After my last post, I was deeply moved by how many women reached out to share their stories of getting divorced in their 60s.
Some felt pushed out – that was my story. Others chose divorce themselves. Some waited until it felt too late. A few were still on the fence.
But what came through in every message was the same: bravery, strength, and hard-earned wisdom. There’s no single path through this life change – but if you’re walking it, you’re not alone.
Did you know that divorce rates among older adults are now the highest of any age group? Meanwhile, divorce among younger people is actually declining.
I found this shocking – until I became part of the statistic myself.
I didn’t know where I would live. I didn’t know how to handle the financial logistics. I was overwhelmed.
We had saved responsibly, but I hadn’t planned for the hidden costs of divorce: moving, furnishing a new home, redoing all the little things you take for granted in a shared life.
Emotionally, I was reeling. And the fear – the fear of being alone, of getting it all wrong – made it hard to think clearly.
Besides being heartbroken, I didn’t know how to begin picking up the pieces. But in the midst of that confusion, I found a few simple strategies that helped me breathe again. I offer them in case they might help you too.
Many of us feel shame around divorce. Even if we were the ones who asked for it, we can carry a sense of failure.
That shame makes us go silent. But connection is what heals us.
I pushed myself to talk to friends. To name my fears. To tell the truth. And I felt lighter each time I did.
We heal trauma by telling our stories – sometimes over and over again. That’s not weakness. That’s the brain processing.
Friends may get tired of the repetition. (It’s okay – they love you.) Rotate friends if you need to. Don’t exhaust them – but don’t disappear either.
You’ll start to notice who leaves you feeling supported and who leaves you feeling small. Lean into the people who hold space for your pain, not the ones who judge it.
Divorce doesn’t just break your heart – it disrupts your routines.
Cooking, paying bills, cleaning out closets – it all feels like too much at first. I remember standing in the middle of my new apartment, thinking, I don’t even know where to begin.
If someone offers help, say yes. That’s hard for some of us. But this is the time to let love in.
You won’t always feel this foggy. But while you do, every bit of practical help matters.
I’m a therapist, so yes – I believe in therapy. But even if I weren’t, I’d say this: talking to someone who is trained to listen can make all the difference.
Therapy is a space where you don’t have to be brave. Where you can grieve without apology. Where your story gets to be the whole story.
Support groups, especially those led by therapists, can be equally powerful. You’ll be surprised how much lighter the burden feels when you share it with others walking the same path.
Each morning, I wrote three pages by hand – first thing, before distractions or doubts could take over.
Some mornings, I wrote: “This is ridiculous. I have nothing to say.” Other days, I made lists. Sometimes I just vented. Sometimes I cried.
This ritual, called Morning Pages, comes from Julia Cameron’s The Artist’s Way. It’s not about writing anything profound.
It’s about showing up for yourself. Clearing the mental clutter. Letting your deeper voice speak – maybe for the first time in years.
It didn’t solve everything. But it helped me hear myself again. It helped me calm down, take the next step, and remember: I am still here.
If you’re in the thick of a major life change – divorce, grief, reinvention – I hope something here speaks to you.
These are just a few tools that helped me. Maybe you’ve found others.
What helped you get through your hardship (be it divorce, loss or something else)? Or what are you still trying to figure out? Let’s keep the conversation going in the comments. We are stronger together than we are alone.
Tags Divorce After 60
at 77 i can’t go and i cannot stay- so few years left
You have a difficult situation and I hope you can find a solution where you can be happy.
I turned 70 this past February and my divorce was finalized this past June. There are no guarantees how much time we have left but I wanted to spend my remaining time in peace and not having to care for a cheating, gaslighting narcissist.
I wish you the best.
Divorced at 41 after a 20-year marriage, I am still very happily single at 66. But it’s a lot harder when it happens in your 60s.
I think women put up with a lot. A whole lot. Too much. We do whatever it takes to stay married, but often, we fail to see that it is actually better, though painful, if we do not remain married. I never in a million years thought I would be divorced—i made a promise for life! But the multiple-cheater I was married to had a different idea. I was impoverished for a long time after the divorce (living in a tiny not-great apt, struggling to make it month to month). I had to learn how to live well on shoestrings, and eventually landed on my feet (better job, financial security, etc.). And was already SO much happier without The Cheater, even when at my poorest.
That’s because I had made a lot of compromises during the marriage, big and small. I adapted and lived the way HE wanted to, not the way I wanted to. Maybe a lot of us do that. But the day you divorce, you get to live the way YOU want to, no one else to consult, no one whose wishes have to come first! You are FREE. FREE. I clung to that in the darkest times and I hope you can too.
SO, ladies, whether you decide you’ve had it with giving up so many aspects of your own life for the sake of the marriage; and/or whether like me it was the last thing you’d ever imagine could happen, here you are: about to embark on the truthful journey of finally getting to live your very own life exactly as you wish. I hope like me you come to realize that you, just you, you all by yourself, constitute a household, a home, a happy place. YOU ARE ENOUGH. You are plenty! You can survive and even thrive. Good luck and much love to each one of us in the sisterhood.
Thank you for saying this. I needed to hear that I am enough, just me on my own. Its scary after an entire life with someone. But alone is better than what our marriage became
Virginia,
After reading your previous article, I bought and read your book If You Must Go, I Wish You Triplets.
I absolutely loved it! Reading about your experience actually helped me to put my own divorce into some perspective.Thank you for sharing your story.
I am on the fence not knowing if reconciliation is possible. It is hard to move away from 42 years. I have felt shame and after 16 months finally confided in a friend since childhood that would not judge me in my roller coaster journey.
I had a familiar journey; however, understand each relationship is unique. Especially now, pray for guidance. Enough is Enough by David Clarke is a good book (it was extremely helpful to me) which gives insight to what a healthy marriage should look like in addition to practial advice for how to approach next steps based on your decision of stay, separate or divorce.
Hang in there! I was married for 40plus years and never dreamt this would happened but there was the writing on the wall that I refused to see…the shame, guilt and shattering of my dreams was like an open heart surgery as someone described to me and it does feel like that. That pain gradually subsides but still, it is hard and I wouldn’t wish it on anyone. However, after two years now, I am now 66 years old, I am happy again. Divorce behind me and living my best life. I still struggle with culture and other people’s perspective on divorce, etc. but I am not alone. My friends are there and so are my family.