Divorce: Why does it happen? ⏲️ 6 Minute English

125,701 views ・ 2024-10-24

BBC Learning English


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:07
Hello, this is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English.
0
7400
3480
00:10
I'm Phil. And I'm Georgie.
1
10880
2160
00:13
In the words of a famous 1960s pop song, breaking up is hard to do.
2
13040
5800
00:18
Divorce - when a married couple who no longer want to be together separate -
3
18840
4880
00:23
can be one of life's toughest experiences.
4
23720
2920
00:26
During the 1990s,
5
26640
1520
00:28
divorce rates in Europe and America were the highest in the world,
6
28160
3760
00:31
with almost half of all marriages ending in divorce.
7
31920
3560
00:35
But since then, the trend has reversed, and divorce
8
35480
3200
00:38
rates in the West have slowed.
9
38680
2040
00:40
Meanwhile, however,
10
40720
1360
00:42
the number of couples divorcing in other parts of the world is on the rise.
11
42080
4400
00:46
In this programme,
12
46480
1000
00:47
we'll be hearing how divorce is talked about in different countries,
13
47480
3960
00:51
and as usual, we'll be learning some useful new vocabulary.
14
51440
3600
00:55
But first, I have a question for you, Georgie.
15
55040
3760
00:58
In Britain, one day of the year in particular is known by divorce lawyers
16
58800
5520
01:04
and relationship counsellors as 'Divorce Day'.
17
64320
3200
01:07
But which day is it?
18
67520
1800
01:09
a) Christmas Day?
19
69320
2080
01:11
b) the first Monday of the new year?
20
71400
3840
01:15
  or c) Midsummer's Day, the 24th of June?
21
75240
3800
01:19
I think 'Divorce Day' is the first Monday of the year.
22
79040
3600
01:22
OK, Georgie, we'll find out if that's the correct answer
23
82640
3480
01:26
later in the programme.
24
86120
1920
01:28
Getting married very young and differences between partners'
25
88040
3720
01:31
backgrounds or interests are two common causes for couples to grow apart.
26
91760
5240
01:37
Today, Marina Adshade is a professor at the University of British Columbia
27
97000
5040
01:42
who studies the economics of sex and relationships.
28
102040
3320
01:45
But her life has a very different beginning,
29
105360
3280
01:48
as she told BBC World Service programme, The Global Story.
30
108640
5040
01:53
I married really young.
31
113680
1160
01:54
I had no education.
32
114840
1480
01:56
I married somebody who was older than me, who had a lot of education,
33
116320
3560
01:59
and our relationship worked well for a while.
34
119880
3320
02:03
And then in my late 20s, I decided to go back to school.
35
123200
3520
02:06
I no longer wanted to be a stay-at-home mother,
36
126720
2080
02:08
which was what I was doing in my 20s.
37
128800
2200
02:11
And that change in our situation for us just became completely unresolvable.
38
131000
5640
02:16
And I think this is true for a lot of marriages
39
136640
2480
02:19
because people's situation changes over their lives.
40
139120
2840
02:21
Maybe they want children, then maybe they change their minds.
41
141960
3360
02:25
Marina started her married life as a stay-at-home mum, a woman
42
145320
4120
02:29
who stays home to take care of the children and manage the household.
43
149440
4120
02:33
Marina married an older man, and although their relationship started well,
44
153560
5360
02:38
over time, they developed different ideas about what they wanted from life.
45
158920
4520
02:43
Marina and her husband changed their minds -
46
163440
2880
02:46
they changed an earlier decision they had made.
47
166320
2680
02:49
Growing apart is one of the most frequently given reasons for divorce,
48
169000
4080
02:53
and eventually Marina and her husband's problems
49
173080
2920
02:56
became unresolvable, not able to be fixed or satisfactorily ended.
50
176000
5320
03:01
Marina's experience is typical of someone who finds themself trapped
51
181320
4080
03:05
in a marriage that no longer works, yet,
52
185400
2480
03:07
unfortunately due to economic or emotional reasons,
