Back in the 50s or 60s divorce was rare. Was anyone else from a divorced or separated family, especially back then?
By the 80s it was common and nowadays it seems like marriage is less likely to happen.
It was just something that I accepted as a child. With my first marriage, I realized that having my children in a very unpleasant setting was worse than a bit of stigma re divorce.
You may find this interesting, Quote:
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English “Kinsey” Report: Love Without Shame Is New, Healthier Thinking in Britain
"How do American women compare with their British cousins in sexual behavior?"
Writer Lester David asks and answers this question with his summary of the "English Kinsey report" in the August issue of Coronet. The report on sexual behavior in England is the result of a four-year study conducted by Dr. Eustace Chesser.
Method Differs
Dr. Chesser, a psychologist, did not follow the Kinsey method of face-to-face interviews. He sent out written questionnaires, of which 6,251 were completed. His conclusions were based on these.
The British psychologist, unlike Kinsey, covered more thoroughly the effects of family and marriage relationships, religion in the home and parental control. Kinsey's study emphasized the biological side of sex life.
On the whole the trend in Britain parallels that in the U.S., Chesser found. A London newspaper sums up one of Chesser's most significant findings:
"Love without shame is the essense of new and healthier thinking which is developing slowly in Britain."
In the U.S., Kinsey found that almost 50 percent of the 5,940 women studied had had sexual intercourse before marriage, with their finances or other men. In England, while only 19 percent of women born before 1904 admitted to premarital experience, with those born after 1934 the proportion is up to 60 percent.
More Regrets
But there is a difference in attitude. Of American women, with premarital experience, only about 12 percent expressed "minor feelings of remorse." Around 35-42 percent of their British counterparts felt regret.
By the time they reached 40, Kinsey found, 26 percent of married women had committed adultery.
Cresser didn't ask this question of his subjects, but he did ask how many of the married women sometimes wanted a man other than their husbands. One out of every two women admitted they did get tired of monogamy.
One of Kinsey's biggest surprises was that the average American women reaches the peak of her sexual desires in her late 20's—almost a decade later than the male. In her 50's and 60's she is still going strong, while the male has gone downhill. But with English women, Chesser found there is "a steady fall from one age to the next."
Rich Pet More
Up to 95 percent of British women have petted by the time they are 18, Chesser found—and there is more petting among the well-to-do than among the daughters of unskilled laborers. Foreign observers "are amazed at the open display of love-making" in public places.
Do women prefer chaste husbands? Here there was a great difference between Americans and British. Only one out of four U.S. women wanted to marry an inexperienced husband. With the "exceptionally happy" and "very happy" English wives, the proportion was just reversed: three out of four wanted their husbands "innocent."
What do English single women look for in husbands? Forty percent looked for physical strength. Twenty percent, for sexual strength.
"The vast majority," for a warm and affectionate nature, understanding and interest in children. Only three percent, for good looks.
What is the best guarantee of a happy marriage in England? Happily married parents, Chesser found."
http://www.hawaii.edu/uhwo/clear/Ho...ame Is New Healthier Thinking in Britain.html