This Is What It Looks Like To Divorce At 25

"It may be the end of your world as you know it but it's not the end of the world."
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In your 20s, you’re still figuring out what a healthy relationship looks like, said teacher and writer Rachel Scott.

This Is Divorce At...“ is a HuffPost Divorce series delving into divorce at every stage of life. Want to share your experience of divorcing at a certain age? Email us at divorce@huffingtonpost.com.

At 25, teacher and writer Rachel Scott found herself newly divorced and raising two young children on her own. It was hardly the life she had envisioned but eventually, she realized it was a mistake to dwell on how she got there.

"In your 20s, I think it's easy to miss the truth that life hasn’t ended just because a marriage did," she said. 

Below, Rachel, who has been married to second husband Willie since 2011 (together they have a total of seven kids!) tells The Huffington Post more of her story.

Being divorced in your 20s can give you life or break you. I had been married for a total of four years when my husband and I split up. I was a mother of two young kids. There were times I found myself completely embarrassed to say that at 25, I had already experienced divorce. It felt like admitting youth had lead me down a road of destruction and I was left living with the consequences. 

At that age, you're still learning how to surround yourself with people who are life giving rather than life taking. That was the case for me, at least. I was still trying to find healthy relationships in my life and learning that those that weren’t healthy for me had to go. No matter how much you may want something or someone around, if it isn’t bringing life to you, it's taking life from you.

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Rachel Scott
Rachel at the time of her divorce.

How people respond to the news depends a lot on the character and heart of the people in your inner circle. My family and friends were very supportive and understood why divorce was my only option. They were full of wisdom and truth which helped me avoid completely emotional decisions and responses. 

Still, other people who had not been an active part of my life through the marriage had a lot to say. I learned to value the opinions of those who actually knew what was going on and had my best interest at heart.

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Autumn Scott
Rachel has been married to her second husband Willie for five years now. The couple, who run the website, Better Than Blended, have seven kids between them.

The truth is, no one gets married planning their divorce. It comes as an unpleasant shock to everyone to realize that hearts once united can so easily grow divided. But in fairness to the life that you have yet to live, allow yourself to grow through this disappointment. Become wiser for your future. It may be the end of your world as you know it but it's not the end of the world.

With your past mistakes behind you and greater wisdom and perspective to guide you, you are on the right path to a brighter future. Heed the wisdom gained from your past.

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Before You Go

8 Women Whose Divorce Was A Catalyst For Change
Martha Stewart (01 of08)
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Today she's a lifestyle powerhouse but before she was a household name, she was a fashion model-turned-stockbroker married to a publishing executive named Andy Stewart.

In 1972, the couple and their daughter moved to Connecticut where Martha launched a successful gourmet catering company. But Martha's career truly took off after her 1990 divorce. With the launch of her lifestyle magazine Martha Stewart Living in 1991, her company became Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, Inc. A successful cable TV cooking show and radio show followed, proving that divorce truly can be a good thing.
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Nora Ephron(02 of08)
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Nora Ephron's 1980 divorce from fellow writer Carl Bernstein inspired Heartburn, an autobiographical novel that was adapted into a film starring Jack Nicholson and Meryl Streep six years later.

Post-divorce, the late writer went on to pen over a dozen books and screenplays, including much loved scripts for "When Harry Met Sally" and "Sleepless in Seattle." In her final book I Remember Nothing, Ephron reflected on moving on from the divorce.

“The divorce has lasted way longer than the marriage, but finally it’s over. Enough about that," she wrote. "The point is that for a long time, the fact that I was divorced was the most important thing about me. And now it’s not.”
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Cheryl Strayed (03 of08)
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In the wake of a divorce and her mother's death from lung cancer, a devastated, 26-year-old Cheryl Strayed set off on a solo, 1,000-mile hike along the Pacific Crest Trail -- a trek she'd later document in her bestselling 2012 memoir, Wild. In a revealing essay that ran in The Sun literary magazine, Strayed opened up about her divorce from first husband Marco Littig.

"We loved each other, but love was not enough. We had become the Insanely Young, Insanely Sad, Insanely Messed-Up Married Couple," she wrote.

Post-divorce, the writer also legally changed her last name from Nyland to Strayed, to symbolize the uncharted path her life had taken.
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Tina Turner(04 of08)
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Musical duo Tina and Ike Turner's notoriously messy marriage -- Ike was reportedly physically and emotionally abusive -- ended in divorce in 1978. Tina kept the surname after the split and went on to become even bigger as a solo artist. In a 1986 interview with Ebony, Turner said she hoped her story would inspire others to make big leaps in their lives.

"If you are unhappy with anything -- your mother, your father, your husband, your wife, your job, your boss, your car -- whatever is bringing you down, get rid of it," she said. "You'll find that when you're free, your true creativity, your true self comes out."
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Elizabeth Gilbert (05 of08)
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Following an emotionally shattering divorce, writer Elizabeth Gilbert embarked on a year-long journey to Italy, India and Indonesia. When she returned, she penned Eat Pray Love, a memoir chronicling the whole soul-searching trip.

“I'm choosing happiness over suffering, I know I am," Gilbert writes in the best-selling book. "I'm making space for the unknown future to fill up my life with yet-to-come surprises.”
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Wendy Davis (06 of08)
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Before she pursued politics, former Texas state senator Wendy Davis was a 21-year-old divorced mom struggling to put food on the table for her young daughter.

To make ends meet, Davis worked at a doctor’s office and as a waitress, all while attending community college. Ultimately, she was accepted to Harvard Law School. After graduation, the single mom returned to Texas where she served on the Fort Worth City Council and won a Fort Worth seat in the Texas Senate in 2008.

"I'm not an overnight sensation," Davis said during her 2014 Texas gubernatorial campaign. "I'm a Texan. And I'm a Texas success story. I am the epitome of hard work and optimism."
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Eva Longoria (07 of08)
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Eva Longoria separated from Tony Parker in November 2010 amid reports that the NBA star had been caught "sexting" with a former teammate's wife. Unshaken by the tabloids' attention, the actress continued to work on "Desperate Housewives" while devoting more time charity and social causes. (It's not for nothing that she was named philanthropist of the year by The Hollywood Reporter in 2009.)

In 2013, Longoria earned her master's degree in Chicano studies from California State University after three years of study.
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Sharon Olds(08 of08)
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In 2013, Sharon Olds won the Pulitzer Prize in Poetry for Stag's Leap, a collection the Pulitzer board described as a “book of unflinching poems on the author's divorce that examine love, sorrow, and the limits of self-knowledge."

In an interview with The Huffington Post shortly after she received the honor, Olds opened up about the raw experience of writing about being left by her husband after 32 years of marriage.

"I think not writing is a lot more painful than writing," Olds said. "Working -- though it's really a kind of playing -- to make something that can stand on its own, a small song, that's fun."
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