Dec 20

christmas-divorceYesterday morning my husband was reading the papers over a breakfast cup of coffee. He looked out into the garden. Our two giant Briard dogs were frolicking together, getting completely covered in snow. A little red robin was hopping about on the branch of a snow covered fir tree. Two wood pigeons landed together on an almost frozen bird bath for a drink. With the snow covering the garden, the trees and the bushes, the scene couldn’t have been any more Christmassy.

“Better do all my jobs today if the weather is going to get even worse”, my husband sighed. And I started to laugh.

My husband wasn’t thinking about Winter Wonderland. He was thinking about practical matters, like how to get to the supermarket on icy roads, so that we don’t starve watching TV this weekend.

And he’s definitely not alone.

One of my clients, a well known company lawyer, has his own theory about Christmas. He believes it is two unnecessary weeks off work, spent living “out of synch” with normality. He believes that Christmas is a “woman thing”

Last year I wrote at length about how the tensions created at Christmas can lead to divorce, after our family law firm experienced a surge in enquiries from overworked women in the weeks leading up to the festivities:

“They described the tidying that had to be fitted around entertaining, the exhaustion and the never-ending rounds of relations and friends for at least a week afterwards. More than one said that she had do all this work herself – and dreaded it. None of them would put themselves through it at all if their children were older.

“Listening to these tales of drudgery I wonder, have women really attained equality?  I doubt it. It seems to me that for women, Christmas continues to be an exhausting, miserable slog for women who take on the chores year in, year out because they feel that they must. It appears to be a matter of tradition, rather than choice.

“I can’t help concluding that it isn’t Christmas that causes a divorce. It’s the thought of it.”  (Christmas and Divorce: What Women Want)

However my male client has a different take on this situation. He argues that if there is pressure placed on a marriage as a result of Christmas, he says, it is because women do it to themselves!

He thinks that women drive themselves and others – particularly men – bonkers with the festive preparations. Like my female clients last year, he points to the shopping, the presents, the cooking, the festive days themselves, the families, the children and all the clearing up afterwards. He also points out that all the advertising, marketing and tugging upon heart strings is aimed squarely at women. He sees men as reluctant and resigned, taking the easy way out. Yes, they do their bit, but usually at the last minute and because they have to.

My client intends to ignore Christmas this year. He is convinced that if men had their way, it wouldn’t exist at all. He asks, “Why do we have Father Christmas? It should be Mother Christmas”.

Is he right? Is Christmas “a woman thing” and if so, why haven’t all we clever women spotted that we are being “had” before now? I have my own thoughts about this, but would be interested to know what you think…

Image credit: Lin Pernille Photography.




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3 Responses to “Christmas and the divorced man: is my client right?”

  1. Donna F. Ferber, LPC, LADC Says:

    I am a psychotherapist in private practice who specializes in family transitions. I disagree with the idea that the stress of the holidays drives women to divorce.Many women are clear they want a divorce PRIOR to the holidays. The frenzy we observe is their desire to make “The Last Family Christmas” as special as possible before they file for divorce in January. Being sensitive to the needs of the family, most therapists and attorneys advise people not to begin divorce proceedings too close to the holidays. If they do, children most likely will associate the festivities with the demise of their parents’ marriage.
    No one takes divorce lightly. Women often have worked for years to keep their marriage together. Sometimes,they make a New Year’s resolution about ending their marriage.
    Holiday stress does aggravate already bad behaviors-people tend to eat, drink and spend too much and are often sleep deprived. If there are issues of substance abuse, the holidays only makes them worse. The same is true for verbal and physical abuse. Often the holidays reinforce the decision, but they aren’t the catalyst.
    Donna F. Ferber, LPC, LADC
    Author-From Ex-wife to Exceptional Life: A Woman’s Journey through Divorce”
    http://www.donnaferber.com

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