Just like no two relationships are alike, the same can be said for divorce.
When you’re going through a divorce, it’s important to focus on your own needs. Comparing your situation to others can cause undue psychological distress when what you should really be doing is focusing on self-care.
Divorce is complicated. You might want to understand yours better by comparing it to the experiences of others, but this is an unhealthy practice. You really should take those observations with a grain of salt. Here’s why.
While it’s helpful to understand the mechanics of the divorce process and what to expect in terms of emotions and healing, it’s difficult to get a good feeling for what your divorce will look like – or should look like – by comparing it to someone else’s experience. Speaking with a good divorce attorney will help you understand the mechanics of divorce in the context of your situation.
We tend to compare our lives to others when we feel vulnerable and uncertain. But there are too many unknowns when you compare your divorce to a friend’s, parent’s, co-worker’s, or influencer’s divorce.
You can’t know everything that transpired throughout someone else’s marriage that led to their divorce. You won’t know how they interacted when they were angry or whether they tried to put their differences aside to cooperate with each other. You don’t know what their attorneys advised them to do or if they kept it adversarial to their own financial advantage.
Like any relationship, there are always two sides. You’re only getting one side and just a small sliver at that. Comparison isn’t worth your time or energy, and it can be counterproductive and detrimental to your emotional health and physical health.
Like any other information you get secondhand, divorce stories will be limited, slanted, and colored by the person telling their side of it.
Comparison is human nature and a common part of living a social life. Especially now, with access to millions of people via social media, everyone is constantly trying to measure themselves against everyone else. Divorce is no exception.
Divorce is a huge life event and a great unknown. Of course, you’re going to want to prepare yourself for the impact of divorce in any way you can. This is a human coping mechanism to help reduce feelings of uncertainty. You want to know if what you’re going through is normal. You want to get a sense of what to expect and how to protect yourself. That’s natural.
Yes, the divorce rate is high with close to half of all married couples calling it quits. But the effects of divorce are different for everyone. Each divorce story has a unique couple behind it. The end of a marriage is the culmination of everything that came before it, and every relationship has its own history.
Comparing your relationship and divorce to that of another couple could set you up to expect things that just aren’t relevant to your experience.
It may be difficult to imagine divorce in terms of success, but it’s your best measurement of all. What does a “successful” divorce look like to you?
We propose that it's a situation that makes you feel strong, capable, and supported. Maybe it's having the ability to maintain a positive co-parenting relationship with your ex post-divorce. Maybe you would be happy to cut ties completely. Maybe you simply want things to be fair so you can move forward unencumbered by the past and build a new, contented life.
Get social support from a support group aimed at helping people in your position. We recommend Circles, a leading online support group platform.
Measuring your success against someone else’s simply doesn’t work. Your version of success is yours alone. That includes how you end your marriage. While divorce isn’t ever a pleasant experience, it doesn’t have to be as unpleasant as you may expect from hearing others’ stories.
At Hello Divorce, we believe that divorce doesn’t have to be contentious and adversarial. If you are navigating a divorce, have heard horror stories, and want things to be different, we can help. Schedule a free 15-minute phone call to discuss your divorce-related questions and to get answers.
Why shouldn’t I compare my divorce to someone else’s?
Every marriage has different finances, communication patterns, mental health factors, and levels of conflict. What worked for someone else may not fit your goals, safety, or reality.
Is it normal to feel like others are handling divorce better?
Yes. People often share filtered versions of their divorce. You rarely see the full context—only the part they’re comfortable revealing.
Can comparing divorces make the process harder?
It can. Comparison increases pressure, shame, and doubt. It pulls your focus away from your goals and what you can control.
What should I focus on instead of comparing?
Focus on your safety, financial clarity, emotional wellbeing, and the parenting plan that fits your family—not someone else’s timeline or outcome.
Why do some divorces look easier from the outside?
Many people hide conflict, financial strain, or emotional turmoil. What looks peaceful may have involved years of work or support behind the scenes.
Can comparing myself to others affect my legal strategy?
Yes. Trying to mimic someone else’s approach can lead to poor decisions. Your legal strategy should be based on your assets, risks, and goals.
Identify the comparisons you’re making
Write down who you’re comparing yourself to and what you believe they did “better.” Seeing it clearly helps you challenge the narrative.
List the differences in your situations
Note differences in finances, personalities, conflict levels, mental health, parenting dynamics, and goals. This adds context you can’t see from the outside.
Refocus on your own priorities
Clarify what matters most—safety, stability, co-parenting, financial recovery, or emotional peace. Let those guide your decisions.
Limit comparison triggers
Mute social media accounts, step back from unhelpful discussions, and avoid people who fuel shame or judgment.
Strengthen your support system
Lean on professionals, trusted friends, or support groups who understand divorce and won’t minimize your experience.
Track your progress
Write down small wins—documents completed, boundaries kept, moments of clarity. Progress is personal and rarely visible to others.
Build a forward-focused plan
Make decisions based on where you want to be in one to three years—not where someone else landed after their divorce.