25 Before And After Pics From Men Who Say Their Divorce Was The Best Thing That Happened To Them
Life is unpredictable. One day, you’re promising to spend the rest of your future with someone, and the next, the two of you are signing papers to get away from each other.
However, if the marriage is truly unsalvageable, probably the best thing you can do is end it and focus on what lies ahead.
To motivate themselves in starting over, men are turning to social media to share before-and-after pictures of their divorce transformations, highlighting renewed confidence and determination to be better.
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American psychologist Mark Travers, Ph.D., says many men begin engaging with their emotions only after a significant disruption—like a divorce—because it often follows a loss of previously effective coping mechanisms.
"The delay is not due to a lack of emotion but reflects sociocultural norms that discourage emotional expression in men," Travers explains. "From early development, boys are often taught to associate vulnerability with weakness and stoicism with strength."
"In heterosexual relationships, this can lead to reliance on female partners for emotional labor. When a relationship ends, that scaffolding is removed, forcing men to confront complex emotional states independently."
Thus, according to Travers, divorce becomes not only a relational rupture but also a psychological turning point—often the first step toward emotional insight.
For example, a study published in the Journal of Adolescent Research found that many boys learn to avoid showing emotional or physical pain not because they don’t feel it, but because they fear the social cost.
"Vulnerability is mocked, caring is labeled “girly,” and any sign of emotional softness is often derided as 'gay,'" Travers adds.
"Instead, boys often come to associate manliness with stoicism and toughness, essentially because their friendships frequently center on taunting, mocking and physical roughhousing — not because these things feel good, but because they help maintain a shared sense of masculinity. In essence, boys are socialized to suppress emotion as a way of belonging," the psychologist explains.
By the time they reach adulthood and begin intimate relationships, these emotional habits are deeply ingrained. Many of the men accused of not opening up are the way they are because they’ve never been taught how to safely express those feelings.
"As a result, when emotional challenges surface in marriage, they may default to minimizing, deflecting or shutting down — not because they don't care, but because caring out loud was never modeled as strength," Travers says.
"The real work begins in unlearning this emotional stoicism and replacing it with something richer: emotional literacy, self-awareness and the courage to be seen."
A study published in the Journal of Marital and Family Therapy shows that while many men are now beginning to show more emotional vulnerability in therapeutic settings, this doesn’t always translate to shared emotional responsibility in their relationships.
The study suggests that men’s displays of emotion can sometimes reinforce traditional gender dynamics, placing their emotional experiences at the center, while still expecting their partners to do the "interpretive" and "repair" work.
Brits: St George was a Palestinian Roman soldier. He was not blue eyed and blonde haired. Explain why your White Supremacists use him and draw him that way? I really dont get it.
This means that a man who seems emotionally open may still unconsciously rely on his partner to manage the emotional tone of the relationship.
"It's part of a deeper pattern: men expressing feelings without necessarily engaging in the relational labor that sustains emotional intimacy," Travers says.
"So when a relationship ends, what’s often lost is not just the partner, but the emotional scaffolding they provided — the one who tracked the emotional temperature, made sense of the unspoken and held space for repair."
When a divorce shifts routines and changes financial and social structures, it can also trigger a deep internal destabilization. What once served as emotional armor — overworking, staying busy, avoiding hard conversations — no longer shields them in the same way.
In fact, a study published in Qualitative Health Research suggests that in the wake of a divorce, many men begin reaching for emotional resources they've never used before — including self-help books, online forums, trusted friends and professional therapy.
Julie I think he can now afford to buy the car he wants simply cause she’s not spending all of his money. More than likely anyway
"Far from being emotionally detached, they are often newcomers to emotional reckoning, pushed into it by the systemic rupture of divorce," Travers says. "It’s often the first time they seriously confront feelings of grief, regret, loneliness and vulnerability."
The effort men put in when married, vs the effort they put in when they're trying to get laid?
Being single gave them time to work out and more motivation to put effort into looking nice to maybe meet someone new? This seems like a logical outcome.
Weird how when it’s women posting split glow ups it’s all ‘you go girl!’ and ‘good for you’ replies. When it’s men the response is ‘bet he’s not got the child’, ‘he’s got fitter ‘cause he’s looking for some action’ and other non-supportive comments. Weird eh?
I am sorry their relationships didn't work out and the 'glow up' is great for them, but I think it is easy to fall victim to the 'fat and happy' world - if you are lucky enough to find someone who loves you for who you are and not what you look like or how successful you are - well, it does make you stop working on those things as life takes over. They could have 'glowed-up' together....
So... men try harder to look good for a new partner once broken up, just like women? We have no idea why they got divorced...or when, or how many years between pics...so there is nothing to comment on.
I'm like, you didn't really care when you were married if you were your best self. It took divorce to make you care. I know it's a generalization, but maybe you didn't appreciate what you had until you lost it. You snagged a woman and decided you could really slack off being your best self. I would like to see the dating stage before your marriage.
Divorced dad here: when you're married your stress is through the roof and you don't have the time to work out because you're busy 17 hrs a day with kids, chores, errands and managing her feelings. Especially that last one.
The effort men put in when married, vs the effort they put in when they're trying to get laid?
Being single gave them time to work out and more motivation to put effort into looking nice to maybe meet someone new? This seems like a logical outcome.
Weird how when it’s women posting split glow ups it’s all ‘you go girl!’ and ‘good for you’ replies. When it’s men the response is ‘bet he’s not got the child’, ‘he’s got fitter ‘cause he’s looking for some action’ and other non-supportive comments. Weird eh?
I am sorry their relationships didn't work out and the 'glow up' is great for them, but I think it is easy to fall victim to the 'fat and happy' world - if you are lucky enough to find someone who loves you for who you are and not what you look like or how successful you are - well, it does make you stop working on those things as life takes over. They could have 'glowed-up' together....
So... men try harder to look good for a new partner once broken up, just like women? We have no idea why they got divorced...or when, or how many years between pics...so there is nothing to comment on.
I'm like, you didn't really care when you were married if you were your best self. It took divorce to make you care. I know it's a generalization, but maybe you didn't appreciate what you had until you lost it. You snagged a woman and decided you could really slack off being your best self. I would like to see the dating stage before your marriage.
Divorced dad here: when you're married your stress is through the roof and you don't have the time to work out because you're busy 17 hrs a day with kids, chores, errands and managing her feelings. Especially that last one.
