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Life After
Divorce-Coping As A Single Parent
When the ink has dried on your divorce
papers, and the dust finally starts to
settle, you will find yourself facing an
entirely new set of problems. Now you
are alone with your responsibilities.
The scheduling of your life is
different, and probably more difficult.
If your husband is limited to brief
visitation rights, then the day-to-day
responsibility for your kids is now
completely yours. Even if your spouse
has your children part of the time, you
will discover that you are more limited.
If your ex did anything at all around
the house you will now have to do it
yourself. If he did any of the family
bookkeeping, or helped the kids with
schoolwork, or took them here or there,
that service is no longer available. You
have a household. Once there were two
people who could take on the duty of
running it. Now there’s one.
You will probably begin to see this
happening from the start. During your
divorce these things present themselves.
But in some ways they aren’t as obvious
then. This is partly due to the
incredible turmoil you are already
facing. There may also be other factors
disguising the truth. Your friends and
family knew what you were going through
while the battle was still raging. Often
some of them stepped up to bat, and
helped in so many ways. Your best friend
drove your boy to sports practice
through an entire season, and maybe your
sister took your daughter to shop for
clothes. But that was when your days
were endless cycles of lawyers, court
dates, and searching for records. Now
life is supposed to be normal.
The only problem with that is the
workload: it seems to be permanently
bigger.
In most cases the ex-spouse should be of
help, but there are almost always
problems and disagreements. Most likely
these will last as long as your children
are still underage and a shared
responsibility. How much support and
help your ex is giving you with the kids
is usually a measure of your sanity.
I’ve had my own problems with this, as
does nearly every parent who keeps
custody most of the time. My
ex-husband’s mandated times with the
kids only cover a couple of weekends and
some weekday evenings each month. Often
the evenings simply don’t happen.
Many divorced parents face the same
dilemma: doubled responsibility not only
for kids, but for shopping, cleaning,
paying the bills, taking care of the
pets, doing the laundry, and the list
goes on and on!
Being a single parent is no easy task.
For each of us the new responsibilities
take different forms. When they are
still together most parents gradually
take on some aspects of the good cop/bad
cop relationship with their kids.
Sometimes dad is the one who is judge
and jury, while mom seems willing to
listen. Or those roles might be
reversed. Maybe your ex-spouse was the
disciplinarian; while you were the
sympathetic one they could always come
to. Whatever role you played before, now
you must be both. If your boy gets in a
fight, or your daughter mistreats a
schoolmate, you have to dole out the
punishment. Yet, if there were
extenuating circumstances, you also have
to understand. How can a person do
both? It seems almost impossible.
When the ink has dried on your divorce papers, and the dust finally starts to settle, you will find yourself facing an entirely new set of problems. Now you are alone with your responsibilities. The scheduling of your life is different, and probably more difficult.
If your husband is limited to brief visitation rights, then the day-to-day responsibility for your kids is now completely yours. Even if your spouse has your children part of the time, you will discover that you are more limited. If your ex did anything at all around the house you will now have to do it yourself. If he did any of the family bookkeeping, or helped the kids with schoolwork, or took them here or there, that service is no longer available. You have a household. Once there were two people who could take on the duty of running it. Now there’s one.
You will probably begin to see this happening from the start. During your divorce these things present themselves. But in some ways they aren’t as obvious then. This is partly due to the incredible turmoil you are already facing. There may also be other factors disguising the truth. Your friends and family knew what you were going through while the battle was still raging. Often some of them stepped up to bat, and helped in so many ways. Your best friend drove your boy to sports practice through an entire season, and maybe your sister took your daughter to shop for clothes. But that was when your days were endless cycles of lawyers, court dates, and searching for records. Now life is supposed to be normal.
The only problem with that is the workload: it seems to be permanently bigger.
In most cases the ex-spouse should be of help, but there are almost always problems and disagreements. Most likely these will last as long as your children are still underage and a shared responsibility. How much support and help your ex is giving you with the kids is usually a measure of your sanity. I’ve had my own problems with this, as does nearly every parent who keeps custody most of the time. My ex-husband’s mandated times with the kids only cover a couple of weekends and some weekday evenings each month. Often the evenings simply don’t happen.
Many divorced parents face the same dilemma: doubled responsibility not only for kids, but for shopping, cleaning, paying the bills, taking care of the pets, doing the laundry, and the list goes on and on!
Being a single parent is no easy task. For each of us the new responsibilities take different forms. When they are still together most parents gradually take on some aspects of the good cop/bad cop relationship with their kids. Sometimes dad is the one who is judge and jury, while mom seems willing to listen. Or those roles might be reversed. Maybe your ex-spouse was the disciplinarian; while you were the sympathetic one they could always come to. Whatever role you played before, now you must be both. If your boy gets in a fight, or your daughter mistreats a schoolmate, you have to dole out the punishment. Yet, if there were extenuating circumstances, you also have to understand. How can a person do both? It seems almost impossible.
This is aggravated even more by the divorce. A split inevitably sets up a competitive situation. In a conflict people always look for allies, and in a divorce both parents want the kids to be on their respective sides. This doesn’t end with the decree.
If dad was once the disciplinarian, but now only sees the kids for a few days a month, he’s likely to be much less help when they do something wrong. He’ll want his house to be the place where they have fun. At the same time, mom is going to get tired of always being the one to give punishments. She doesn’t want her children to hate her. This often turns into a competition for affection that can only hurt the children.
What every parent in a divorce must learn is that their children still have the same needs they had before the divorce. That means they need the adults in their lives to take on adult responsibilities.
