Deal With Step Children During Divorce

July 2, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Children, Divorce, Divorce Tips

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Stepchildren
very often are overlooked during a divorce. This can be very damaging
to them. If you have a strong bond to these children, the pain of
separation will be no less than if they were your own children.


Steps

  1. Treat them no differently than your own. They may need more love than your biological child since this is their second divorce.
  2. If you are trying to protect your children from an abusive spouse, also protect your step children identically.
  3. Understand that it’s difficult not to be angry during divorce, but you have to succeed for the sake of your children.


Related Tips and Steps

Deal With Children in a Divorce Situation

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Dealing with children in divorce means thinking like a child while acting like an adult..


Steps

  1. Try to see your ex through their eyes — as their mother/father.
  2. Remember that you will probably have to deal with your ex for the rest of their dependent lives. Try to make the best of it.
  3. Envision a happy life and healthy future for them.
  4. Think of the benefits of the divorce — such as parents being happier apart and less fighting.
  5. Talk with your ex about continuing toward the original goals you shared in having children.
  6. Broach the divorce to the children together, if your ex is willing.
  7. Encourage them to tell you how they feel about it.
  8. Do not take their anger personally.
  9. Try to maintain discipline using the same rules and structure
    as prior to the divorce, unless those rules and structures were a cause
    for the divorce.
  10. Spoil them with attention, not things.


Tips

  • Accept your ex’s limitations.
  • Expect bad behavior from your children.
  • Remember to tell your children that you love them and always will, even when you’re angry.
  • Scientific studies show that the #1 cause of maladjusted kids
    is conflict between the parents. Even if your marital/romantic
    relationship has ended, you need to be partners in parenting for the
    sake of the children both of you love.
  • try to tell your children the truth, they will find it out
    eventually and resent you for any lies no matter how well intentioned
    they were.
  • Put as much effort into your relationship with your ex as you would if you were together. be good exes, it can work with work.
  • remember when you embark on divorce that you will have to deal
    with your kids relationship to any other person you have a relationship
    with. It is not easy, it takes a special person to deal step children.
    you, as a woman, will probably be alone until your kids leave home.Then
    you will be an older woman and all that stuff is much harder.
    Meanwhiles,your ex will not have that problem and he will settle down
    and have more kids. If you think that you can handle this and still be
    friends with him go for it. If not patch up that relationship cos, if
    you can both work on it, it might just make life nicer.
  • put serious work into making your relationship with your ex
    work. your kids feelings are more imortant than your silly point
    scoring. Share present giving so there is no competition.give 50/ 50
    money to Christmas and birthdays despite anything. do not give your
    child anything to resent you for. they will find plenty when they are
    teenagers no matter what you do.


Warnings

  • Don’t badmouth your ex in front of your children
  • If you do badmouth your ex, apologize to them
  • Don’t use your children to get back at your ex; your children
    love both of you the same, using them against your ex, is like having
    them choose which parent they love the most.
  • Most of the time, in divorce situations, somehow the children
    are overlooked, almost forgotten. The adults are so wrapped up in who
    gets what, that they don’t realize how bad they are hurting their
    child(ren). Be sure to explain to your child, that they are still loved
    by both of you, and don’t fight or argue in front of them. Be an adult
    in this situation, and be strong for your child.

Divorce Your Abusive Husband

June 28, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Divorce, Divorce and Separation Tips

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The
mental part of abuse is insidious. If your husband is abusive, you
don’t have to have his permission to get divorced. What you have to do
is learn to separate his put-downs and control from reality, be very
careful of your own physical and mental safety, and be prepared to give
up some security.


Steps

  1. BELIEVE that you have choices.
  2. Think about where you want to go and what you want to do.
    Have a plan. It’s not wrong to have dreams and believe you’re worth
    having a good life. Break it down into manageable steps: the short term
    (getting away safely) and the longer term (getting a decent job,
    whatever…).
  3. Find a shelter or women’s center with people who can counsel
    you discreetly. Some places will help you even if you have children,
    but most will at least be conduits to other agencies who can help. They
    may be able to put you onto Legal Aid sources who can get you a lawyer.
    They will know about job training programs if you need one. They may be
    able to help with childcare or a transitional residence where you’ll be
    away and safe.
  4. Prepare without telling your husband or anyone who might
    tell him. Be smart enough to not even give him subtle clues. Don’t
    circle the shelter’s phone number and leave it by the phone! If you
    look up a place online, be sure to delete it from your History file
    before you log off.
  5. Get counseling. The shelter/women’s centers will have leads
    on that too. When you’re abused, your self-esteem is so wrecked that
    your reasoning is flawed. You need to listen to someone who knows about
    such things and be prepared to take their advice. Sure, even those
    people make mistakes sometimes, but you must learn to put your own
    welfare #1 on the list and that means letting go of what the abuser has
    “sold” you to keep you under his thumb. Don’t let him take over your
    life.
  6. Remember that this is YOUR life that is at stake. If he’s
    physically abusive, it’s well established that the levels of violence
    will escalate. Sure, he promises it will never happen again, and you
    have a nice time for a bit, but the cycles ALWAYS repeat themselves.
    After a beating you might end up permanently scarred or brain-damaged
    or maimed or even dead. What use will his promises be then?


Tips

  • Tell a friend about the abuse and have a code so they know when to call the police.
  • If you have family you trust to help, enlist their aid too.
    You may be ashamed of your choices and reluctant to ask for help, but
    ask anyhow. If they can’t or won’t help, don’t let that stop you.
  • Make sure you have a list of important numbers in your
    wallet, or store important information on a Yahoo! (or similar) account
    where you can reach it anywhere. Assume you won’t be able to go back
    home to pick up anything once you make the break.
  • Have a friend or family member (outside of the home) keep a
    calender to record what happens. Show them if you have bruises and
    don’t hide it. This is what really tells the jury what is happening.
  • Be realistic. Take responsibility. Don’t be a victim. Believe
    in yourself: seek out professional counseling with a psychologist, you
    can learn new ways to live and recover. Give yourself time.
  • It will go easier if you leave with a plan, a place to go
    already lined up, etc. BUT if you feel as if you’re in danger, don’t
    hesitate, RUN!


Warnings

  • Even if you believe that your abuser loves you, and you love
    him, the only solution is to remove yourself from the situation. You do
    not “fix” abusers.
  • Call the police if you’re physically abused. First, you need
    to establish a record of the abuse. The authorities also know where you
    can go to get away. NEVER put up with violence. It always escalates and
    women do die.
  • Your life won’t be perfect after you get away. In the USA we
    do not take care of our own particularly well. Social programs struggle
    to stay afloat. You may not be able to live financially the way you
    used to. But you will LIVE.


Related Tips and Steps

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