Of all the people I personally know, I can only recall one time that the man started the divorce. From my experience it's far higher than 70% that woman initiate the divorce, but that's my experience. Currently, this guy at work is getting divorced, because his wife wants out. She is seeing, according to the guy at work, her daughter's friend's dad, while they are still married.
From your personal experience from people you know, what would you say, the ratio is?
I've told this story before:
Once upon a time, I went to work on what I thought was a typical day. I came home and soon found that half the house was gone, and of course, so was he. Some time later, I received papers in the mail with the cheery headline, "You Are Being Sued For Divorce."
I later moved out of the area, but one of my friends called me after some time had passed. It was something like 2 in the morning, and as soon as I picked up, she said, "There's something you should know." My husband had a secret relationship with a girl we worked with, and my friends had seen them in public, holding hands. Since I didn't live in the area anymore and he was divorcing me, they finally decided to go public officially.
Had that friend not called and told me, I would have had to listen to Christians who hollered at me about "not having a Biblical divorce" for the rest of my life, because I would have had no way of knowing. (I find myself wanting to tell more of the whole sad story, but I shall refrain.)
The reason I'm even mentioning this is because I then went through a myriad of Bible classes and programs trying to pull my life back together, doing what all my fellow Christians told me to do. I even went through "Divorce Care" -- twice -- and in my experience, the vast majority of divorces were initiated by actions of the men, usually because they had fallen for a younger women, but refused to legally divorce their wives out of fear of financial or family loss.
I have to wonder if a person's experiences might also be a bit gender-biased. Women are typically going to know/speak with more divorced women who were left behind, and men are going to know/speak with more men who may have had that experience.
I know of one woman who did indeed initiate the divorce -- because her husband made a lot of money, was sleeping with his secretary, and told his wife that he was going to do whatever he wanted since he made all the coin (a 6-figure salary at that.) He thought he held all the cards because she was a stay-at-home to their 4 children and hadn't worked since before the kids were born.
Rather than put up with that, she divorced him, got a job, and raised her 4 kids completely herself (and, feeling she had betrayed him for being able to live without him, he refused to pay any child support.)
The other woman I know who initiated a divorce did so because 1. her husband had a sexting affair with an old girlfriend, though they had not yet met up in person (and he was open about it, flaunting it in her face,) and 2. he has a substance abuse problem for which he refused any help, and was becoming increasingly violent towards her.
He wouldn't divorce her because he couldn't hold a job due to his addictions, and he needed her for her job.
If the statistic of over 70% of women initiating divorce is correct, I would be interested to know the conditions were. And I'm certainly not trying to say that it can't happen to men at all, or that men can't be abused, or that men don't suffer from finding out their wives are cheating on them.
I'm just saying that in my experience, a lot of women who started divorces were in situations where their husbands were using them for something, and wouldn't initiate a divorce themselves. These men thought they could have the benefits of both holding on to their girlfriends and wife at the same time, didn't want to have to pay any money for child or spousal support, and/or just flat-out needed their wives to pay for their bills.
However, again, this could be a more gender-centric observation, as I've had the opportunity to speak with far more divorced women than divorced men.
Whenever I read a statistic, I am always wondering what's really going on.
A statistic might look like a large number, but there is always a story -- from many perspectives -- behind each one.