The general definition of abandonment is:
- Giving up or withdrawal of support from something or someone
- The act of leaving or deserting a person or property.
Spousal Abandonment Syndrome is when one of the spouses leaves the marriage without any warning, and—usually–without having shown any signs of unhappiness with the relationship. With spousal abandonment, there is often no outward sign that one of the spouses is frustrated or considering leaving the marriage.
Below is how a woman who had suffered spousal abandonment, and who contacted Midlife Divorce Recovery, described her situation:
I went to visit my parents in another state and when I came home, he had taken all of his stuff and left a note saying he wouldn’t be back. I have no idea where he is. I have received no help with the bills. They are going to foreclose on our house. I don’t know what I’m going to do. I am a stay-at-home mom with three kids. I am so scared!
The real-life pain of spousal abandonment is overwhelming and devastating. The description above is from a woman who knows first hand about the chaos and suffering caused to those who are left behind…usually a wife and children.
This isn’t how most divorces happen, but spousal abandonment cases seem to be growing. Maybe that is because there is now a legal name for abruptly abandoning your wife, your children and your marital commitments. Women and children are forced to fend for themselves with absolutely no warning and often with no resources to fall back on.
Legal Definition: Spousal Desertion – Criminal Abandonment
“Marital desertion (abandonment) refers to a situation in which one spouse severs ties with the family, forsaking his or her responsibilities and duties to the family. Simply moving out of the family home in an attempt to create a temporary or permanent separation is not considered abandonment. The difference is often seen in the person’s refusal to provide necessary support, whether financial or otherwise, with no intention to return, or to fulfill those responsibilities. In most states, the remaining spouse has no financial responsibility to the abandoning spouse.
In an at-fault divorce state, abandonment may be considered grounds for divorce. In these states, the spouse claiming abandonment must prove certain things to the court. She would need to show that the couple had not agreed on the departure of the spouse, that she didn’t cause the departure, and that he hadn’t provided any support during his absence.”
There is also something called constructive abandonment when one spouse, through bad behavior, gives the other spouse no alternative except to leave.
Examples of legal grounds for a victim/spouse to leave the marriage and the home include:
- Physical, mental or emotional abuse
- Infidelity
- Withholding sex
- Refusing to provide financial support.
Criminal Abandonment
Suddenly refusing to provide care, support and protection for minor children, or for a spouse who has serious health problems, is considered criminal abandonment. It is likely the court would consider such an abandoned spouse to be financially dependent on the leaving spouse, and issue an order for continued financial responsibility and care. Abandoning a minor child is, in many cases, considered a crime as well, even if the child has not suffered physical harm as a result of being abandoned.
(Midlife Divorce Recovery cannot provide any legal advice about spousal abandonment, but we can help anyone going through any kind of divorce about how to navigate the grieving and the healing and the rebuilding work that needs to happen especially after traumatic divorces.)
Signs of Spousal Abandonment
Some common traits of those who abandon their spouse, children and marriage commitment:
- Usually men
- May have contemplated leaving for years
- Leaves suddenly with no attempt at fixing the marriage or even discussing their complaints
- Disappears with little or no future contact with ex or with their children
- Exhibits midlife crisis behavior; ie young girlfriend, adapting to her more youthful lifestyle
- Rewrites marital history, blames wife, moves on immediately and never looks back.
Change in Behavior
Often there is little outward change in the spouse who abandons his family. One of my RADiCAL women (women who are Rising Above Divorce In Confidence And Love) recounted how she and her spouse had a wonderful dinner for their anniversary the week before, and had purchased a “retirement home” the year before. In the middle of a regular conversation, he said, “I can’t do this anymore. I’m not happy. I haven’t been happy for many, many years, and I am filing for divorce.”
That kind of punch in the gut and stab in the heart is absolutely devastating for many reasons, but especially because it comes totally out of the blue like a shot in the dark where you are left gasping for breath and wondering if you will survive.
Retreating Emotionally
Some men pull back even further physically and emotionally if they are secretly considering spousal abandonment. They mentally leave the marriage and refuse to share the inner questions they may be having about life with their spouse.
