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Should I Get a Divorce? Questions to Ask Yourself First

Searching this question is already a form of honesty. Most people who type "should I get a divorce" into a search bar have been living with that question for...

Clarity Divorce TeamApril 8, 20266 min read

Should I Get a Divorce? Questions to Ask Yourself First

Searching this question is already a form of honesty. Most people who type "should I get a divorce" into a search bar have been living with that question for a while. They are not looking for someone to decide for them. They are looking for a way to think through it clearly.

That is what this is. Not a checklist that tells you what to do. A set of honest questions to help you see where you actually are.

Have you been unhappy longer than you have been happy?

One hard year does not define a marriage. Every relationship goes through seasons that feel impossible. The question is not whether you are unhappy right now. It is how long you have been unhappy, and whether anything has actually changed during that time.

If you look back over the last three to five years and the unhappy stretches are longer and deeper than the good ones, that is a different kind of problem than a rough patch.

Have you already tried to fix it?

Thinking about divorce is not the same as reaching it. Most people who seriously consider divorce have already tried: couples therapy, honest conversations, changing their own behavior, giving it more time. The trying matters.

If you have not genuinely tried to repair things yet, that is worth doing before making a permanent decision. Not because divorce is wrong, but because you will want to know you gave it a real shot.

If you have tried, and the same problems keep coming back unchanged, that is its own kind of answer.

Are you staying for reasons or for genuine desire?

Be honest here. The reasons people stay in marriages that are not working tend to sound like: "We have kids." "It would be too expensive." "It is not that bad." "What will people think?" "I do not want to hurt them."

Those are real considerations. They deserve weight. But they are different from wanting to be with someone.

If practical reasons are the only thread left, you are already making a different kind of calculation than the one marriage is built on. That is worth naming, even if it does not change your decision today.

Do you feel like yourself around your spouse?

This one is subtle. Think about how you feel when your spouse walks into the room. Not excited or butterflies, just: do you feel like you can be yourself? Or do you brace for something? Do you get quieter, more careful, more watchful?

Over time, some people become a smaller version of themselves in their marriages. They stop sharing opinions. They manage their spouse's moods. They feel freer alone than together. If that resonates, it is worth sitting with.

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Can you picture a version of this marriage you would actually want?

This is different from asking whether you can imagine things being better. Can you picture a realistic future with this person that you would genuinely want to live?

Not perfect. Not the version from when you first fell in love. Just a future that feels like yours, with this person, that you would choose.

If you cannot picture it clearly, or if every version of the future you want involves not being with them, that is information.

Have you pictured your life without them, and how does it feel?

There is a difference between fantasizing about leaving and quietly imagining what your life might be like alone. Most people who are seriously considering divorce have done the second kind. They have thought through what their apartment might look like, how the holidays might work, whether they would eventually be okay.

If that imagined future feels like relief rather than just loss, that is worth acknowledging.

What does staying actually cost you?

Not financially. What does it cost you in terms of the life you are living? Energy you spend managing conflict. Sleep you lose. Joy you do not feel. Things you do not do because your marriage is the primary weather system you are navigating every day.

Some costs are worth carrying. But they should be named, not ignored.


If you are leaning toward moving forward

Deciding to get a divorce does not mean you have to do everything at once. It means you are taking the question seriously, and that deserves a clear next step.

If your situation is uncontested, meaning you and your spouse are in rough agreement about the basic terms, the process in Arizona is more straightforward than most people expect. You do not need attorneys for that. You need to understand the paperwork and make sure it is done correctly.

Before committing to anything, it helps to understand , since the financial picture is often different from what people expect. If you have children or significant shared assets, those details will shape the process.

You can also to see what the document preparation process looks like before making any decisions. There is no pressure and no commitment.

When you feel ready to take the first step, you can . It takes about 20 minutes to get started, and you can pause at any time.

For a complete picture of what the process looks like in Arizona, see our guide on .

A word on timing

There is no right time to decide. Some people feel certain for years before they act. Others know within a week. Grief, fear, guilt, and relief can all live in the same moment. None of those feelings mean you are making the wrong choice.

If you have been reading articles like and something in them felt too familiar, that recognition matters. You are not imagining it.

Take the time you need. But do not spend that time avoiding a question you already know the answer to.

No pressure. Just know your options.

Educational guidance only. This is not legal advice.

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