Divorce: Helping Children Cope
More than one million children are affected by divorce each year.
Your primary goal should be to minimize the emotional harm to
these children. The main way to achieve this is to help the
children maintain a close and secure relationship with both
parents.
Tell your child about the separation or divorce before the actual
departure of one parent. Preferably, both parents and all children
should be present.
The following recommendations may be useful in helping your
children cope.
- Reassure your children that both parents love them.
Make it clear that, although you are unhappy with each other
and disagree about many things, the one subject you both
completely agree on is how much you love your children.
Demonstrate this love by spending time with your children.
Preschoolers especially need lots of cuddling from both
parents, but don't start bad habits like letting your child
sleep with you.
- Keep constant as many aspects of your child's world as you
can.
The fewer the changes, the better your child will cope with
the crisis of divorce. Try to keep your child in the same home
or neighborhood. If this is impossible, at least try to keep
your child in the same school with the same teachers, friends,
and teams, even if only temporarily. Reassure your child that
although your standard of living will decrease somewhat, you
will continue to have the basic necessities of living (that
is, food, clothing, and shelter).
- Reassure your child that the noncustodial parent will visit.
Your child needs both parents. Young children are confused by
divorce and fear that one parent may abandon them. Children
need to know that they will have ongoing contact with both
their father and their mother.
Have a scheduled, predictable time for visiting. The custodial
parent should strongly support the visiting schedule. One full
day every 1 or 2 weeks is usually preferable to more frequent,
brief (and rushed) visits. Try not to do too much in one day.
If there is more than one child, all should spend equal time
or the same time with the noncustodial parent to prevent
feelings of favoritism. Your child will eagerly look forward
to the visits, so the visiting parent must keep promises, be
punctual, and remember birthdays and other special events.
Both parents should work to make these visits pleasant. Allow
your child to tell you he had a good time during the visit
with your ex-spouse.
Provide your children with the telephone number of the
noncustodial parent and encourage them to call at regular
intervals. If the noncustodial parent has moved to a distant
city, telephone calls and letters become essential to the
ongoing relationship.
- If the noncustodial parent becomes uninvolved, find
substitutes.
Ask relatives or Big Brother or Big Sister volunteers to spend
more time with your son or daughter. Explain to your child,
"Your dad (or mom) is not capable right now of being available
for you. He (she) is sorting out his (her) own problems.
There's not much we can do to change that." Help your child
talk about disappointment and the sense of loss. If your child
is a teenager, writing and calling the absent parent may
eventually reengage him or her.
- Help your child talk about painful feelings.
At the time of separation and divorce, many children become
anxious, depressed, and angry. They are frequently on the
brink of tears, sleep poorly, have stomachaches, or don't do
as well in school. To help your children get over these
painful feelings, encourage them to talk about them and
respond with understanding and support. A divorce discussion
group at school can help children feel less isolated and
ashamed.
Your child needs ample time to grieve the loss of you and your
spouse as a parental unit. Allow feelings to be expressed
openly and answer your child's questions honestly. When anger
turns into disruptive behavior, limits must be imposed while
you help your child express the anger.
- Make sure that your children understand that they are not
responsible for the divorce.
Children often feel guilty, believing that they somehow caused
the divorce. Your children need reassurance that they did not
in any way cause the divorce.
- Clarify that the divorce is final.
Some children hold on to the hope that they can somehow
reunite the parents, and they pretend that the separation is
temporary. Making it clear to children that the divorce is
final can help them mourn their loss and move on to a more
realistic adjustment to the divorce.
- Try to protect your child's positive feelings about both
parents.
Try to mention the good points about the other parent. Don't
be overly honest about negative feelings you have toward your
ex-spouse. (You need to unload these feelings with another
adult, not your children). Devaluing or discrediting the other
parent in your child's presence can reduce your child's
personal self-esteem and create greater stress.
Don't ask your child to take sides. A child does not need to
have a single loyalty to one parent. Your child should be able
to love both of you, even though you don't love each other.
- Maintain normal discipline in both households.
Children need consistent child-rearing practices.
Overindulgence or too much leniency by either parent can make
it more difficult for the other parent to get the child to
behave. Constant competition for a child's love through
special privileges or gifts leads to a spoiled child.
Reasonable ground rules regarding discipline should be
enforced by both parents.
- Don't argue with your ex-spouse about your child in the
child's presence.
Children are quite upset by seeing their parents fight. Most
important, avoid any arguments regarding visiting, custody, or
child support in your child's presence.
- Try to avoid custody disputes.
Your child badly needs a sense of stability. Challenge custody
only if the custodial parent is causing obvious harm or
repeated distress to your child. False accusations of physical
or sexual abuse cause great emotional anguish for the child.
If possible, don't split siblings unless they are adolescents
and state a clear preference for living in different settings.
- Books can provide reassurance and support.
Your child can read about other children of divorce who feel
sad and scared but yet ultimately emerge stronger. (See the
reading list under "Recommended Reading.")
Call Your Child's Healthcare Provider During Office Hours If:
- Your child has symptoms that interfere with schoolwork,
eating, or sleeping for more than 2 weeks.
- You feel your child is depressed.
- Your child has any physical symptoms, due to the divorce, that
last for more than 6 months.
- Your child continues to believe that the parents will come
back together again, even though over a year has passed since
the divorce.
- You feel the other parent is harming your child.
- Your child refuses visits with the noncustodial parent.
Written by B.D. Schmitt, MD, author of "Your Child's Health," Bantam Books.
Published by
RelayHealth.
Last modified: 2006-03-01
Last reviewed: 2008-06-09
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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