When a wife confronts her husband and says, “You don’t seem like yourself lately. We need to talk. Is there anything going on I need to know about?,” he say “No,” or tunes her out. These questions often drive a husband further into his fantasy world of thinking something outside of himself is going to fix the turmoil that is going on inside of him.
He often mentally makes notes of all the things his wife is doing wrong or falling short of his often unrealistic expectations. (ie – expecting his wife of 20 or 30+ years to have the body or the attitude of a 20 year old.)
Causes/Reasons: Why Is This Happening
Often, men claim to not know why this is happening. According to the women who reach out to us, their ex-husband never talked about what was bothering them. One RADiCAL woman described meeting with a counselor to see if the marriage could be fixed. The husband described a stifling and overwhelming need to get out. This happened when everything on the surface of their marriage and their life seemed to be going just fine.
Lack of Communication
Because men often see baring their souls as a sign of weakness, they sometimes operate on their worst instincts. They bail out. They leave without explaining or trying to fix things. They ignore their obligations and seek fun and freedom!
Men often don’t talk to their friends about this either. It is frustrating to friends and family because we are here to listen, but men refuse to share what they are really feeling. That’s something we need to teach both our sons and our daughters. We all need to be honest and open about difficult and conflicting feelings with our spouses and have a support system of peers and mentors to be accountable to.
Infidelity
Often when men are thinking about fleeing their normal relationships and daily life, there are plenty of dissatisfied women (I call them girlFIENDS!) who are more than willing to be a shoulder to cry on. These women have no qualms about giving midlife crisis men the sex, the teenage-like obsession, the excitement they want, never thinking at all about the devastation they are heaping on the unsuspecting families of the men they hook up with. (Note: most affair partners share thousands of text and phone messages, much like immature adolescents!)
The men who go looking for new sexual partners are often cowards because they don’t end their marriage before they go looking for something better. All of us could have done better in our marriage. We all make mistakes. But infidelity is not the answer. The blame of infidelity is on the man (or woman) who makes that choice — not on their spouse and not on the person they find to seduce and woo to make themselves feel better. Check out our article on the Infidelity Recovery Stages.
Midlife Crisis
Many men who abandon their family show signs of a “midlife crisis,” which I personally think is a term that has been overused as an excuse for bad behavior in response to a normal rethinking of life in your middle years. Every stage of life requires some re-evaluating. Many men, however, use it as a culturally accepted excuse for bad behavior. See my Midlife Crisis Divorce article for more info and on how to recover from a divorce that was a result of your ex-husband’s midlife crisis.
How To Feel Better
Figuring out how to feel better after spousal abandonment is extremely difficult … especially if you’re in the middle of the storm and barely keeping yourself together from morning ‘til night every day. Divorce is overwhelming and exhausting and your emotions are intense and erratic and usually not typical of who you are. We can help you grieve, heal and start rebuilding. It takes time, but we provide a practical agenda to get better. How Do I Get Over A Divorce .
Spousal Abandonment Is Not Your Fault
When something like spousal abandonment rocks our world, we, as women often tend to blame ourselves first. We ask ourselves, “What’s wrong with me? Why didn’t I see this coming? Why wasn’t I more attentive? Why didn’t I work out a little more?”
The truth is, men with skinny, sexy, smart, beautiful, attentive, good, fun wives do this, too. It’s not about you. (Really!) It’s about his insecurities. And many times, the family of the men who do this is like ours was, the kind of family everyone wanted. Spousal abandonment is not your fault.
We all make mistakes through the lifetime of our marriage. If our ex-husband didn’t have the common decency to talk to us about things that were bothering him and either get out with dignity and support or try to fix things, that is on him, not us.
Little did anyone know that simmering behind the men in these marriages there is often a sense of “Is this all there is?” or “I’ve been supporting this family since my late twenties. I’m fifty now. I want out!”
Instead of seeking help and being honest and open with their wife, they often just bail out to avoid all the emotional drama of leaving a long term marriage that seemed to the rest of the family to be strong and solid.
