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| All About
Divorce |
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The
Voice of Experience:
DIVORCE: 10 THINGS I LEARNED AFTER THE FACT
For anyone who hasn't been
divorced, trust me÷ divorce is never what you imagine it to
be. Here are a few insights that may hopefully save you a
trip to court÷ or at the very least, give you some idea of
what may lie ahead. I know everything listed here might not
apply to everybody (there's always going to be the exception
to the rule) but it covers most of us. ÷Vicki

1. It Takes Longer To Get Your Divorce Behind Than You
Think. Or Can Allow Yourself To Believe.

I thought I had it together after a year. Then I thought I
had it together after 3 years. Then I was impressed when I
could say I had been divorced 5 years. Then I was devastated
that I could be brought to tears in seconds after 8 years
when something inappropriate÷ I thought÷ was said to me. I
guess it's always "there" but fortunately with each passing
year it feels longer ago, less important and more comfortable
but unlike your child's owies, it's never quite all gone.
As that old saying goes, marriage may not be forever, but
divorce is.

2. Going Through Divorce Is A Physical Experience.

This one took me by surprise. My body seemed to experience
a death defying whirlpool. I hate speed, roller coasters and
the feeling of one's stomach dropping when on a turbulent
airplane ride. But I can remember having all those feelings÷
simultaneously÷ while just sitting in a chair after we separated.
Yuck! Fortunately this usually passes in 3 to 9 months. Shorter
than than #1 but not short enough!

3. It Never Works Out According To Plan ÷ Yours, That Is!

And even when it does, it's only for a short time. Life after
divorce is always changing and you won't have a lot of control
over those changes. We often get hopelessly caught up in parenting
plans when we first separate, and÷ while that is important÷
it doesn't usually prepare you for the on-going changes and
negotiations that go on for years÷ changes that you don't
always like but learn to live with. There is the on going
trade-off of which battles will catch your children in the
middle and when one must learn to lose a battle to win the
war÷ or should I say the peace÷ the peace of mind your children
need. Life takes twists and turns that will never be in the
"plan" so you must learn to go with the flow or be hopelessly
mired in your own anger or disappointments.

4. Parental Time (aka custody) And Shared Financial Responsibility
(aka child support) Are NOT Tied Together

Though they might be tied together in the eyes of your mother
or your mother-in-law, these are two separate issues. When
you confuse them or make them cause-and-effect items, you
do a squeeze on your kids. It seems like such a natural ("if
he doesn't pay support on time, well then the kids just won't
be ready on time or at all" or "I'll be damned if I'm going
to send a check this month if she and her honey are going
on a ski trip: a) with the kids (that's not what I'm sending
support for and I'll not see them this weekend like I was
supposed to) or b) without the kids (she's away and I have
all these extra food bills this week with the kids here) but
this is not a life situation where each month comes to an
EVEN tally. EVEN it never is. Equitable is the best you can
hope for. Marriage isn't EVEN so divorce sure ain't gonna
be.

5. You Never Outgrow Your Wish To Be The Favored Parent

Remember when your kids asked you who you loved best, you
knew what a silly (but honest) question it was because everyone
likes being first in the hearts of those they love. Unfortunately
in a divorce, when parents aren't together to hear news in
a shared situation, your child will tell one before the other.
It doesn't mean you're the less favored, secondary or unfavorite
parent but it sure does feels like it. So you have to learn
to forgive yourself when those competitive feelings crop up
from the dark depths of your soul and learn to laugh at them.
Remember you're not alone.

6. Divorce Doesn't "Fix" Your Ex

If your former spouse was cheap, never on time and thoughtless
before the divorce, he or she will continue to be tight, late
and say stupid things in the divorce. The things that you
tolerated in marriage under the perfume of love will infuriate
you in divorce. You thought you were done with putting up
with "_____" (fill in the blank) but it continues just like
it was in your marriage. You have to learn to accept, overlook
and forgive or else you are going to expend a lot of wasted
emotions on someone you're not even married to. You can only
be angry or hate someone you care about. (Ain't that a bummer!)
Also, your lawyer can't make your ex-spouse be a sensitive
person or parent so don't waste unnecessary dollars trying
to have your lawyer get "through" to him or her. When you
can begin to replace the word "wrong"(as pertains to parenting
skills, money values, personal habits, etc, etc, etc) with
the word "different" you'll have come a long way towards acceptance.

7. