top of page
Search

Should You Stay or Go? What Divorce Lawyers Won’t Tell You

  • Writer: RESCET™
    RESCET™
  • Dec 28, 2025
  • 3 min read

Updated: Dec 30, 2025

Most couples who divorce still love each other. They separate because they can no longer manage the way they relate.


A woman staring into the distance pensively with a man out of focus sitting on a sofa behind her

Here is what happens:


Two people fall in love. The connection is strong, but each carries a personal history shaped by family, trauma, culture, and past relationships. These histories shape how they perceive safety and threat.


Conflict begins. When one partner feels hurt, the other interprets that pain through their own filter. Each person defends themselves and the defensive behavior is often interpreted by the other as hurtful. They start reacting to tone, timing, or phrasing instead of the underlying emotional message about their partner's feelings.


Misunderstandings accumulate. Over time, each partner builds a private story about the other. They stop verifying assumptions and begin describing behavior with labels like controlling, selfish, cold, irresponsible.


Distance forms. The emotional system becomes closed. Curiosity is replaced by confirmation bias. The couple believes they disagree on fundamental values, when in reality they have stopped understanding how the other’s experiences formed their worldview. In other words, they are confusing misunderstandings for disagreements.


Hopelessness sets in. After years of repeating the same patterns, they begin to see the conflict as unchangeable and their partner as unreachable. Divorce starts to look like relief.


This is tragic because most couples who end a marriage never fully understood one another. Instead, couples mistake misunderstanding for impasse (often called "irreconcilable differences" in legal speak) and pull the plug.


Before divorce, one is strongly advised to pursue understanding because it is understanding

that drives change. And change is much more possible than couples contemplating divorce believe it to be. Therapist Esther Perel has observed that a person may have several marriages within a lifetime, often to the same partner.


Psychologist Joshua Coleman, in Imperfect Harmony, describes couples who stay together for practical reasons such as children, stability, and inertia, and later find that the conflicts which once seemed insurmountable lose intensity over time. As external pressures shift, perspective expands, and the same relationship can begin to function differently. Transformation is common among those who stay long enough to witness it.


Empirical data supports the difficulty of sustaining connection. Roughly 40 percent of marriages are considered “discordant” or low in quality. Neuroscientific research further shows that only about 15 percent of long-term couples remain deeply and passionately in love, still experiencing a measurable physiological response when their partner enters the room. In a culture that equates marriage with continuous romantic intensity, these numbers seem discouraging. In reality, they point to untapped potential.


The RESCET™ framework was developed for this inflection point. It provides a defined process for determining whether a relationship can evolve and, if so, how to build it on accurate understanding rather than defensive reaction. It is not about preserving marriage at any cost; it is about examining whether clarity has ever truly been achieved between two people.


Unless a marriage involves physical danger, the decision to examine it closely is rarely wasted. Most relationships contain more elasticity than either partner realizes.


Finally, caution is warranted when advice encourages diagnosing or labeling a spouse. Labels interrupt analysis. Once a motive or trait is assigned, observation becomes interpretation. Curiosity disappears, and with it, the capacity for empathy and accountability.


The same discipline that drives successful negotiation, leadership, and investment, verifying assumptions before acting, applies here as well.


Most marriages do not collapse from absence of love. They collapse when two people reach conclusions about each other too early and never revisit them.


Contact us to start your journey towards understanding today.

 
 
 

Comments


bottom of page