Those of you who talk about your wife knowing everything about your bitcoin holdings, I hope you have them declared to the authorities, as I recently heard about a case where the wife upon divorce reported to the authorities that the ex-husband had undeclared bitcoin that he should have declared.
Besides, I personally know of a couple of close cases of divorces where the men told me that they did not know the person they had loved so much in the past because of how she behaved in the process. With divorce rates in industrialized countries being very high and 70-80% of divorces being initiated by women, depending on the location, it is something to be cautious about.
I mean, I hope users have declared their earnings regardless of the threat of a divorce. Although, divorces often get ugly, especially if it's not a mutual agreement. Usually, there's plenty of rows over who gets what, and it's a rather lengthy process too. Although, honestly most marriages you can see it happening, and there's certain reasons why it leads to that. Obviously, for the minority it's a little more complicated than that. However, I'd like to think that most couples can get through most of their difficulties, and once you've been with someone long enough, as long as you show them the same attention, and are very much still connected the same, you should be able to trust them indefinitely.
Divorce is tricky, since usually it's not by mutual agreement, and then one party is out to hurt the other. Usually, the person who's been handed the divorce letters, feels betrayed, and therefore looks to gain everything they can, and actively hurt the other since they've been hurt. I've seen this a few times now in life. Although, that's the agreement you sign up for. Technically, you're saying what is mine is yours, and you should be expected to split everything equally, no matter who bought what. Plus, for me if things did fall apart towards the end, I'd want them to be set up for their next chapter in life, I wouldn't want to see them struggle.