Take a look at what is in your power.
Whether you are proactive in calling children, picking them up or dropping them off, there is power in doing that and the best thing to do is keep it up! You may not like/love the other parent anymore, but you love your children don’t you? So do what you can to make life easier for them. You already impacted them in so many other ways that hasn’t been so positive.
Whether you like the truth or not, you and the other parent disempowered the children when you both started warring with one another. Their voices weren’t hard through the yelling, silent treatment and any other war you had with the other parent. You both were determined to end the relationship, so now what you do going forward is in the best interest of the children not you or the other parent! Hopefully, as the children mature they will heal emotionally and physically. So it is in your power to connect with the parent to get your needs met whether personally or through a third party. It is in your power to raise the children not to hate the other parent. It is in your power not to badmouth the other parent to children. State facts not opinion, when necessary.
Use the tools that have been made available to you.
From parental support groups to food and financial assistance, there are many programs that can help you feed and house your children and obtain whatever mental supports you all might need. However, when you are stubborn, bitter or envious of the other parent, your mind is solely focused on what you can get from the other parent or how you might pay he or she back for every offense; rather than spend so much time thinking evilly of the other parent, think: “What can I do for my children and self to make our quality of life better?”
It hurts when an ex-partner makes promises he or she doesn’t keep. Do you focus on what he or she hasn’t done for you lately or do you get out there and do what you can to meet your family’s needs? Let your attorney handle the legal matters while you manage your daily responsibilities whether children are with you full-time or not.
Avoid the belief that a new partner will solve your personal and professional hardships.
Too many divorced men and women are under the false assumption that if and when someone new comes into their lives that everything will be okay. Maybe that might happen for awhile, but then the newness of the relationship wears off. The fantasy of one big, happy family becomes a reality filled with many unhappy family members.
The new partner is burned out with trying to appease someone who has just as much, if not more baggage than he or she. Then again, you might end up being the one carrying the load once more in a new relationship or you find yourself dumping your load on to someone else. Consider this you will find yourself persuading your children into accepting someone new and their offspring when they are still trying to heal from the break up between their mother and father. Some divorced people simply ask too much from broken children.
As much as fighting parents would love to believe that they are doing all things right by their children, the truth is, they are not! Rather they are creating further division when they stubbornly do things like:
1) Refuse to compromise on things like: appointments, what to buy children, or where to take them for entertainment.
2) Refuse to make lifestyle choices that are healthy and honest without selfish motives.
3) Refuse to slow down or stop starting new relationships without considering the current familial challenges or how even the new partner might feel about being brought into an inner circle of conflict.
4) Refuse to listen to children’s concerns and other relatives counsel.
5) Refuse to stop participating in acts of emotion, physical, financial, or even sexual abuse!
6) Refuse to seek help for addictions from shopping to substance abuse.
7) Refuse to stop talking or doing negative things to insult the other parent and possibly children.
Nicholl McGuire is the owner of this blog and the author of When Mothers Cry