Bab McLagan started seeing the man who would become her husband back in the eighth grade. Now, after 36 years of marriage, she's waiting for a judge to sign divorce papers.
"I was in it for the long haul," said McLagan, 57, of Minneapolis. "Then I found out he was seeing someone else, and it was time to go our separate ways."
The breakup of a decades-old union is all too common. A quarter of all divorces in 2007 involved couples who had been wed 20 years or more, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Most of those opting not to wait "till death do us part" are baby boomers, the most divorce-prone generation in history.
Experts say the growing number of "gray divorces" often end more with a whimper than a bang.
"They tend to be less acrimonious," said Ron Ousky, an Edina-based attorney and mediator, "a little more of a sense of, 'Let's try to keep what we have. We want to be able to go to graduations and weddings and bar mitzvahs or whatever for our grandkids.'"
Ousky said most of the cases he sees are "what feels like a 'fadeaway divorce' as opposed to divorce by crisis."
Matt Weiser, 50, of New Hope called his 23-year marriage's dissolution "largely just kind of a disaffectation."
LaDonna Redmond, 47, of Minneapolis said she and her husband just grew apart.