Divorce Dilemmas – One of the most difficult times of your life can also be a blessing

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Dr Seuss said “I’m sorry to say so but, sadly it’s true, that bang-ups and hang-ups can happen to you.”

For a moment – whether brief or exaggerated – your life feels like it’s going down the toilet.

Everything you knew to be true has just shattered around you like cheap glass crashing on concrete and you’ve got more than a few cuts trying to pick up the pieces.  The hardest part – the one person you counted on in tough times like these is the only one you can’t turn to.

Because he’s the one you’re getting away from, through divorce or separation.

Divorce can be messy, painful and confusing. No one says this is fair or that it will be easy – but at the very least, you can try for manageable.

Whether the circumstances are cooperative or uncooperative, if you find yourself drowning in your own divorce, here’s to throwing you a life jacket. It’s possible to make it through a divorce a better, stronger person – but first you’ll have to do your legal, mental, and emotional homework.

Carolyn Ellis, award-winning author and founder of Thrive After Divorce, helps people navigate through divorce. Those about to get a divorce, or even thinking about it: Ellis wants you to do your research.

“It’s important to become an educated consumer of the divorce system beforehand, because if not, you will be educated while your lawyer’s clock is running,” says Ellis.

From mediations to collaborative divorce to third party litigations, there are many legal options that don’t involve the often-unnecessary path of divorce court.

Putting together the right team is essential. Finding a lawyer that suits you, both financially and personally, can be a task in itself, as not all lawyers will be in tune with your best interests.  

“You need to be the quarterback of your divorce resource team,” Ellis advises, “you need to tell your lawyer your best outcome, where you’re willing to give and where you aren’t.”

“Ask questions, and shop around.”

The legal system can get quite complicated.  Alexis Martin Neely, “America’s Personal Family Lawyer,” outlines a list of questions you need to ask:

  • How do you bill for your services?

  • Are you able to be responsive to my needs on an ongoing basis?

  • How will you proactively communicate with me on an ongoing basis?

  • Can I call about any legal problem I have, or just about matters within your specialty?

Neely is very clear: you need not be afraid to ask these questions of potential lawyers. After all, you will be paying them a lot of money.  You need to be sure of what you’re getting into.

Ellis, in addition to offering advice on legal issues, also acts sort of as a life coach.  She teaches her clients methods to better handle adversity in any capacity, not just in divorce or separation.

Urging people to be in charge of their own thinking helps them to see the positive, even in seemingly negative situations:

“Without an awareness of how important our mindset is, we engage in knee-jerk reactions or fight or flight responses,” Ellis cautions. This can lead to making irrational decisions that create further damage down the road.

Having your emotions and way of thinking sorted out leads to a better sense of control, and better able to cope with what you cannot control, she adds.

Keep the Kids in Mind

One aspect in your control is how to handle children.

“The single-greatest mistake people (undergoing divorce) make is not having a child-centered divorce,” says Dorcy Russell, CEO and founder of the Conscious Co-Parenting Institute.

“That means being concerned with the best outcome for the kids, and most of all, keeping adult issues out of both your relationships with the kids,” says Russell.

Russell knows of what she speaks.  She’s a nationally-recognized expert in Parental Alienation Syndrome.  PAS happens when kids are “brainwashed” to be hostile and aggressive towards one parent by the other.

The consequences can be severe, including increased tendencies towards drug abuse, cutting, early sexual activity, and in the future, trouble being a good parent themselves.  There are consequences for the “brainwashing” parent as well, says Russell:

“If you keep processing your pain through them, they will turn on you.”

“Kids are way more resilient, adaptable and understanding than we think they are,” adds Ellis, “and they will respond in large measure in reaction to how you (respond).”

But what if the other parent truly did turn out to be a dirtbag? For example, the husband left with the babysitter, or the wife goes to jail for a terrible crime.  It happens.

“That’s so hard,” says Russell, “just keep in mind that kids can and will form their own opinions.

And if you happen to be the one whose former partner is poisoning their young hearts and minds against, Russell advises constancy.

“Don’t be a victim, and don’t fight with your ex in front of them,” says Russell, adding you’ll only confirm their worst fears that you really are to blame for this mess.

Instead, be proactive, and find ways to deflect and defer any hostility.

How to break the news of a divorce depends largely on the child’s age. Older children might require more information. Give them as much as they need to know, but make sure not to speak negatively of your former spouse.

Breaking the News

It is important to make sure children know they are loved, that they didn’t create the divorce, that they taken care of, and that divorce is a grown-up thing.

“Often, kids are concerned with what affects their immediate lives,” says Ellis.

What matters to a child? Things like: if they will be moving, where the family pet will go, where his or her toys will be, and if they will still see their friends.

There are a few common-but-avoidable mistakes where kids and divorce are concerned. Putting children in the middle by making then messengers or spies, or dishing to them and thereby making them act as your therapist, are harmful acts to be avoided.

Dealing with your kids is a part of “the process of disentanglement,” according to Ellis. Former spouses still play a role in your life in this way, but it’s drastically different.

“They are no longer a romantic partner,” Ellis says, “they are a business partner in parenting the children, and should be communicated with as such.”

Communication can often be helped by structuring it around a business model.

Divorce is essentially the death of a relationship, which is in essence, a sad thing. However, if it came to an end in this way, it was for good reason. Ellis is quick to point out the positives a divorce can bring.

“Divorce can be an enormous gift,” she says.

“The amount of strength and emotional resilience that I have now, I would not have received in any other way.”

