23 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Finally, a book for us!, January 30, 2006
This review is from: The Way They Were: Dealing with Your Parents' Divorce After a Lifetime of Marriage (Paperback)
This is the first book in over 10 years that is by, for and about those of us whose parents divorced when we were adults. And it is worth the wait! Well-written and full of compassion, the book serves two purposes. It shares the author's story and that of many adult children of divorce who were interviewed, helping the reader to understand that he or she is not alone in their feelings. More importantly, this book helps to put those feelings in perspective, gives advice on how to deal with them, and helps you to get through the various stages of your parents' divorce and remarriage. I am nearly 10 years removed from my parents' divorce when I was 23, and have read nearly everything ever written on the subject, and I still gained insight from this book. I highly recommend it to any adult experiencing parental divorce, any parent trying to understand their child's feelings, and any spouse/friend/etc. trying to help someone through the situation.
Lara Little, owner/webmaster, Adult Children of Divorce website
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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I'm so jealous of those who were interviewed for this book!!, July 16, 2006
This review is from: The Way They Were: Dealing with Your Parents' Divorce After a Lifetime of Marriage (Paperback)
WOW...I read this book with such enthralled interest and found myself nodding through so much of it because it fully validated all I have felt in the 12 1/2 years since I learned my parents' nearly 29-year marriage was ending.
Let me first say to anyone considering "staying together for the kids" that you seriously reconsider! Not only is there NO evidence that waiting until the kids are adults makes it less painful, but as many of the interviewees in the book attest, it makes the marriage seem to be a sham, and if the disenchantment with it is made known to the kids after they're grown, particularly if all appeared to be well, we end up questioning all we thought we had learned from it. I had always thought my parents were happy together. They never fought in front of us, and we always saw them make up. I was actually proud to have parents who appeared to be in love with each other after years and years--the way my husband and I are--only to find out from my mother when she left my dad for his best friend that she didn't think she had EVER really been in love with him! I had only been married for 4 years by then myself, and it crushed me. I began to question my own identity because of all the lies that suddenly came to light.
The other thing I wrestled with was the timing. I had just learned I was pregnant with my second child and had just had a crisis with a lifelong chronic health condition. Mom, who had always been so protective of me, chose THAT TIME to leave my father! She also lied many times to me about what she had planned to do, and perhaps predictably, I became extremely sick and battled one thing after another through my entire pregnancy. Brooke Foster validated for me what I have always wondered: whether all the stress from the split, as well as all the pleas and fights over whose "side" I should be on contributed to the demise of my health during that time. I'm sure now that it did, and since my son was subsequently diagnosed with autism, I am sad to say that I can't dismiss the role of the divorce as contributing to it.
I'm relieved to say I have a great relationship with both of my parents now, and even my mom's husband (sorry; can't say "stepfather"! I was 28 when they married!), and I have moved on from all of the anger and hurt I felt about it, but it does change who you are and how you think about your own relationships. When I find that my husband and I squabble about the same things over and over again, I worry that the cycle is beginning again, so even if you get to the point of being "over it," it can have a lasting--perhaps even lifelong--influence over you in some way. If you need to leave a lousy marriage, do, by all means, but please don't stay on account of your kids, because I can assure you that they will have other problems as a result.
If you are looking for a book that reassures you that you aren't (or haven't been) overreacting to your parents' divorce, this is the book to read, from someone who has "been there and done that." Please pick it up. It is definitely worth the read.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Only resource of it's kind; exactly what I was looking for!, March 23, 2006
This review is from: The Way They Were: Dealing with Your Parents' Divorce After a Lifetime of Marriage (Paperback)
I was 25 years old when my parents divorced after 29 years of marriage. Dealing with their divorce was (and is) difficult in part because I didn't know anyone else who had been an adult when their parents divorced. I also could not find any resources for adult children going through the break-up of their parents' marriage. This book is the only one of its kind that I have found.
Foster is not a counselor or psychologist; she's just someone who went through the same thing I'm going through. (She is a writer, and an excellent one at that, making this book very easy to read.) In her book she shares her own story and the stories of other adults who went through similar situations.
Reading this book has been one of the most helpful things I've done in the last year since my parents divorced. This book was just what I needed -- not an over-the-top psychological evaluation, not even a how-to manual. It's just an honest, no-frills book about what we experience when our parents divorce in our adult years. It helped me to realize that others are experiencing the same challenges and emotions that I am. Hearing their stories helped me cope with my own situation.
I highly recommend this book.
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