Also, often everyone is amazed that in these spousal abandonment cases, the men move on immediately, often with very little or no further contact with wife or children. They are fully invested in this “new and better” life they think they have found. They often move in immediately with the new woman and don’t look back. That’s heartbreaking to the family they leave behind.
If spousal abandonment has happened to you, there is help! You can’t control anything anyone else is doing, but you can get help yourself. Read our article on divorce recovery and join our group of RADiCAL women who are determined to create the life they want and deserve.
I am a male that has been in relationship with a woman for 7 and half years. We have a young son together, and both of us were married before with children from that previous marriages. Anyway, as a male I like to address issues head on, but she hides how she feels. If you met us 3 years ago and then met us now during the worst year of our relationship, there would be no difference. She and my daughter from my previous marriage do not get on at all, and I am expected to manage that, as well as take a side. I cannot believe my partner would do this to me. I tried discussing this with her and telling her how it is tearing me apart. Her response, “It’s your problem, I don’t know how to help you.” We had a fantastic sex life, but when I think of I can’t even maintain an erection, as she has gone from a woman I idolised to a gargoyle. I am seriously looking to leave this relationship, because she is emotionally incapable of addressing fundamental issues in our relationship. She doesn’t like therapists and has said that quite blatantly. What do I do?
it has been 17 months after being married for 34 years my husband still supports me but all the other facts are the same Struggling to move on I am 71 years old and this happened 6 months before was due to retire I am taking it one day at a time it is better than it was a year ago but it just feels like i am going through the motions of life
sexist, ignores primary care giving fathers
Everything is centered around women’s “needs”. That is, men are expected to be from another planet and have ultrasuperior forces that helps him not feel a thing. This “B.S.” (degree).
After 19 years of marrriage, and whike planning our 20th aniversary, my wife disappeared without any notice with our children. I’m left on a “clift hanger” and homeless.
18 years of marriage gone. My wife cheated on me and left our home and everything last week. We have 3 kids. She started a different job in health care last year, shortly after started her affair. Started dressing different, opening up credit cards, going to the gym, .. I searched her phone.. Unbelievable. texts, rants with co workers, google cache showed her searches over the last year and dates. Believe me guys.. search the phone. Search her Google. You will be shocked!!
29 years of what I thought was a happy marriage. Nothing signaled a man unhappy with his marriage. In the prior two weeks, we’d celebrated both our birthdays and our wedding anniversary—when my runaway husband enthusiastically showered me with jewelry. Within 30 minutes of his announcement that he wanted out, he was packed and out the door — to never to be heard from again. It was so very surreal! I would soon find out that he’d surreptitiously taken my name off joint accounts, cleared out the savings, gotten a passport, and was well into the process of leaving the US with his old girlfriend from high school—who now [wait for it!] is a well-heeled muckety-muck PhD psychologist in an international headhunting firm. She was opening a new office overseas and she ‘needed an escort’ to protect her while she was there … and my husband was just the person to fill the need. Or so, he told everyone, but me. The mind games were unbelievably cruel. Every Machiavellian tactic was pulled out and used, shocking everyone with his 360 change in personality. We worked in the same company. He helped to make sure that I was smeared in my profession when I had PTSD symptoms from the massive cataclysm. It’s an unbelievable story, the mental torture and gaslighting that was levied [she is an ex military psychologist, trained in psychological warfare, so I’m sure she instructed him] had me spinning, wondering where True North was in all of it. He bankrupted me, left me with all the debts, and I ended up going on to lose my job, my home, and everything I owned. I became homeless and literally sat in my car in various shopping center parking lots for several years … I’ll not rehash all the details… Read more »
Having an empathetic heart, and being the kind of man who, when I love something ,I put my whole heart and being into it. Sadly there are women out there who are Narcissistic, and passive aggressive, such as my 3 ex wives. But not limited to marriage, several relationships too. Until recently I never knew about Constructive Abandonment, but suffered greatly from it. No matter how romantic and attentive I was to them, No Was the only word I would ever hear. One of my ex wives would even humiliate me in front of friends, making a joke about she only gives me affection once every 3 months as a reward if I am ” a good man “. I only learned later after they left me for another man, that they were cheating. I don’t have alot of trust now with relationships, for a while I only wanted a Friend with benefits, so that I didn’t have to open my heart, although I would feel a emotional connection with them anyway, I can’t separate myself from feeling affection, because sex is not just a physical release, but an emotional connection between 2 people, a union of spiritual awareness. Because of the frequency of constructive abandonment that I have experienced, I refuse to date any women who doesn’t believe in having sex , or feels that it is abandoning her power as a woman, to lower herself to give a man any kind of pleasure.
