Tag Archives: divorce

Red Flags: Would You Date Someone Who Was Newly Separated?

By The Huffington Post News Editors

Dating after divorce is tricky. First you have to figure out if you’re really ready to get back out there, then you have to find someone you’d actually want to date — and good luck scheduling that date if you both have kids.

But one of the biggest conundrums for divorced daters, as far as we’re concerned, is deciding whether it’s worth pursuing someone who’s only recently separated from his or her spouse.

That’s the exact problem The Frisky writer Abby Cooper grappled with when a date let it slip that he was recently separated — really recently. He told Cooper that he and his wife had decided to end their marriage the night before the date. Biggest red flag ever, right?

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Nigella Lawson's Quickie Divorce Granted

By Evann Gastaldo

From borderline abusive tabloid pictures to divorce in less than seven weeks: Nigella Lawson is free of former husband Charles Saatchi, who announced his divorce plans shortly after the tabloid incident. The High Court granted the divorce in a hearing that lasted less than 60 seconds, the BBC reports, although… …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Anthony Weiner Marriage Poll Finds Many Think Huma Abedin Should Go Rather Than Stay

By The Huffington Post News Editors

Should Huma Abedin, wife of embattled former congressman and New York City mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner, file for divorce in the wake of his latest scandal?

According to a new HuffPost/YouGov poll of 1,000 people, Americans are more likely to say that Abedin should end her marriage, rather than stick around and work on it.

Thirty-nine percent of poll respondents said that Abedin should file for divorce, while just 22 percent said she should stay and try to work on their marriage. Another 39 percent percent said they weren’t sure.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

40 Radio Stations to Drop Limbaugh, Hannity: Source

By Kate Seamons

Politico is calling it a “major shakeup,” while the New York Daily News paints it as a “seemingly inevitable divorce.” America’s No. 2 radio broadcaster intends to give Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity the boot by year-end, per an industry source. Money is apparently the root of this problem: Cumulus… …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Stick Figure Family Decals Are Not Immune To Divorce (PHOTO)

By The Huffington Post News Editors

Not even those stick figure car decals are immune to divorce.

Forget divvying up the assets or arguing over custody arrangements, the first order of business for today’s divorcés seems to be removing their exes from the family car stickers. (Need a refresher? See the crossed out wife on this back window or the Disneyland-loving family who etched out dad after the parent’s marriage presumably hit the skids.)

And here comes another, this one posted by Redditor Swagasaurous on Wednesday. Take a look:

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Relationship Problems: Why Do People Stay In Unhappy Relationships?

By The Huffington Post News Editors

For many husbands and wives, a deep sense of unhappiness just isn’t a good enough reason to end their marriage.

Why? According to recent study by UK law firm Slater & Gordon, many unhappy spouses say they simply lack the courage to divorce. What’s more, of the 2,000 married people surveyed by the firm, a fifth said they felt trapped in their relationship but would only consider ending their marriage if their future financial security could be guaranteed. (Click here to see the top ten reasons spouses stay in unhappy relationships, according to the study.)

The marriage study hit a nerve with our divorced readers on Facebook and Twitter, so much so that many weighed in with their own thoughts on why people stay in unhappy relationships.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Red Flags: Readers Share Signs That Their Marriage Was Doomed

By The Huffington Post News Editors

Ever since we launched HuffPost Divorce, we’ve been asking readers to share the moment they knew their marriage was over.

But as anyone who’s been through divorce can tell you, there tend to be signs that something is amiss in the relationship early on — signs you overlook because you’re understandably hoping for the best. On Friday, our readers shared some of the red flags they disregarded early on in their relationships, from arguments that descended into name-calling, to small lies that eventually gave way to bigger, unforgivable ones.

Click through the slides below to see what they had to say, then tell us about the red flags you’ve ignored in relationships past.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Michael Moore Divorcing Producer Wife

By Arden Dier

Michael Moore is calling it quits with his wife of 21 years, Kathleen Glynn. The famously controversial director filed for divorce last month, citing “no reasonable likelihood that the marriage can be preserved,” MLive.com reports. Glynn, who worked with Moore on Bowling for Columbine and Fahrenheit 9/11 , has yet… …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

