
Dewi* has always been an evidence-based person.
"I never make decisions without weighing things up really seriously," she laughs, "I spent three months researching which robot vacuum we should buy."
So, when things in her eight-year marriage to her husband Stuart* began to go south, she wasn't going to rush into anything.
"We had two kids under four years old, and I'm not sure when it happened, but we were no longer on the same team," she says. "More than that, we were really, really against each other. I'd resent every moment he took for himself to go to the gym or out with his friends; he seemed to read criticism and nagging into everything I asked him to do."
"Friends told us it was just the stage in our life - they said the fog would clear, and things would get better, but they didn't."
Watch: Is it a good idea to stay together for the kids? Post continues after video.
Dewi and Stuart began counselling, but after six months, she knew the connection wasn't getting any better.
"We had a real heart-to-heart where we both realised we'd be happier apart," says Dewi, "but, in classic Type A style, I wanted to 'do divorce' right. I was determined we'd manage the split with as little interruption to the kids as possible."
Dewi and Stuart decided that, financially, they'd be better equipped to continue living under the same roof for at least the next six months while they sorted out a plan moving forward.