Couples With A Mix Of These 7 Personality Traits Most Likely To Get Divorced
If you and your partner have these personality traits, your marriage might be doomed.
By Jeremy Brown
As anyone who enters into a marriage knows, the odds feel stacked against couples before the first “I do’s” are even said. It’s not only that divorce statistics sit pulsing in the distance but also the fact that there are so many different behaviors or scenarios that can upend your relationship.
One of the best things to do, then, is arm ourselves with knowledge of the list of personality traits that, left unchecked, can doom a marriage.
Because we all have bad habits and by understanding the worst ones, we can better recognize our faults, hold ourselves accountable, and be the best partner we can be. In other words, in trying to better ourselves, we can shake the looming specter of divorce from our minds and focus on the future — and the joy of being married.
Here, then, according to psychologists, relationship experts, and divorce lawyers, are some of the most common personality traits that can lead to divorce.
Couples with a mix of these 7 personality traits are the most likely to get divorced:
1. Catastrophizing
When one partner tends to take little incidents and blow them out of proportion, it can slowly wear away the marriage. And, in many cases, these incidents are insignificant but magnified by anxiety and depression.
David Gonet, an Illinois-based family lawyer, reports cases of clients filing for divorce for such things as having a spouse come home late for work or forgetting to pick up dry cleaning.
“In severe cases, I have had clients suffering from catastrophizing file for divorce from their spouse on three separate occasions,” Gonet says. “A harmless event leads the client to file for divorce, during the divorce the client realizes that they overreacted, and the client dismisses the divorce. The next harmless event precipitates the same course of action…file for divorce, realize they overreacted, dismiss the divorce.”
2. Materialism
Studies have shown that when one or both partners in a marriage have a propensity for wanting more and/or buying more, it can be a surefire marriage killer.
“In today’s world, women work hard and earn a lot but they always expect the man to work harder and earn more,” says Chicago divorce lawyer Russell D. Knight. “If a woman consistently out-earns her partner she will slowly begin to resent him if she judges her life based on material things such as money.”
3. Compulsive caregiving
This would seem like a good quality but when one partner is excessively giving to another, it can actually be a sign of emotional distance and a subtle way of trying to assert control in the relationship. This can lead to feelings of resentment, and isolation, and, ultimately, pave the way for divorce.
The message starts out as "I am giving to you because I care for you; and winds up ‘I am not taking anything from you, ergo you have nothing of value to offer,” says Mark B. Borg, Jr., Ph.D., clinical psychologist and author of Relationship Sanity: Creating and Maintaining Healthy Relationships. “Over-giving is a powerful defense against building mutuality and equality in relationships, disallows the establishment of intimacy and empathy and leaves people in marriage feeling isolated.”
4. Argument avoidance
Disagreements are essential for a marriage. It’s important to get grievances out in the open and, when done effectively, can help to work through issues and improve communication.
However, when arguments are avoided in a relationship, things are left unresolved, and the relationship can’t progress. This leads to unhappiness.
As a sexologist and relationship expert Dr. Nikki Goldstein says, “Relationships can be saved without that focus and hard work that someone who is avoiding arguments might not be prepared to give.”
5. A fragile ego
Deep insecurities can sow the seeds for marital upheaval because the insecure person might try and find external means of resolving those insecurities.
One of those external means could be attention from another person, which is the first step on the road to infidelity — emotional or otherwise.
“When life settles and there are just two people living side by side,” says Goldstein, “the fragile ego will find another one to be stroked by, in more ways than one.”
6. Narcissism
Unsurprisingly, the risk of divorce among narcissistic people is very high, predominantly because of their inability to see reality when it comes to the balance of relationship roles.
Very often, when something goes wrong or there is any kind of conflict, a narcissist tends to play the victim.
“Someone who is always playing victim coupled with a grandiose sense of self might not have the empowerment and control to fix things when the relationship is at risk,” says Goldstein. “How can someone fix things if they won’t take responsibility for their role in the first place?”
7. Selfishness
Selfishness and narcissism seem like they might be one and the same, but there is a difference in that everyone has a bit of selfishness in them and everyone has times where they might put their own needs ahead of their spouse’s.
Problems can arise when this behavior becomes habitual and the partner continually makes the other one feel useless.
“Being selfish has a shelf life in a marriage, and only so much love will keep someone around,” says Goldstein. “However when [selfishness] is hurtful towards someone else, things can start to go downhill.”
Jeremy Brown is a writer and editor. His writing has appeared in many magazines, websites, and newspapers around the world and he has authored special issues for TV Guide and the Discovery Channel, among more.