The Best Leaders Are Vulnerable

By David K. Williams, Contributor

We all know leaders who are filled with the kind of bravado that takes great pains to hide any very hint of misgiving. No matter what happens, they “knew it all along”. At the very essence of their strategy is the fierce belief that showing even the slightest hint of vulnerability would cause their teams to see them as “weak”. They couldn’t be more mistaken. In reality, vulnerability is a strength. Every leader has vulnerability. The greatest leaders have the self awareness to recognize this fact. They also recognize that showing their vulnerability is a sign of courage, and strength. Courage is the sixth Non-Negotiable that I cover in my book The 7 Non-Negotiables of Winning. Vulnerability is not a weakness.  In reality, the courage to show up and be seen. I was very compelled by the recent thoughts of business writer Kimberly Weisul, who recently discussed a presentation on vulnerability by author and researcher Brene Brown.At a Leadership Forum for Inc. Magazine, Brown turned the popular notions of vulnerability on their head. In reality, she says, vulnerability is actually the courage to show up and be seen. I agree. “Vulnerability is the absolute heartbeat of innovation and creativity,” she says. “There can be zero innovation without vulnerability.” How does vulnerability work? According to Brown, here are the four common mythes of vulnerability and how to combat them. Myth #1: Vulnerability is Weakness. In her research, Brown asked thousands of people to talk about times they felt vulnerable. They provide answers like “Starting my own business; the first date after my divorce; taking my company public.” Other answers include “owning something I’ve done wrong at work” (a big one, as you know from my prior columns) or “cheering my son on because he wants to make first chair in the orchestra and I know that it’s unlikely to happen”. Brown realized that none of these situations had anything to do with weakness. In fact, she points out that vulnerability is not a weakness at all. It is, perhaps, one of our most accurate measures of courage. Every entrepreneurial endeavor, by its very definition, is courageous and risky. For example, in my book I share the full experience of heading up the company buyback of our company, Fishbowl, in 2010. Rarely in my life have I been in such a vulnerable position. Although we’d always run our company in a very cash conservative way, the need of our majority investor to divest himself left us in the most vulnerable place of our life. Banks were not lending. Against all odds, we’d received an agreement for the only enterprise loan our regional bank offered in 2010, but at the last minute, we discovered the final approval was $500,000 short of our goal. I spoke to my executive team openly about the situation we were facing. I was humbled, and the discussion even involved tears (my own, and many from these longtime friends and esteemed partners as well). It took courage beyond words …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Vicki Gunvalson: ‘I Have A Lot Of Divorce Remorse’

By The Huffington Post News Editors

“Real Housewives of Orange County” star Vicki Gunvalson stopped by HuffPost Live on Monday and dished on her divorce, which played out on the Bravo reality show.

Gunvalson, who filed for divorce from husband Donn Gunvalson in 2010, admitted that she feels remorseful about the relationship’s demise.

“I have a lot of divorce remorse. I mean I really, really do.” she said. “In hindsight I wish I would have worked harder on the marriage. I think I messed up on some areas and he messed up too. It takes two people to get married, it takes two people to get divorced.”

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Jane Lynch Divorce: Actress Opens Up About Split From Lara Embry On ‘Larry King Now’

By The Huffington Post News Editors

On Monday’s episode of “Larry King Now,” Jane Lynch opened up about why she and Lara Embry, her wife of three years, are divorcing.

“It’s two people who decided it’s better to go apart than stay together,” she told Larry King.

Lynch filed for divorce on Friday, one month after announcing that she and Embry had parted ways. The estranged couple met at a fundraiser in 2009 and married on Memorial Day in 2010 in Massachusetts.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Online Dating After Divorce Was More ‘Tawdry Than I’d Ever Expected’

By The Huffington Post News Editors

Written by The Stir Bloggers on CafeMom’s blog, The Stir.

I separated from my husband just a year ago. The day before Mother’s Day, to be exact. We were just kids when we married sixteen years ago, so breaking up was a seismic event in my life. We’d been together almost my entire adult life. Obviously I couldn’t jump into dating right away. I decided to take a year off from men and just work on myself. Do therapy. Work out. Learn how to make myself happy — which, it turns out, I already knew how to do quite well. And then, finally, after this self-nurturing incubation period I would be ready to enter the world of 21st century dating.

My first post-divorce “dating” experience was way more tawdry and hot than I’d ever expected.

All of my friends told me the same thing: You have to try online dating. So I held my nose, did the research on how to create an irresistible profile, and I jumped in. I uploaded those photos and started weeding through messages from complete strangers. It took less than 24 hours to get one that made my heart pound.

“I think you’re truly adorable…. You come across as charming, honest and real,” the writer said. He added a little bit about himself, details that made him sound like your classic Renaissance man, then added “Please write back because it would put a smile on my face. Graciously, R — PS You have a beautiful smile.” His photo showed a dark, handsome, intense-looking man. I was already hooked.