For instance, if you are about to leave your children off at your spouse’s, don’t work extra hard to leave the best impression. There’s no need to make your last stop one at a fast food joint where you fill them full of sugar and empty calories. Instead, just make them understand that you love them, and are concerned with their well being in every way. Ease them into the transition by assuring them of their place in your life, while helping them see that they still have that place in your spouse’s life as well. If your spouse doesn’t cooperate, try to resolve it when the kids aren’t there. Do all you can to make sure that the facts of custody are not rules of engagement, but rather are simply a structure for your children’s benefit.
If you and your spouse still have lingering differences in this area, the best way to help your cause is to simply be the best parent you can be.
But whatever your arrangement is with your ex-spouse, life can’t help but be more difficult alone. So what do you do in the face of overwhelming odds, and the seemingly inevitable nervous breakdown?
First, remember you are not alone. There are millions of single parents out there facing the same thing you are. You probably know other mothers (and/or fathers) who are, or have been, in the same situation. Don’t be afraid about turning to them now. They may know things you don’t, and if not, they can always lend a hand, or at least some sympathy.
Others who have gone through the same thing will realize what pressure you are under. This isn’t simply a matter of finances (though that issue usually has a lot to do with it).
You are now the one that your children come to every day of the week. They need you desperately for their own sense of security, especially after their world has been turned upside down from divorce. You are the one who picks up after them, feeds them, and gives them allowances. You are the one who talks to their friends’ mothers and fathers. You get the call from school. You talk to their teachers. You are the first one to hear about bills for education and health. If your children are about to go to college, you are the one they talk to about those possibilities.
If you are the parent they stay with most nights, and you are the parent they see in the morning before they go to school, then you are simply the one.
Because it used to be different, because there used to be two of you, and because there used to be two parental roles being played in this house, you now have to learn something new. Now you must develop some skills you never needed before. If you can do what is necessary you’ll find that this new order isn’t that scary. If you can adapt, you will not only survive, but thrive. A new exciting life is just around the corner.
Your job is to figure out how to keep from getting so exhausted that “just around the corner” turns out to be an impossible distance to cover.
Your job as a newly single parent may not be easy, but it is simple. And it is crucial.
This is aggravated even more by the
divorce. A split inevitably sets up a
competitive situation. In a conflict
people always look for allies, and in a
divorce both parents want the kids to be
on their respective sides. This doesn’t
end with the decree.
If dad was once the disciplinarian, but
now only sees the kids for a few days a
month, he’s likely to be much less help
when they do something wrong. He’ll want
his house to be the place where they
have fun. At the same time, mom is going
to get tired of always being the one to
give punishments. She doesn’t want her
children to hate her. This often turns
into a competition for affection that
can only hurt the children.
What every parent in a divorce must
learn is that their children still have
the same needs they had before the
divorce. That means they need the adults
in their lives to take on adult
responsibilities. For instance, if you
are about to leave your children off at
your spouse’s, don’t work extra hard to
leave the best impression. There’s no
need to make your last stop one at a
fast food joint where you fill them full
of sugar and empty calories. Instead,
just make them understand that you love
them, and are concerned with their well
being in every way.
Ease them into the
transition by assuring them of their
place in your life, while helping them
see that they still have that place in
your spouse’s life as well. If your
spouse doesn’t cooperate, try to resolve
it when the kids aren’t there. Do all
you can to make sure that the facts of
custody are not rules of engagement, but
rather are simply a structure for your
children’s benefit. If you and your
spouse still have lingering differences
in this area, the best way to help your
cause is to simply be the best parent
you can be.
But whatever your arrangement is with
your ex-spouse, life can’t help but be
more difficult alone. So what do you do
in the face of overwhelming odds, and
the seemingly inevitable nervous
breakdown?
First, remember you are not alone. There
are millions of single parents out there
facing the same thing you are. You
probably know other mothers (and/or
fathers) who are, or have been, in the
same situation. Don’t be afraid about
turning to them now. They may know
things you don’t, and if not, they can
always lend a hand, or at least some
sympathy.
Others who have gone through the same
thing will realize what pressure you are
under. This isn’t simply a matter of
finances (though that issue usually has
a lot to do with it). You are now the
one that your children come to every day
of the week. They need you desperately
for their own sense of security,
especially after their world has been
turned upside down from divorce. You are
the one who picks up after them, feeds
them, and gives them allowances. You are
the one who talks to their friends’
mothers and fathers. You get the call
from school. You talk to their teachers.
You are the first one to hear about
bills for education and health. If your
children are about to go to college, you
are the one they talk to about those
possibilities.
If you are the parent they stay with
most nights, and you are the parent they
see in the morning before they go to
school, then you are simply the one.
Because it used to be different, because
there used to be two of you, and because
there used to be two parental roles
being played in this house, you now have
to learn something new. Now you must
develop some skills you never needed
before. If you can do what is necessary
you’ll find that this new order isn’t
that scary. If you can adapt, you will
not only survive, but thrive. A new
exciting life is just around the corner.
Your job is to figure out how to keep
from getting so exhausted that “just
around the corner” turns out to be an
impossible distance to cover.
Your job as a newly single parent may
not be easy, but you will adjust, create
new routines and discover a new found
inner strength you never thought you
had.
Christina Rowe
is the author of the best selling
divorce book "Seven Secrets To A
Successful Divorce-What Every Woman
Needs To Know". Find out the
survival skills that will save you time,
money and heartache during your divorce.
For your free chapter of the book go
to:http://www.secretsofdivorce.com
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