I disagree, Rick.
Marriage is a partnership. It's based on a mutual agreement. It depends on the participation of both spouses. When one spouse feels that he or she can no longer participate, that partnership and agreement - i.e. the basis of the marriage - is lost.
And I don't think it's your right to hold someone else's assets hostage. Yes, you worked for that house, but so did your spouse. When things are divided up, you'll get your fair share, and that's all you're entitled to.
Besides, don't you want your marriage to be based on, say, love and trust, not a grudging realization that with her money tied up in your house, she couldn't afford a down payment somewhere else?
Speaking for myself, my spouse didn't cheat on me and didn't beat me up. What did happen is that our marriage got to the point where I was so miserable that I really did feel I couldn't live with her any more. After I separated, one of my best friends, who's known me since I was 9, said t me "you know, I would never have said this when you were together, but I never saw you as unhappy as you looked when you were with her."
"No fault" doesn't mean "no reason", IMO. Even if the law doesn't demand that one spouse be identified as the one to blame, people don't throw away a commitment like marriage on a whim. If it gets to the point where one spouse feels they have no choice but to leave, then this say that there are serious and probably insurmountable problems in the marriage.
I think that in this situation, the spouse who claims that he or she did nothing wrong is probably just closing their eyes to the problems.
It was like that for me: I tried for years with my wife to deal with the problems we were having, but it was like talking to brick wall. Eventually, I came to the realization that she wasn't going to address them with me, so there was no hope of fixing the marriage. Since the status quo was intolerable, I left. And I think I made the right decision, given the circumstances.
Marriage is a partnership. It's based on a mutual agreement. It depends on the participation of both spouses. When one spouse feels that he or she can no longer participate, that partnership and agreement - i.e. the basis of the marriage - is lost.
And I don't think it's your right to hold someone else's assets hostage. Yes, you worked for that house, but so did your spouse. When things are divided up, you'll get your fair share, and that's all you're entitled to.
Besides, don't you want your marriage to be based on, say, love and trust, not a grudging realization that with her money tied up in your house, she couldn't afford a down payment somewhere else?
Speaking for myself, my spouse didn't cheat on me and didn't beat me up. What did happen is that our marriage got to the point where I was so miserable that I really did feel I couldn't live with her any more. After I separated, one of my best friends, who's known me since I was 9, said t me "you know, I would never have said this when you were together, but I never saw you as unhappy as you looked when you were with her."
"No fault" doesn't mean "no reason", IMO. Even if the law doesn't demand that one spouse be identified as the one to blame, people don't throw away a commitment like marriage on a whim. If it gets to the point where one spouse feels they have no choice but to leave, then this say that there are serious and probably insurmountable problems in the marriage.
I think that in this situation, the spouse who claims that he or she did nothing wrong is probably just closing their eyes to the problems.
It was like that for me: I tried for years with my wife to deal with the problems we were having, but it was like talking to brick wall. Eventually, I came to the realization that she wasn't going to address them with me, so there was no hope of fixing the marriage. Since the status quo was intolerable, I left. And I think I made the right decision, given the circumstances.