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For years children have been considered the real victims of divorce, doomed to
a life of insecurity, underachievement and endless shuttling between two
homes.
But two studies have found that most children whose parents split up are happy
with their new life and do not see divorce as a tragedy.
A poll of 2,000 adults and 350 children published today found that 80 per cent
of 10 to 15-year-olds were “quite happy” or “very happy” with their family
life. The same proportion said that things were “just as good” or “better”
since the separation.
Less than a third of the children (28 per cent) longed for their parents to
get back together. An “end to the arguments” was cited as the greatest
benefit of divorce by far.
Today is traditionally the busiest day of the year for divorce lawyers, when
they are deluged with inquiries about separation. A stressful Christmas is
often the last straw for an unhappy couple, experts say.
The poll was commissioned by insidedivorce.com and conducted last month by
Tickbox. Its findings are supported by detailed academic research nearing
completion, which has tracked the experiences of 60 children of divorced or
separated parents over nine years.
Jennifer Flowerdew and Bren Neale, sociologists at the University of Leeds,
are the principal researchers working on Family Dynamics after Divorce.
Dr Flowerdew told The Times: “When the separation is taking place it
is often very difficult and hugely challenging for everyone involved. But
that is temporary. Over time the divorce fades into the background and
things settle down into their new pattern.
“When the children were interviewed four years on they were very keen to
emphasise that the divorce was just one of several challenges they had to
face. Only a small minority got stuck, while the rest became preoccupied
with the other problems of their own lives. They mostly saw themselves as
leading perfectly ordinary family lives and did not want to be typecast as
the children of divorced parents.”
She said that one of the biggest advances had been an end to the stigma once
attached to divorce. Dr Flowerdew believes that the idea that children
always fare better when their parents are married — most recently endorsed
by David Cameron, the Tory leader — has not been tested.
“Just like there are many different kinds of divorces, there are many
different kinds of marriages,” she said. “Some are OK and some are not and
no one examines what life is like for children when the marriage is not OK.”
The poll and the research found that children came off worst when parents
continued to argue over access and ignored their wishes. One fifth of the
children surveyed, mostly boys, complained that they did not have enough say
over where they spent their time.
'Now life is twice as fun,' says one child of divorce
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