Be sure to check out MOMeo Expert, Carolyn Ellis, on day 30 of our MOMeo 30-Day Challenge!

Relationship Renovation…

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Date night for Alice and Bart often meant shopping at Target or the grocery store. Nothing like choosing lettuce and light bulbs to stir the romantic embers. With a never-ending to-do list and the added responsibilities of a newborn, this dual-income couple found it increasingly difficult to nurture their relationship. Until Alice attended a group counseling session, discovering how to rejuvenate her marriage.

“I learned what brings me joy in my life,” says Alice, a marketing rep in Harrisburg, Pa., married six years. She requested her last name withheld to protect family privacy. “Both of us like to be outside,” Alice says of Bart while strolling recently with their 5-month-old son through their neighborhood. “We try to make time to be together where we’re not distracted” by errands or housework, she says. Long walks or road trips with a sleeping child in tow seem to do the trick. “It reminds me why we’re together.”

It’s no wonder marriages are pushed to the back burner when trying to manage children, a job, housework, financial strains and schedule overload. Unlike these other areas that vie for our attention, relationships tend to “quietly soldier on” until it’s too late, says James Córdova, director of the Marriage Checkup program at Clark University in Worcester, Mass.

That’s why even the most successful marriages need a relationship overhaul from time to time, according to psychologists and counselors interviewed for this story.

Here are a few marital issues cited by the experts and their suggested remedies:

Conflict: Where’s the Romance?

Resolution: Experience The Embrace

Hugs will never be the same after you’ve tried this mindful approach from Córdova, author of the new book, “The Marriage Checkup: A Scientific Program for Sustaining and Strengthening Marital Health.”

Enter the hug from a position that does not require straining, he says. “Breathe into the hug. Relax into the contact, turning your attention to the moment, the warmth, softness, pressure of contact. Allow an awareness of all the qualities of the moment. Walk through each of your senses. Experience the totality.”

Now stay this way for five minutes. “It’s quite a bit longer than most couples will hug,” Córdova admits. Rest assured, with regularity, the awkward barriers will disappear, “allowing a deeper, more embodied experience just to be with this unique person.”

“Our minds tend to want to rush off,” he says. “This is an opportunity to practice just being aware. It can be a real basis to foster intimacy.”

Hugging not your thing? Try a little eye contact to bolster your declarations of love, says Dr. Robert Moss, a clinical psychologist in Greenville, S.C. While words may be cheap, the nonverbal message is: “You are worth my time simply to gaze into your eyes and tell you.”

An eye statement tends to lessen the impact of many marital troubles, according to Marriage Counselor Ann Smith, of Reading, Pa. Greeting each other with the eyes should be the first priority upon entering the home after separation, she says. “Put it ahead of the mailbox and bills, even if only for two minutes to see the person you love. Then, when you open the bills, they do not seem so bad.”

Conflict: Who Has Time For a Date?

Resolution: Consider Bungee-Jumping

Undefined plans for a getaway or date next weekend or next month may never materialize, Córdova says. “We look for found time to grab in spare moments. Even though it seems simple, you have to make time because you are never going to find time.”

He recommends couples schedule regular, predictable time during which they can actively explore and experience the world, possibly try something neither one has done before. “They should practice a type of curiosity about each other and about the world.”

Couples who think they know everything about the spouse fail to understand that everyone is evolving, Córdova says. “If you’re bored with the person you are with it’s a sure sign you have stopped paying attention to ‘who the person I am with today is because certainly I’m not the same person as yesterday.’”

Every six months to a year couples should also plan a getaway so they don’t feel as helpless about their relationship and have something to look forward to, he says.

Conflict: Put Up Your Dukes

Resolution: It’s Called Communicating

If you know your spouse is frustrated about something, actively listen without trying to solve the issue, Moss says. You might address your partner: “If we can agree not to look for solutions, I can just to be there to hold you so you’re not alone, so I don’t have to feel like I want to escape.”

Anger is not necessarily a bad thing in a relationship, Córdova adds. Use dance lessons as an analogy for communication. “You are going to step on toes. If you say ‘ow’ and your partner does the same thing, naturally you learn to dance gracefully together.

You get to say ‘ow,’ that pissed me off, but you do not get to attack each other’s character.”

Conflict: The Thrill is Gone

Resolution: Attract A Crowd

Schedule gift deliveries several times a year when your partner least expects it, not just on Valentine’s Day, anniversaries or birthdays, says Moss, who latest self-help book offers marriage counseling, “For Better or For Worse: Am I in Love with a Giver or a Taker?”

“If your wife works, send it to her at work. Get in front of people a special surprise they will see. The attention from others activates positive feelings.”

On the other hand, be cautious about sending gifts as an apology, he warns. Like makeup sex, such gifts may subconsciously force your partner to start an argument to gain the reward.

Conflict: The Honey-Do List

Resolution: It Takes Two

Set aside problem-solving sessions twice a week for 45 minutes to an hour without distractions, Moss says.  Take the phone off the hook, occupy the children and alternate presenting a problem, ensuring the listener understands the issue and agreed-upon solution. “If it’s two hours a week, you free up all the rest of the time to do positive things.”

Smith suggests finding a permanent location around your home, outside the bedroom and earshot of children, for face-to-face discussions. Ideally three to four times a week couples should meet here to debrief, away from whatever is bothering them, says Smith, executive director of Breakthrough at Caron, a nonprofit wellness program that helps break unhealthy life patterns.

JOIN US on Friday for PART TWO–How To Use Relationship Renovation Tips with your Co-Workers!

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