53
187880
3240
03:11
many people stay trapped.
54
191120
2040
03:13
So, what can be done?
55
193160
2040
03:15
Now, some countries are looking to the authorities rather than
56
195200
4040
03:19
the couple themselves for a solution.
57
199240
2680
03:21
Here, Lucy Hockings, presenter of BBC World Service's The Global Story,
58
201920
5400
03:27
and divorce counsellor Joanna Gosling
59
207320
2680
03:30
discuss a new strategy being used in China.
60
210000
3560
03:33
There was an interesting thing they did in China
61
213560
1920
03:35
where they introduced this cooling-off period.
62
215480
2800
03:38
So, the government enforced this.
63
218280
2720
03:41
Does that work when the government intervenes in a situation like this
64
221000
5080
03:46
and makes people behave or do things in a certain way?
65
226080
3000
03:49
If nothing changes in the dynamic between two people, being told
66
229080
4200
03:53
that they've got to cool off and wait a bit longer,
67
233280
2000
03:55
I don't think is going to make them suddenly realise
68
235280
1840
03:57
that they want to be together.
69
237120
2000
03:59
It might be an idea for states to invest
70
239120
1880
04:01
in communication programmes for these couples,
71
241000
2520
04:03
because that's invariably why relationships fall apart.
72
243520
3640
04:07
In response to rising divorce rates, in 2021
73
247160
3480
04:10
the Chinese government introduced a 30 day cooling-off period
74
250640
3760
04:14
for couples wanting to separate.
75
254400
2440
04:16
A cooling-off period is a period of time
76
256840
2280
04:19
in which two groups who are arguing can try to improve the situation
77
259120
4120
04:23
before taking further action.
78
263240
2000
04:25
However, it's unusual for governments to intervene - to become involved -
79
265240
4320
04:29
in people's private lives this way.
80
269560
2640
04:32
Joanna doubts a cooling-off period will work, especially
81
272200
3840
04:36
as the main reason for relationships failing is non-communication.
82
276040
4600
04:40
She says a lack of communication is invariably
83
280640
3400
04:44
- or always - the reason for divorce.
84
284040
3080
04:47
On the plus side,
85
287120
1280
04:48
by communicating openly, maybe with the professional help
86
288400
3720
04:52
of a relationship counsellor, saving a marriage is possible.
87
292120
3720
04:55
I think it's time you reveal the answer to your question, Phil.
88
295840
3920
04:59
You asked about 'Divorce Day' in Britain
89
299760
2280
05:02
and I guessed it was the first Monday of the new year.
90
302040
3080
05:05
Good guess Georgie,
91
305120
1000
05:06
because that's the correct answer.
92
306120
2280
05:08
'Divorce day' is the first Monday of the year.
93
308400
4120
05:12
OK, let's recap the vocabulary we've learnt in this programme,
94
312520
4200
05:16
starting with 'stay-at-home mum', a phrase for a woman who stays home
95
316720
4560
05:21
to care for her children and manage the household.
96
321280
2920
05:24
If you change your mind,
97
324200
1400
05:25
you change an earlier decision you made or opinion you had.
98
325600
3960
05:29
If a problem is unresolvable, it cannot be satisfactorily solved or fixed.
99
329560
5720
05:35
A cooling-off period is a period of time
100
335280
2320
05:37
for two people to try to resolve their differences.
101
337600
3080
05:40
It can also mean an agreed length of time
102
340680
2480
05:43
in which someone can change their mind about something they've agreed to buy.
103
343160
4080
05:47
To 'intervene' means to become involved in a difficult situation
104
347240
4000
05:51
in order to improve it.
105
351240
1480
05:52
And finally, the adverb 'invariably' means always.
106
352720
4080
05:56
Once again, our six minutes are up, but remember to join us again next time
107
356800
4440
06:01
for more trending topics and useful vocabulary.
108
361240
2800
06:04
Goodbye for now. Bye.
109
364040
2840
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7