Of course I wrote back. We exchanged a couple messages, and he said, “How good are you at an intelligent, shamelessly flirtatious phone conversation? My intent is to entice you out for coffee and conversation and high school kissing.” Oh God. I don’t know how to flirt, and all my wits left me at that instant, but I did my best. We chatted and he had an adorable English accent. I was pretty much screwed at that point.

We agreed to meet at his office the next day after work — not at a coffee shop as I’d originally imagined. He was tall and skinny, a little older than his photo looked, but elegant in a suit with a pocket square. We chatted politely. On the phone and over email he kept bringing up the shameless kissing — and I’d been hesitant at first. Now facing him, I just didn’t see how we were going to get started. But he had definitely done this before.

He took me by the hand, led me to the wall, and started kissing me, gently around my face at first, then full on my mouth. I thought it was okay, but I wasn’t feeling any sparks, yet. Then he started putting his hands all over my body, and it felt so amazing I just let him. Long story short, we ended up on the floor under his desk engaged in some serious heavy petting, half-undressed. Then, he ended our session abruptly. He wanted to see me again. Tomorrow. And then the next day. And then again and again. He walked me out to the elevators and I teetered out, a little dizzy with the most ridiculous grin on my face.

A minute later my phone buzzed with a text. “You are incredibly lovely.”

We did the same thing on Wednesday and then Thursday, which happened to be my birthday. As he kissed me he told me I was gorgeous, that he loved my body, that he loved how it responded to him. I couldn’t believe how turned on I was. I was completely out of control and it felt so exciting.

Even before becoming a single mom, I’ve been committed to the ideal of being an independent woman. Post-split it became even more important that I be in control, totally self-sufficient, self-contained, super-woman. And I think that’s why it felt so delicious to surrender to this clearly experienced seducer. Well, that’s what he was.

I knew where this was going. I could tell. He was not interested in my soul. He was never going to invite me to dinner. This was a fling, purely physical. And it was incredibly sleazy to make out with a man under his freaking desk. But I decided to go along with it anyway, just for the experience.

Meanwhile I lost my appetite. I was in a constant state of excitement. My whole body was vibrating, always. I couldn’t sleep, either.

I knew it wouldn’t last forever, but I was hoping it would last for a couple of weeks at least. I had the day off on Friday. We made plans for him to stop by my apartment that morning on his way to work, but that morning I got a text from him saying he’d slept in. “When else can i see u tday?” I had a busy day with a window open around lunchtime. I didn’t hear back. After a while I sent a flirty text (I’m a fast learner, I’d figured it out) saying I was sorry we couldn’t… (fill in the blank). He wrote back to say he’d been in meetings all day.

Without going into too much detail into what he does for a living, I knew he was hitting a particularly busy, high-priority moment at work — not just from him, but from the news. So I didn’t think much about it. But I also just wanted to nudge things a little bit away from pure sex and into, you know, the human realm. So over the weekend I called him over the weekend just to talk about books and what we’re doing and what I wanted him to do to me the next time we saw each other.

Monday morning he sent me a series of flaming hot sexts. We had an exchange while I was in my kitchen, trying to eat my granola and yogurt, and while my son was telling me in excruciating detail all about a Lego spaceship he’d just built. Life is surreal that way. My cheeks burned and I got excited again. Later I texted him. Could he squeeze me in that evening for a little… you know. “Wld love to..but in a mtg from 530 to 630.”

Okay, at this point I could either be naieve and trusting, or I could be realistic. My instincts say he’s seducing the woman of the week, and I go with that scenario. At any rate, I feel blown off. We barely got started, and it’s already over.

Apparently R was only into the chase. He was a hunter who killed, had a taste, and moved on. It seems a sad and unsatisfying way of life. My appetites run larger than that.

I have to be perfectly honest here, because I believe in feeling your feelings and all that. My feelings were hurt. I couldn’t believe anyone wouldn’t want more from me than a couple days’ worth of making out. How could he make me feel so special one moment, then so forgettable the next? I came home and cried in the bathroom. I emailed two of my friends, my online dating guides. “I’m not cut out for this!” My sweet friends talked me off the ledge and assured me I’d eventually meet someone who would see everything I had to offer, who would be interested in me for a DATE and sex, not just the sex.

So I got back out there. I went back online and changed my profile photo. I tweaked my profile a bit. I got some more bites. This is what I signed up for. I’m dating because it sounds fun and to expand my life. I have no regrets. It felt amazing to be desired like that, even if it lasted for just a few days. But next time? I think I’ll have to require at least a meal and an hours’ conversation before I allow myself to be ravished like that again.

Have you ever had a fling with a stranger?

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post