For many years, marriage was often perceived as a lifelong commitment irrespective of personal happiness. Older generation of women remained in difficult marriages, with the belief that endurance, sacrifice, and family stability was more important than individual fulfillment. However, in recent times, many women are making alternative choices. Rather than remaining in relationships that are emotionally or physically unhealthy or unsatisfying, some are choosing separation or divorce.
Quite often, this shift can be interpreted that modern marriages have less commitments than previous generations. But the reality is different. Women's changing role in society, in addition to the expectations of marriage, and greater financial independence, coupled with increased awareness of mental health have all reshaped how intimate relationships are evaluated.
Marriage Has Changed
In the past, marriage served practical purposes such as economic ties, bringing up children, family wealth preservation, and strengthening social ties; emotional fulfilment was not what marriage was centred on.
In most marriages, commitment was prioritised before personal happiness, love was on the sidelines. When challenges occur, the couple usually had to endure than leave the marriage.
In recent times, many couples expect marriage to provide not only companionship but also emotional intimacy, friendship, mutual respect, shared values, personal growth, and support during life's challenges. These high expectations can produce richer relationships, but they also mean prolonged dissatisfaction is less likely to be accepted.
Financial Independence Creates More Choice
A significant difference between generations is women's economic independence.
In previous generations, most women depended financially on their husbands. So when a marriage became emotionally distant, unhappy, controlling, leaving often meant risking poverty, homelessness, insecurity, or limited opportunities and resources to support children.
However, in recent times, more women pursue higher education, build financial security, establish careers, own property independently. This does not make divorce more appealing, but it makes leaving an unhealthy marriage more feasible.
Psychologically, having options changes decision-making. People are more likely to remain in relationships because they genuinely choose to, rather than because they feel trapped.
Emotional Wellbeing Has Become a Priority
In many modern conversations, mental health has changed how people think about relationships.
In previous generations, emotional neglect, chronic criticism, poor communication, or psychological manipulation were often viewed as private matters or simply "part of marriage." Today, these issues are more widely recognised as factors that can significantly affect wellbeing.
Many couples now seek counselling, read relationship literature, attend workshops, or develop healthier communication skills. At the same time, people may be less willing to tolerate patterns that consistently damage their mental health.
Choosing to leave is not always a rejection of commitment. Sometimes it reflects a belief that personal safety, dignity, or emotional health should also matter.
Expectations of Partnership Have Shifted
Many modern marriages are built on the idea of partnership rather than traditional gender roles.
Both spouses often work outside the home while also sharing childcare, household responsibilities, financial planning, and emotional labour. When one partner consistently carries a disproportionate share of these responsibilities, resentment can build over time.
Researchers have described emotional labour as the often-invisible work involved in remembering appointments, planning family activities, anticipating needs, resolving conflicts, and maintaining relationships. When this work falls heavily on one spouse, feelings of exhaustion and inequality may develop.
Many women today express a desire not simply for help around the house, but for a genuine sense of shared responsibility.
The Influence of Individual Fulfilment
Modern culture places considerable emphasis on authenticity and personal fulfilment.
People are encouraged to pursue meaningful careers, personal goals, emotional growth, and healthy relationships. While this can foster resilience and self-awareness, it can also change how people evaluate long-term commitments.
Rather than asking, "Can I endure this marriage?" many people ask, "Can this relationship continue to grow in a healthy way?"
This does not mean every difficulty justifies ending a marriage. Healthy relationships require compromise, forgiveness, and perseverance. However, many individuals distinguish between temporary challenges that can be worked through and long-term patterns that repeatedly erode trust or wellbeing.
Why Previous Generations Often Stayed
It is important not to romanticise or dismiss the choices of earlier generations.
Many older couples demonstrated remarkable resilience. They survived financial hardship, illness, bereavement, and other difficulties together. Their willingness to persevere often created stable family environments and lasting partnerships.
At the same time, many people remained in marriages because they faced barriers such as:
Financial dependence.
Social stigma surrounding divorce.
Religious or cultural expectations.
Limited legal protections.
Concern about losing custody of children.
Fear of community judgement.
Lack of access to support services.
Remaining married did not always indicate marital satisfaction. In some cases, it reflected limited alternatives.
Working Through Problems Still Matters
Although divorce has become more socially acceptable, many couples continue to overcome significant challenges.
Successful long-term marriages often involve:
Honest communication.
Mutual respect.
Accountability from both partners.
Willingness to apologise and forgive.
Shared responsibility at home.
Emotional availability.
Commitment to resolving conflict rather than avoiding it.
Relationship experts consistently note that marriages are strengthened not by the absence of conflict but by the ability to repair after conflict.
There Is No Single Story
It is tempting to compare generations and conclude that one had stronger marriages while the other gives up too easily. Reality is more complex.
Some older marriages endured because two people continually invested in one another despite hardship. Others endured because one or both partners felt they had no viable alternative.
Similarly, some modern divorces occur after years of sincere effort, counselling, compromise, and repeated attempts at reconciliation. Others may reflect changing expectations or an inability to resolve persistent conflict.
Every marriage exists within its own unique circumstances.
A Healthier Question
Perhaps the most useful question is not whether people should stay or leave, but what makes a marriage worth preserving.
Healthy marriages are generally characterised by mutual respect, trust, emotional safety, shared effort, and a willingness to grow together. When these qualities remain present—even through difficult seasons—many couples emerge stronger.
When they are consistently absent despite genuine efforts to repair the relationship, some individuals conclude that separation is the healthiest path.
Finally, the apparent increase in women leaving unhappy marriages reflects a combination of social, economic, and psychological changes rather than a simple decline in commitment. Greater financial independence, increased awareness of mental health, changing expectations of partnership, and broader acceptance of divorce have all expanded the choices available to many women.
At the same time, the enduring lesson from older generations should not be overlooked. Patience, perseverance, forgiveness, and shared commitment remain vital ingredients of lasting relationships. The challenge for modern couples is to balance those values with the equally important principles of mutual respect, emotional wellbeing, and personal dignity.
Ultimately, a successful marriage is not measured solely by its duration, but by the quality of the relationship experienced by both partners.
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