We were married for 19 years, my husband wss very dominating from the begining of our marraige i come from the culture where male domination very very common and normal, this looked like part of very normal life. I was almost everyday facing emotional, mental and physocal abuse in front of my children was very common. My children may be ou tf of fear never questioned fathers behaviour. He stopped me from work for 10 years as i questioned him regarding our finance only once. I had no financial independence ghough i was working all our finance was managed by my husband.Children edcation or any future plan was never discusses with me,everthing was kept so secretive. I had no clue of his decision to move to australia, that was also planned without discussing with me.. properties were brought and sold without m yh knowledge. All this were very normal to me. He always threatened to leave me one day. Since my children started their hsc i planned to work after convincing a lot. This time i decided open my bank account which he could not tolerate later stopped talking to me stopped all financial support for home. One fine day walked away with outi nfoming or discussing withme leaving me and children dont know what to do, whom to approach. Kindly suggest
Hi, I have just come across your website and it struck a cord with my situation. My husband of 33 years told me on 22 May (a date now etched on my memory) that he no longer loved me and was leaving me as I had taken him for granted, amongst other things. He wouldn’t seek help or really discuss it. To say I was in shock is an understatement. like the other people who have commented, it has totally devastated me. He was still sending me loving text messages, and left a note in my case when I went away several weeks before. when I mentioned this his reply was: you expected it. He also very kindly told me he meant to tell me the week before but chickened out! I have started smoking again, which I hadn’t done for years. I am not proud of myself but I seem to need it. It is like my axis has moved. I shake, and feel I have this nervous energy in me. None of which I had before. Everything you have said could be him. Not longer afterwards he started a relationship with a slightly younger woman, the total opposite of me who he used to see at a group he went to. Very quickly they have moved in together. His response to me and my two grown up children is: he’s moved on and we will all get used to it. I cannot believe that a man that used to be so kind, caring, a loving husband and father can totally change. Also it is like he has totally wiped his past life with me out of his mind. Earlier today while having a cigarette it hit me. I feel that the past 36 years have been wiped clean… Read more »
I was married for almost 14 years..I feel like I’m on an emotional rollercoaster right now…we have four children together…he has left so many times I have lost count but every time would be out of nowhere…we would have a date night or he would speak about future plans together..in my first pregnancy I came home from.work one day and he was packing..this hit me out the blue I was young pregnant and had no idea anything was wrong..I begged him.back and again after our 2nd child was born he left when she was 2 weeks old abruptly..came into my job and told me I’m going to south Dakota tonight and never coming home…he did after his family begged him to come take care of his family and he always told me it was because I was too much to.live with I believed him and took him back and then it became worse..he blackened my eye..gave me a concussion..permanent perifial vision loss..drug me by the car and cut my legs and feet to pieces..never showed up to our youngest child birth..told me he did those things because I am too much to deal with and aggressively mouthy..I blamed myself..dropped out of college se real times and am hanging on a thread to keep it now..turns out he has had affairs with over 2 dozen women. and that it is my fault because they were nice to him and I’m not..I know much of this is bs and I just feel lost though .how to rebuild my life all these years later…all our friends are gone during all that..4 kids to support..8 months of college left..no job..he has nothing to do with me or kids nor gives support if financially but nor do I really want it as much as I… Read more »