Our community is deeply divided over the rise of ‘walkaway wives’, with many readers describing midlife divorce as a long-overdue rejection of unequal relationships, while others argue marriage is increasingly being abandoned too easily when partnerships become difficult. Share your opinion and read the full debate here.
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I married late, in my forties, and I believed we would grow old together. So when the physical and emotional relationship withered, I stuck it out, thinking I was aiming for companionship. I was also trapping myself in the fear that if two live cheaper than one, one will struggle financially. Our lifestyles had diverged and eventually I couldn’t tolerate the heavy drinking. I cracked and left – and felt an immediate lightening. I am in my mid-sixties but feel more confident alone. More relaxed. And even though I will have to keep working for some time, I can do it.
Anonymous
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The number of children that are severely absent and miss more than 50 per cent of school as numbers hit record highs
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“She never looks at her husband's mobile phone.”
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Sources close to Brigitte Macron deny she fought with her husband, French president Emmanuel Macron, over texts to an exiled Iranian actress
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With so much uncertainty and confusion among travellers, I am talking today to the man who has led Abta, the travel association, for 20 years: CEO Mark Tanzer. "I don't anticipate from where we are today that there'll be large scale disruption for people," he tells me. "With everything going on in the world, it's a good time to have a holiday."
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With so much uncertainty and confusion among travellers, I am talking today to the man who has led Abta, the travel association, for 20 years: CEO Mark Tanzer. "I don't anticipate from where we are today that there'll be large scale disruption for people," he tells me. "With everything going on in the world, it's a good time to have a holiday."
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