Posts Tagged ‘Helping Children’

How do I Help My Children at This Stage?

Thursday, November 25th, 2010

You can help your children most by doing everything in your power to keep them separate from the court contest. Be careful what you say on the phone or to visitors; children usually have much more information than parents think they do, albeit filtered through their own eyes and ears. Do not talk to your children about the dispute, except to inform them of its initiation, to answer their questions, to assure them of both parents’ continued love for them, and your desire to be their parent in all respects, whatever the dispute’s outcome.

Do not grill your children about the other home or use them as informants, detectives, or messengers. Your information must come from elsewhere. If you cannot find it, and  your children are not complaining to you directly, then perhaps you are blowing issues out of proportion. Click here for a kid’s guide to divorce.  

Pay attention to the stress level your children are expressing. They may be more manipulative or angry. They may be echoing your complaints about the other household; you’ll especially want to note if your spouse reports the opposite. Then your children may be “telling” you they are caught up in loyalty conflicts. They may be demonstrating increased anxiety around transitions between parental homes, or between their primary home and day care, school, or after school activities. They may be regressing in their behavior, going backwards to a previous developmental step. Or they may be discipline problems at home or at school. If you pay close attention, you may be able to trace the change in behavior to specific events, such as the house being sold or a parent’s move to another town. Or you may observe a slow deterioration as the custody dispute wears on. Click here for more children’s resources.

In any case, when you note negative changes in your child’s demeanor or behavior, you should first talk directly to your child (assuming they are verbal) to ascertain what he or she understands about his behavior, and to learn more details about what she is feeling. Talk to the child’s attorney or guardian to discuss changes you might make to facilitate your child’s improvement. Certainly, notify a teacher or therapist already in the picture.

If, upon discussion with other professionals involved in your child’s life and the case, you decide that either you need more information than the child is giving you, or that your child needs intervention, don’t wait until the dispute is over. Get help sooner rather than later. You could seek individual therapy or, in conjunction with your spouse, couples counseling specifically geared toward helping the two of you help your child. Or you could have your child seen by an outside mental health professional. Parents often complain at this stage that so many people are involved in the dispute that they are loathe to invite one more person in, especially with time and money already scarce. Your child did not ask for this dispute, and he or she shouldn’t bear the brunt of it. So if at all possible, you should get short term help, or just provide someone not connected to the dispute for him or her to talk to confidentially. It may help the child manage his or her stress level, and cope with the ongoing dispute. 

Excerpted from Your Divorce Advisor: A Lawyer and a Psychologist Guide You Through the Legal and Emotional Landscape of Divorce (Simon & Schuster/Fireside 2001). For more information: http://www.yourdivorceadvisor.com/.

For more information contact Peace Talks www.peace-talks.com 

(C) 2008  Peace Talks Mediation Services, Inc.

 

  • Share/Bookmark

More Ways to Help Your Children

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

Listen to Your Children

Children often experience very different feelings than you do at different times during this transition. They may feel sad when you feel relieved. Try and listen to the feelings behind the words your children speak. Allow your children to express their anger with you and at their situation. Allow them to miss the other parent when they are in your presence. Click here for some tips on how to listen to your children.    

Words are not the only way children express themselves. Younger children, and those who are feeling their emotions very intensely, do not use words to show their feelings. Learn to understand what they are feeling by watching their behavior. They may withdraw indicating they are sad.  They may act out in some way, which is telling you that they are angry. 

Act Civilly To Your Spouse

There are several important components of being civil. First, try to cooperate together. You can disagree privately with each other, but try to present a uniform front as a parenting team. This will be especially helpful as your children mature, and when they need a safety net to keep them from wandering too far from “home” values.  It is easier to keep them in tow if they know you are together on the rules and consequences of breaking the rules. Curfews, discipline, academic expectations, treatment of adults and other family members — these are basics you should try to agree upon.

Being civil means encouraging your children to respect the other parent. If you do not talk or act negatively about your ex-spouse, your children will not need to either. It is tempting to tell them stories about the other parent’s lapses, but children who do not respect both of their parents have a harder time reconciling the half of themselves that is the genetic connection to the other parent. Your child is half of each of you. If she thinks that you hate the part of her that is like her mother, she may choose to hate that part of herself too. Do not draw your child into losing half of him or herself. For some tips on acting civilly toward your spouse, click here 

Excerpted from Your Divorce Advisor: A Lawyer and a Psychologist Guide You Through the Legal and Emotional Landscape of Divorce (Simon & Schuster/Fireside 2001). For more information: http://www.yourdivorceadvisor.com/.

For more information contact Peace Talks www.peace-talks.com 

(C) 2008  Peace Talks Mediation Services, Inc.

  • Share/Bookmark

What Else Can I do to Help My Children?

