I recently fell down a very specific internet rabbit hole, courtesy of a quick, suspiciously casual blurb about something called “alpine divorce.” The premise? One partner takes the other on a scenic hike and gently (or not so gently) bumps them off a cliff. We’ll, dumps them.
Let me say this clearly. This is not a thing. This is not a lifestyle category. This is not a niche relationship strategy filed somewhere between couples therapy and “conscious uncoupling.”
And yet, it lingers.
Because psychologically, it scratches at something uncomfortable and very human.
We have always been a species that prefers the grand gesture over the honest conversation. Not because we are dramatic (though, yes, we are dramatic), but because we are deeply avoidant. It is, apparently, easier to orchestrate an entire alpine excursion than to say, “This isn’t working.”
Conflict avoidance is the quiet villain in many relationships. It dresses well. It smiles politely. It books the hike. It says, “Let’s get some fresh air,” when what it really means is, “I cannot tolerate the discomfort of telling you the truth.”
And so we invent myths like alpine divorce that are extreme, absurd, and cinematic because they exaggerate a truth we recognize. Sometimes people would rather do anything than have the hard conversation.
It reminds me, oddly, of those glossy, sunlit moments we see in media and pop culture. Take Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston walking arm-in-arm on a beach, looking like the embodiment of permanence only for the story to shift overnight. The juxtaposition is jarring. How does something that looks so intact unravel so quickly?
But of course, it doesn’t unravel overnight. It just reveals itself overnight.
No cliffs required.
The truth is, most endings are far less cinematic and far more ordinary. They happen in small silences. In conversations not had. In the slow drift of disconnection. In the polite decision to “wait for the right time,” which never arrives.
So no, alpine divorce isn’t real.
But emotional avoidance? That’s alive, well, and booking weekend getaways.
If you’re going to end something, maybe skip the hike. Stay home. Sit down. Say the hard thing.
No hiking boots required. No dramatic scenery. Just courage. The rarest terrain of all.
Categories: Culture, current events, identity, mental health, Pop Culture, Psychology, society





A Case for Perry Mason Indeed
An ‘Alpine Dive Pushed off a Cliff’
to Avoid
Divorce
Court
It Seems Dear
Miriam Although
It’s True Instinctually
Humans Will Avoid Conflict
With Whatever Village they Feel
Part of (If any at all particularly
these days at Least) to Insure
Survivability for It is True Being
Outcast From the Village Before
Technology Retirement Benefits
Door Dash and the Such took Care of Us
Was Yes the Equivalent of Getting Pushed off the Cliff
to Our
Demise
Indeed
No need for
Perry Mason
Just the Cruel
Reality of Survivability
Yet things have changed
Indeed as We in many ways
Have become more Things than
the Humans Who Counted on each
Other to Survive Before the Days of ‘The
Machine’
Fitting In Well
Enough as a Cog
Perhaps even to Escape
With Real Free Agency
That Allows the Individual
to Speak their Own Truths
Without Fear of Getting
Pushed off the Village Cliff
Life will be so Much Different
Without a Master Indeed No More
Slave Yes Free Agency to Breathe
However We aRe All Still
Just Little bitty humans
Still Gotta Find a way to
‘Fit in Rome’ Enough to
Breathe for What
Keeps a Social
Animal Warm to Be
Indeed LoVE iN Peace
Together Yet the Ocean
of Potential Avatar Connections Now
Is Large Enough to Create Our Own Tribe
For Those Who Understand How Our Humanity
Continues to
Work and Play
Both Before and
After ‘The Apple’
In “The Garden” Free..:)
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