Children and Divorce - Treating the Non-custodial Parent with Respect

By Laura Egbers, published Sep 10, 2007
Published Content: 14  Total Views: 1,419  Favorited By: 3 CPs
Embed:  
Rating: 4.0 of 5
Divorce is a painfully process, now put a child(ren) in the mix and you have more heartache. The custodial parent needs to treat the non-custodial parent as a person. This person is still sharing their lives with their children. Excommunicating them or putting favorism on a child(ren) that do not visit the other parent is in short, wrong.

Your child(ren) have had their lives turned upside down. Why would a parent further the distress by making the other parent not available. You have to be an adult. You made an adult decision to not be married and/or with this other person, this does not mean that your child(ren) have joined you or rejoice in your choice.

The non-custodial parent should be treated with the same respect that is given in the household the child lives in. The child needs to know that both parents are still there and available for them when needed. Emotionally, the child will need both parents now, more than ever. They need to know that just because they are not in the same household, that this parent still loves and cares for them.

Too often child support or outside relationships come into play. This only furthers the confusion on who and where the child(ren) fit in. A divorce is not about the child(ren). It is about two adults that are not compatible for one another. Denying the child(ren) of their parent is devastating. You made the choice not to live with this person, they did not.

Keeping open communications and general respect for another's person is important for a child(ren) to recover from the feelings of abandonment. Sometimes as the custodial parent you need to encourage communication between the child(ren) and the ex-spouse. Encouraging them to call after a good day at school. Perhaps calling about a test grade. The child(ren) should not be made to feel "bad" if they want to contact their a parent. You as the custodial parent, also need to keep the other party up to date on events concerning the child(ren).

Takeaways
  • children and divorce
  • keeping your children in communication with non-custodial parents
Comments
Showing Comment 1 of 1
 
 
wonderful article!!

Posted on 11/30/2007 at 5:11:00 PM

Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Your name:

Submit your own content on this or any topic. Get started »
Showing Comment 1 of 1
 
Most Commented On