What to do when your spouse wants a divorce but you don't?

A rash reaction will do little to change your spouse's mind. The best thing to do is to stay calm and not push your spouse any further away. That means not begging or begging that you will do anything to keep the marriage together. Don't stalk or threaten to keep children away from your spouse.

Don't talk badly about your friends, family, or especially your children. And most of all, don't do things out of spite, such as spending a lot of money or having an affair. As Kelly learned the hard way, an affair will only cause more harm and give you exactly what you don't want, even if you seem “smart” at the time. The best thing to do in this situation is to stay calm and try not to force the marriage to work. Focusing on yourself and your children is the best way to deal with a divorce.

Focus on taking care of yourself. Start a new hobby to keep your mind from obsessing over your problems. Whether your marriage is successful or not, you need to be maintained spiritually, emotionally, mentally and physically. The sooner you hire an attorney to prepare for a divorce, the better chance you have of getting a fair settlement.

For the past twenty years, I have seen how one marriage after another was saved when a couple came for help, even though only one of the spouses wanted to save the marriage. In this session, she said that she had seen the emails she had sent to the other woman and that she wanted a divorce. The best way to do this is to hire an experienced divorce attorney to prepare you for the legal divorce process. If your spouse wants to leave because you're constantly being critical, the next time they do something you would normally criticize, ignore it and respond in the opposite way to how you normally would. However, there comes a point where you must prioritize your own mental health and well-being and accept a divorce.

My wife told me yesterday that she wants a divorce after I spent 12 days at home with her taking care of her after foot surgery. I'll go to work out of town and he tells me he wants a divorce, he tells me he's been thinking about it for six months and I had no idea that I'm completely devastated and lost, I don't know what to do. If your goal is to defend yourself and set healthy boundaries, you're likely to get a divorce. While these issues are part of the divorce process, they also need to be discussed in order to fix a marriage. If you ignore a divorce petition, you risk losing your property, assets, spousal support, and a fair child custody agreement.

If the only reason your spouse suggested that you divorce is because you had an argument, the request may not be legitimate.

Brittany Ferrini
Brittany Ferrini

Infuriatingly humble web enthusiast. Infuriatingly humble beer evangelist. Typical food expert. Avid sushi junkie. Award-winning bacon guru. Friendly internet buff.