These
deal-breakers include abusive behavior, disrespect of family and friends, trivialization of career, habitual deception and harsh treatment of others. In this question and answer with Divorce360, Karinch advises what to do when your spouse exhibits deal-breaking behaviors, how to turn these objectionable actions around to avoid divorce, and what to do if they persist.
Divorce360: You refer to certain behavior in marriage as deal-breakers. Why?
Karinch: There are some things that are so important to your personal identity that when they’re violated you feel as if a piece of yourself has been taken out. When you enter a relationship, you expect that the other person will honor certain entitlements. These entitlements can be anything that is important to you, such as, someone being faithful to you. Entitlements are completely personal, and it’s something you must sit down and figure out on your own.
Divorce360: Why do you say in your book, “Your basic question in deciding whether or not to continue a relationship is this. Does he violate my entitlements?”
Karinch: If the person knows your entitlements and deliberately violates them, he or she is showing disrespect for you. All the love he/she feels won’t change that. Respect is fundamental in a relationship.
Divorce360. Why do you refer to them as deal-breakers? Karinch: Your relationship has a foundation like a house. If you remove one aspect, there’s structural damage. If a pillar breaks so does the relationship. Repairing it isn’t easy.
Divorce360: What are the most common deal-breakers? Karinch: Fidelity is a big one. If you cheat on most people, they’re out. Anything can be a deal-breaker, stealing, lying, squashing another person’s career, hurting one’s friends, abusing in-laws.
Divorce360: When does annoying behavior stop and deal-breakers begin? Karinch: If annoying behavior persists after it’s been addressed, that’s a deal-breaker. It’s no longer the behavior itself, but the fact that the person continues to behave in a way that disturbs you.
Divorce360. Describe the effects of abusive behavior. Karinch: Abusive behavior can be psychological or physical. Physical involves rough treatment, making you uncomfortable in your own home. Psychological abuse entails insidious treatment that makes you feel uncomfortable and unsafe.
Divorce360: Prior to getting married, this deal-breaking behavior likely appeared. Why was it allowed to persist? Karinch: Most people make excuses and hope the behavior will change. They think the more time they spend together, the more the person will respect them and will stop the abusive behavior. As the love deepens, the problem should go away. Most often, it doesn’t go away by itself.
Divorce360: Many people think marriage is some magical potion that will transform a person. What’s wrong with that view? Karinch: That’s like saying “I’ll take a crocodile into the house, feed it, give it attention, and it won’t behave like a crocodile.” It’s in their character to be abusive. If that behavior is present early on, it’ll be present later. Behavior won’t change without intervention like therapy or medication.
Divorce360: What’s your best advice to stop this abusive behavior? Karinch: Make it clear that it must stop immediately. If therapy is something the person will do, get them into therapy. You need immediate action, not promises to get better. If you don’t take action right away, you fall into a vicious cycle or the Ike and Tina Turner syndrome, where the abuse is part of the love.
Divorce360: Many abusive people get defensive, say they will change and don’t. Why? Karinch: Many abusive people don’t see themselves as abusers. Many were raised that way by an abusive parent.