Newly Married - Divorce Needed - Help
Newly Married - Divorce Needed - Help
Author
Discussion

TheGreatDane

Original Poster:

363 posts

94 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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Hi All,

Been together for 1 year 8 months, but never lived together prior to getting married.

Got married 8 weeks ago and life is a living nightmare.

Arguments daily and I feel she has some serious mental health issues.

I've said I want a separation but she won't leave.

House is in my name with a mortgage, no other joint assets etc.

I pay for everything.

Any advice?

anonymous-user

78 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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As a divorced man I would say speak to a solicitor immediately.

What was she like before you got married, has she completely changed since you got married?

bongtom

2,018 posts

107 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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You need to speak to a solicitor not ask some randoms on the internet.

Get a grip and sort it now. Quick, get on the phone.

southendpier

6,040 posts

253 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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Yep, talk to a specialist family lawyer, you need to play by the rules and the game has started already - it would seem.

Pistom

6,234 posts

183 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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Are you sure it's not just buyers remorse and she just needs a bit of running in?

Have you tried a period of refusing to argue? Just let things ride?

If all else fails, shagging her mother is usually effective in getting them to leave.

derek.j

80 posts

65 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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Sounds like you've been played big style

_Hoppers

1,594 posts

89 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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jonsp

1,541 posts

180 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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The lesson is probably don't buy a car without a test drive. No doubt a lot of us know from bitter experience there's a huge difference between seeing a woman a few times/week when she's at her best and she's making an effort vs living with her full time.

What's her financial situation, presumably not good? Thinking maybe offering her some amount of money might be the quickest/cheapest way to get rid. Obviously you'd still need legal advice to kill the marriage but if you can get her on side and accepting she needs to move on some amount of money might be very well spent.

PM3

1,124 posts

84 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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In May 22 ( must be just weeks before you got married ) YOU asked advice about pre nuptial agreements. You also expressed doubts about marriage etc
Many people ( did not look like a pile on at all ) suggested for various reasons you don't get married .You got married.

Having no idea of your age, your level of general maturity ( you don't strike me as immature tbh ) and your long term fiscal situation , It all right now just sounds like speed bumps , but as a long term married person it does sound like speed bumps with warnings going off .
Your are going to have to decide if internet advice ( you do not listen it seems ) is just a bit random, but there is often a seed of group truth ....so for "gods" sake really think hard and make some sort of decision before children enter the field of play.

Family lawyer advice -yes . Serious parental/family( YOURS )advice unless you have a family littered only with broken relationships .
Forget the monetary aspects of the marriage/dissolution of marriage , do you want to go with this ?...or get out now for the betterment of you and probably her

alscar

8,229 posts

237 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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Sorry to hear that OP but given your previous post about Pre-nups ( I recall your name ) I assume that conversation sadly never went any further ?

dudleybloke

20,553 posts

210 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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Do you own a canoe?

Hammersia

1,564 posts

39 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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PM3 said:
In May 22 ( must be just weeks before you got married ) YOU asked advice about pre nuptial agreements. You also expressed doubts about marriage etc
Many people ( did not look like a pile on at all ) suggested for various reasons you don't get married .You got married.

Having no idea of your age, your level of general maturity ( you don't strike me as immature tbh ) and your long term fiscal situation , It all right now just sounds like speed bumps , but as a long term married person it does sound like speed bumps with warnings going off .
Your are going to have to decide if internet advice ( you do not listen it seems ) is just a bit random, but there is often a seed of group truth ....so for "gods" sake really think hard and make some sort of decision before children enter the field of play.

Family lawyer advice -yes . Serious parental/family( YOURS )advice unless you have a family littered only with broken relationships .
Forget the monetary aspects of the marriage/dissolution of marriage , do you want to go with this ?...or get out now for the betterment of you and probably her
Excellent powers of forum recall. I remember that thread.

Don't think "love" was mentioned at all in the original thread. OP said he "had" to get married. So I suspect divorce is going to be even more tricky than normal.

anonymoususer

7,950 posts

72 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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PM3 said:
In May 22 ( must be just weeks before you got married ) YOU asked advice about pre nuptial agreements. You also expressed doubts about marriage etc
Many people ( did not look like a pile on at all ) suggested for various reasons you don't get married .You got married.