Monday, May 17th, 2010

Resist the Temptation to be a Disneyland Parent

The parent who leaves the marital home, most often the father in our society, may fear that he will lose his children. You may know you won’t lose their love, but you fear that you will lose the chance to have control or say about what happens with them. This fear can add significantly to the stress and anxiety that is part and parcel of divorce. This fear and its impending sense of loss can lead to your feeling that you have to be the perfect parent: the “Disneyland” parent. For an excellent article on the Disneyland parent, click here.  

It’s all too easy for the non-residential parent to treat time with their children as Disneyland days.  Feelings about the divorce are allayed by making it up to the children through gifts and special trips. Trips to toy stores, movies, and events help push away the awkwardness at being together again. They make the time special, and when time seems scarce, it feels like every moment must be perfect. Your children need to continue to see you as a regular person, the usual Mom or Dad.  They will need to spend quiet time with you, and they need for you to be interested in their homework, their sports, friends, and all the things that concern them.  If you spend your time with your children in “Disneyland”, your children will come to expect this and the relationship between you and your children will become superficial.  They will come to expect fun time with you, gifts, activities, just the material goodies of life.  And as we know, that is just one side of  life and of being a parent.

Sometimes parents are unaware that they are competing with each other for the children’s affections by lavishing the kids with favors. This does neither of you any good, and it can actually erode your relationship with your children. You could become the fun parent, or the wealthy parent, but not the parent to turn to when it matters. Moreover, spoiling your child at this time does not do him any favors. Click here for an excellent article on how parental competition can hurt children. 

Another temptation when parents are unsure of themselves is to act like a friend rather than a parent. If your children are older, you may be tempted to take them into your confidence and tell them your troubles. If they are younger, you might substitute play for other parental functions. Your children need you to be a parent now. It is reassuring to them. Do not lower your expectations of them. Be gentle, give them slack as you judge that they need it, but do not change your style wholesale. If you were the “nice’ parent, the lax disciplinarian prior to the divorce, you may have to work harder at balancing out your normative style with the discipline that children need at both houses in which they spend time.

Excerpted from Your Divorce Advisor: A Lawyer and a Psychologist Guide You Through the Legal and Emotional Landscape of Divorce (Simon & Schuster/Fireside 2001). For more information: http://www.yourdivorceadvisor.com/.

For more information contact Peace Talks www.peace-talks.com 

(C) 2008  Peace Talks Mediation Services, Inc.

 

  • Share/Bookmark

How Can I Best Help My Children During the Early Stage of Divorce?

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Your children have developmental tasks they must master relative to the divorce, just as they do relative to other challenges they will face in their lifetime. They need to be accepting of the divorce without becoming drawn into it, deal with feelings of loss and blame (self and parental), and learn to look to the future again with optimism. There are many ways you can make this period easier for your children. Follow as many of these suggestions as you can. Do not worry if you cannot meet all of them, but to the greater extent you can respond in these ways, the better.

Be Predictable

Continue your usual lifestyle and routine as much as possible, including activities, chores, and visiting family and friends.  Continuity and predictability is one way you can reduce the disruption in your children’s lives.  Maintain rules and traditions. Have dinner at the same time on a regular basis, have the same expectations for homework as you did before the separation, and most important, maintain discipline!  When change is necessary,  inform your children of plans and changes that may affect them.  Get their input about what they need in the schedule. If either parent wishes to change a plan that involves contact with the children, tell the children well in advance and attempt to find an acceptable alternative, if need be.  Try not to be late for occasions that involve the children, for instance, picking them up after school, or after an outing.  If you are paying child support, pay consistently and on time. Your children need to be able to rely on you.

Remain Involved. If Not Involved, Get Involved

Some children feel that the parent who is no longer in the family home has rejected them.  In order to reassure your children that you are still a part of their lives, remain involved. This means with homework and their friends, not just time alone with them.  If you were the parent who is leaving the home, you must check in with the parent remaining at home regarding the children’s sporting activities, school concerts, and weekend activities.  Ask your children about these activities, show your interest.  Telephone your children when you have not seen them for a day or two,  just to say “hi”.  If your children are not great conversationalists on the telephone, don’t worry about that. Your children know that you are there, you are available, and that you are concerned.  They will remember that you showed interest. Click here for  a terrific article on helping children with divorce.    

You may feel empty and distressed each time you see your children; assume that they will have the same feelings.  It is not uncommon for parents in this situation to consider ceasing contact with their children because the transitions are so painful.  If a parent disappears after separation, the child’s worst fears are reinforced.  You have abandoned them; now they believe they are not lovable. It is crucial that you maintain contact with them, no matter how painful it may be for you.

For most people, it does get easier over time. For more terrific information, click here.   

Excerpted from Your Divorce Advisor: A Lawyer and a Psychologist Guide You Through the Legal and Emotional Landscape of Divorce (Simon & Schuster/Fireside 2001). For more information: http://www.yourdivorceadvisor.com/.

For more information contact Peace Talks www.peace-talks.com 

(C) 2008  Peace Talks Mediation Services, Inc.

  • Share/Bookmark

Bad Behavior has blocked 181 access attempts in the last 7 days.