with reading it. The best was # 11. I actually am a dancer AND a mathematician. No lie. I studied both in college. So how does that work? Would I average the two numbers or assume that they both would be true and add them together? Doesn't really matter. If I find the person I want to spend the rest of my life with, I'm not going to consult studies to see our chances of divorce. Oh. And my last point. In general, these "Signs You'll Get Divorced" seem to indicate they are discussing heterosexual couples. Well guess what? I live in Massachusetts. I have attended a homosexual wedding. What about those statistics?
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