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March 29 2024 5.38am

Divorce advice

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View Kermit8's Profile Kermit8 Flag Hevon 28 Apr 15 1.36pm Send a Private Message to Kermit8 Add Kermit8 as a friend

Quote Pikester at 28 Apr 2015 1.05pm

Quote PalazioVecchio at 28 Apr 2015 11.28am

it still amazes me that any fella would commit to getting married. It doesn't matter if she looks like a supermodel, talks like a history professor, goes like the clappers, cooks like gordon ramsey and understands the offside rule.

marriage is a bum deal for blokes.

Looks like a supermodel and cooks like Gordon Ramsey. ... Ahh now I see where I went wrong.


Took me a few seconds but

 


Big chest and massive boobs

[Link]


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View elgrande's Profile elgrande Flag bedford 28 Apr 15 1.44pm Send a Private Message to elgrande Add elgrande as a friend

Quote PalazioVecchio at 28 Apr 2015 12.58am

divorce is the caterpillar turning into a butterfly.

you will look back and think ''thank christ i got away from that bint''


Great line.

 


always a Norwood boy, where ever I live.

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View dannyh's Profile dannyh Flag wherever I lay my hat....... 28 Apr 15 1.55pm Send a Private Message to dannyh Add dannyh as a friend

have a wee gander at the father for justice website, all joking aside they have some good links for advice on there.

 


"It's not the bullet that's got my name on it that concerns me; it's all them other ones flyin' around marked 'To Whom It May Concern.'"

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View Pete53's Profile Pete53 Flag Hassocks 28 Apr 15 4.05pm Send a Private Message to Pete53 Add Pete53 as a friend

My ex and I used mediation and it was £120 per 2 hour session and that was 17 years ago. However, I would recommend it.

The basic premise is that the pair of you ultimately agree to all the terms of the separation, rather than leaving it to the solicitors to fight it out and often engender grief where there was none before.

Be warned though, as others have mentioned, what may seem fair to you may not judged as such in the eyes of the law. Basically your spouse is entitled to 50-50 of everything.

If for example you had spent your disposable share of the income on building up, let's say, a collection of vintage clocks, and your wife had spent all hers on clothes and shoes, you would still have to pay her half the value of your collection on separation, unless she was happy to waive that claim. Meanwhile, she would not be in anyway liable to pay you half of her expenditure on her wardrobe as it is not considered an asset whereas your clocks would be.

 

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