Having no idea of your age, your level of general maturity ( you don't strike me as immature tbh ) and your long term fiscal situation , It all right now just sounds like speed bumps , but as a long term married person it does sound like speed bumps with warnings going off .
Your are going to have to decide if internet advice ( you do not listen it seems ) is just a bit random, but there is often a seed of group truth ....so for "gods" sake really think hard and make some sort of decision before children enter the field of play.

Family lawyer advice -yes . Serious parental/family( YOURS )advice unless you have a family littered only with broken relationships .
Forget the monetary aspects of the marriage/dissolution of marriage , do you want to go with this ?...or get out now for the betterment of you and probably her
I couldn't work out why I couldn't see the post you refer to when I went back a few months but then realized it was May '22 NOT May '23. So it looks like the OP was trying to put stuff in place considerably some time in advance of the marriage ie a year or so before getting hitched.
It all looks to have gone horribly wrong and I suspect the OP had some foreboding it might.
As others have said posting on here won't be as useful as actual advice from a solicitor. There will be some gems on here but the OP needs to sort a solicitor out now if things are as bad as they seem.
I genuinely wish him luck


Edited by anonymoususer on Thursday 27th July 10:20

Resolutionary

1,480 posts

195 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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This makes for an interesting re-read, given your current predicament:

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

And this sentiment came up a lot:

Porsche guy said:
V1nce Fox said:
Ussrcossack said:
If you are having doubts now.... don't get married
Absolutely this.
What he said..smile
I actually remember it because I've long decided marriage as a construct is not for me, and this coupled with real life examples (and your new situation) continue to reinforce that point. In my mid-30s I've seen both sides now, and I'm still not convinced it's a worthwhile endeavour.

In that thread, you also said:

TheGreatDane said:
Very clear consensus here, thanks everyone for their input.

I wish it were as simple as having a discussion but her sister had a prenup, fell apart guy left her up s**** creek after amassing huge amounts of debt in her name. She will never come around to the idea of it due to that.

As mentioned culture plays a big part in both of our lives (hers more than mine) so not getting married isn't an option.

I'll have to have a real think, not to sound soppy but I do love her so it is a tough one.
Perhaps besides the point, but the whole 'culture' aspect seems to have screwed you royally here, and one can thusly assume a divorce, so soon, is possibly more culturally unforgivable / inappropriate.

For context, part of my heritage makes it culturally normal to marry without cohabiting first, or have families hook their kids up, or otherwise do things as the older generations did. I told everyone involved to do-one from an early age (black sheep label notwithstanding!), and still do when pressed / ribbed, and I'm all the better for it.

You can, and should, do things for yourself first. You're no good to anybody else if you're not alright, as evidenced here in the fallout of cultural pressure.

Best of luck with all this, must be extremely difficult. I'd seek proper legal advice, and find your feet while you can - before things get uglier (which is entirely likely, the more you endure).

As an aside, I also have sympathy for your partner. I have a friend who, again, was culturally coerced into marrying someone in their early 20s who they barely knew. The wife ended up losing her mind, became unrecognisable to my pal, and was actually sectioned for a while. What's normal 'back home', ain't necessarily compatible with the here and now.

classicaholic

2,168 posts

94 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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I know how you feel, my ex turned into her Mother on the wedding day - should have walked away when I still had my assets!

TheGreatDane

Original Poster:

363 posts

94 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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I tried walking away and I was 100% convinced she was going to harm herself, hence I stuck around - hate myself for being a sap here.

Ultimately I decided to proceed so that's on me. Lesson learnt.

My main concern is the house really. She lived with her mum earns well and hasn't contributed towards anything since marriage.




Hammersia

1,564 posts

39 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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It may not help, don't know, but I'd still like to know if you love, or ever loved, her?

TheGreatDane

Original Poster:

363 posts

94 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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Given whats happened I can't say I do.

Care for her as a person yes and don't wish ill upon her.

x5tuu

12,692 posts

211 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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If it hasnt been consumated you may be able to seek an annulment within the first 12mths ... https://www.gov.uk/how-to-annul-marriage

Legal advice here is key as is speed of action.

TheGreatDane

Original Poster:

363 posts

94 months

Thursday 27th July 2023
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It has.

She will refuse to leave or proceed so I genuinely don't know what to do.

Will contact a solicitor.

I feel totally lost and numb.