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Sue Atkins, Parent Coach at
Positive
Parents
Navigating through
Divorce
A bad marriage can make parenting – and life in
general – stressful. The loss of the family
structure can be very upsetting and distressing
for everyone involved in the major
change.
Despite divorce being on the increase around
the world, parents often feel at a loss when
searching for practical support. They also feel
overwhelmed, confused, afraid, resentful, or
completely frozen in panic about how to handle
the changes in their family’s way of
life.
Sometimes this fear manifests itself as
animosity, which turns the whole divorce
process into a battle, with children trapped in
the middle and feeling
powerless.
Divorce needn’t be like this. Parents can make
positive, healthy choices during this very
emotional time and make the transition less
painful for everyone.
Divorce isn’t about winners and losers. It’s
about working out a way to handle the
separation with dignity and compassion and
minimising the disruption to your children
emotionally. This article offers numerous
approaches and strategies for making the
experience of divorce as positive and healthy
as possible.
Presenting a united front: Telling the
kids
I’ve worked with many parents going through
divorce and one of the main worries is how to
tell their children about what is going to
happen and what to actually say to
them.
Children naturally fear that they’ll lose one
of their parents in divorce or that their
parents will abandon them. They also fear the
changes and disruptions that divorce inevitably
brings to their family. Children often blame
themselves.
When a marriage becomes troubled, a couple
often relies on old habits of interacting,
which lead to fights rather than solutions. If
those old habits didn’t lead to constructive
solutions during the marriage, they’ll surely
reap no better results during the divorce. You
may not have been a united front while married,
but you and your partner must take this
opportunity – for the good of your children –
to work together.
The following sections cover various activities
I lead parents through to help them and their
children cope with divorce.
Critical question
One of the things I ask parents to do is
to work out together the answer to this
critical question: What are the key messages
you want to convey to your children?
Consider:
-
Your
child’s need to feel reassured that you
will both always be his/her parents and be
there to support, nurture, guide, and love
them.
-
Your
child needs to express themselves and their
feelings – this may include anger, silence,
denial, bravado, or pleading.
-
You
need to weigh up whether each parent tells
each child separately, or all together. If
you can manage to speak to them together,
this gives and opportunity for them to see
that you’re not blaming each other, that
they don’t have to take sides, and that
you’re both still there for them.
-
Think
about the sort of questions your children
are likely to ask. ‘Will we still see you
and spend time with you?’ ‘Who will take us
to football training?’ ‘Who will we live
with and where will we live?’ ‘Will we have
to change school?’ ‘Will we still see
Grandma?’ You need to explain that at the
moment you don’t have all the answers but
reassure them that you’ll have more clarity
and answers soon and they don’t need to
worry.
From your child’s
perspective
I ask parents to place a piece of paper on the
floor, step onto it, and imagine they’re
looking at the situation from the eyes of their
child. I then ask them to answer the following
questions as if they were the
child:
-
What
do you see and hear around you at the
moment?
-
How
do you feel?
How could Mum and Dad make you feel better?
What could they do or say?
Reassurances and
guarantees
I ask parents to write seven reassurances and
guarantees that they can honestly give to their
child in a graphic wheel. The reassurances
and guarantees are things that will help their
child cope with the enormous changes that are
coming.
Be honest – don’t hedge around the
difficulties. Don’t give false promises that
you can’t keep because you destroy their
confidence and belief in you at a critical time
in your relationship. Give them information but
not too much – give details of things in the
not-too-distant future.
Working together
I also help divorcing parents develop some
so-parenting strategies. For
example:
-
Plan
and agree on what both parents will say
before
they talk to their children. This helps to
avoid mixed messages, which can confuse and
really distress children.
-
Look
at the benefits of telling the children
together or individually.
-
Work
on overcoming the ‘blame’ mentally and the
feeling that the divorce must be someone’s
fault.
-
Look
for ways to avoid making children feel that
they must take sides.
-
Try
to take the emotional charge out of telling
the children
-
Help
each parent gain more control over his or
her distressing feelings and emotions
during this difficult
moment.
Divorce changes – but it does not end – a
family. Your children are now members of two
families.
Extract taken from:
Raising
Happy Children for DUMMIES
Author: Sue Atkins
2007
Book Description
Every parent would like to have a happy, well-
behaved child - but every parent also knows
this is not often a reality!
Raising Happy
Children For Dummies helps you
better understand your children - from
toddler to teen, boys and girls - and is
packed with practical tips from an
experienced parenting coach to improve
your parenting, your child's happiness
and as a result, their behaviour.
The book helps you explore your own parenting
skills, helps you to define what changes you
may need to make and provides advice on how to
implement new parenting habits to improve you
and your family's relationships. Covering both
day-to-day parenting and offering extra advice
on how to help your children deal with life's
tougher challenges, this is a down to earth
guide from a parenting coach and mother of two,
Sue Atkins.
2007 Sue
Atkins
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