Disclaimer: All facts gleaned from the filings stated hereafter are only as truthful as the petitioner. The tone of this article expresses a style of writing historically employed by America’s greatest writers and, as such, is for opinion purposes only. No intentional harm is due. Do not read if the topic of divorce (even your own) causes you emotional distress. Continue at your own risk.

In the delicate weave of St. Charles County’s courthouse, where the threads of lives once joined are gently undone, Michael C. Frisz appeared on July 31, 2025, to part ways with Jessica M. Frisz. Their marriage, begun on October 4, 2008, in the county’s quiet embrace, unraveled by May 1, 2025, its fabric irretrievably broken, no hope left to bind it. With Joseph J. Porzenski and Jon P. Wagner of Turken & Porzenski, LLC, Michael seeks dissolution, a careful disentangling of their shared years.

Two children, K.R.F. and G.N.F., carry their legacy, now in Jessica’s care at Lake St. Louis. Michael pleads for joint legal and physical custody, guided by a parenting plan, and child support set by Missouri’s guidelines. No maintenance is sought; both, employed, stand on their own. Their marital property and debts, accrued over seventeen years, await the court’s measured division, while non-marital assets must return to their origins. Legal costs fall to each, unless Jessica contests, then Michael demands she cover his fees.

In the courthouse’s soft stillness, Michael’s voice carries a steady hope: to end the marriage, secure his children, divide their burdens fairly. In St. Charles County’s tender light, where love’s echoes fade, the judge must trace their long union, granting Michael and Jessica their separate paths, their children’s future held gently, the law weaving a new beginning from the remnants of their past.

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