I think, I'd be the complete counter-evidence to your thesis, redliner.
My parents got divorced when I was very young, and the divorce went on for years and came along with so much fighting (for the right of custody).
My Dad married again rapidly, and the time with my stepmother turned out to be pure horror for me as she hated me, harassing me wherever possible (call me a modern Cinderella

). *shrugs* After I moved out, my dad separated from her.
Currently, my dad will be divorced for the third time. *tilt* (Hopefully, he has learnt now from it).
Of course, all these experiences HAD an influence on my thinking and the way I chose the men I wanted to be with. Always searching for someone to protect me, someone to love me, and always tending to clutching and co-dependency. And every relationship broke after a certain time.
Thus, for many many years I refused to ever think of marrying (in my opinion back then, marriage just leads to divorce and fighting).
These days, having found "Mr. Right", I have been living in a happy relationship for 12 years now, and have been married for 3 years. And everything's fine.

And the fear that I could somehow repeat my dad's experiences or his mistakes, or even could show behaviours of my hated stepmother, did not come true.
Nonetheless, what has to be mentioned, is, that my hubby and I HAVE HAD fightings and times where I wouldn't have bet a penny on our relationship. But instead of instantly separating, we stuck together and finally overcame our problems.
In the end, I think that childhood experiences and what a child experiences from it's parents WILL affect it's later life. But it doesn't automatically have to be in a negative way. Bad parents, for example, might just be an example for how you never want to be and which behaviours to avoid.
(I hope that was clear enough. It's always difficult to write such long texts in a foreign language)