By Rosalind Sedacca, CDC
Over the past few years there has been a strong movement towards 50/50 post-divorce parenting arrangements. It’s often referred to as shared parenting. In many regards this approach to co-parenting may be the best custodial situation for most children of divorcing parents.
I am a strong advocate of shared parenting. It worked very successfully in my own divorce. However, I do not believe it’s the right or only answer for everyone. That’s because every situation is different when it comes to divorce. I don’t believe legislation should be determining uniform custody outcomes for every family. These are issues that caring, conscious parents should be deciding together with only one goal in mind – the very best interest of their children.
Unfortunately, too many parents approach this issue as adversaries. When child custody becomes a battle, everyone loses. Parents are pitted against each other and innocent children inevitably pay the price.
When custodial decisions move into contention, the children don’t win. By creating a scenario where lawyers, legislation and courts determine the direction of your children’s future, you lose power in your life. You also may lose harmony within your already fragile family structure. And your children get caught in the confusion.
Honest Answers, Not Automatic Legislated Solutions
There is another way. When you create a child-centered divorce, your children win – on every level. Parents are encouraged to sit down with each other and discuss the future well-being of their kids together. The process keeps their perspective where it really belongs – on the children.
To do this, they must take into account and ask themselves some very serious questions:
- What’s best for our children today, tomorrow and in the years to come?
- How can we minimize the physical, emotional and spiritual damage inflicted upon our children as a result of our pending divorce?
- How can we best support our children through this difficult time?
- How can we show your love and compassion for them as they move through challenges they did not ask for — or create?
- What can we do to boost their sense of security, self-esteem and well-being during the transitions ahead?
- Who can provide the least traumatic home environment for the children – and for what percent of each day, week, month and year?
- How can each of us best contribute our assets – physical, emotional and spiritual – to create harmony, good will and peace within the family structure?
- How will our children look back at this divorce a year, five years, ten years and more from now? Will they understand?
- How can we make life better for our children after the divorce than it was before?
The answers to these questions are not simple, nor are they black and white. They require honest communication between two mature adults who have their children’s best interest at heart. And yes, it may likely take more than the two of you to come to resolution on all the child-custody details.
That’s where you can enlist the aid of professionals — mediators, therapists, coaches, parenting coordinators and clergy. These experienced and knowledgeable experts will approach your divorce from a child-centered perspective. They have the tools and insight to help you reach mindful agreements on important issues. To help you make decisions that will affect the wellbeing of your children in the least-divisive manner.
Don’t let the court make decisions about your children for you!
As tough as this process may appear, wouldn’t you prefer to make these decisions together? To discuss as parents who know and love your children? And to do it before you approach the court – and lawyers – rather than having decisions made for you?
However, you can’t let the negative emotions you may be feeling toward your spouse influence parental decisions. When hatred, hurt, disappointment, guilt, shame, anxiety, frustration and mistrust impacts your child-custody issues, you end up sabotaging your children.
It is selfish, insensitive and extremely unproductive to let your personal vendetta determine the relationship your children have with their other parent. You are allowing personal satisfaction to get in the way of your parental responsibilities toward your kids. And the cost – to them as well as to you – will be high. (Many children, as they grow, come to resent a parent who keeps them from having a positive relationship with their other parent, leading to alienation and other negative outcomes.)
If you’ve been touched by separation or divorce, I value your comments and suggestions on this highly volatile topic.
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Rosalind Sedacca, CDC is a Divorce & Parenting Coach and Founder of the Child-Centered Divorce Network. She is the author of How Do I Tell the Kids About the Divorce? A Create-a-Storybook Guide to Preparing Your Children – With Love! To get her free ebook on Post-Divorce Parenting, and learn about her coaching services, programs and other valuable resources on divorce and parenting issues, visit https://www.childcentereddivorce.com.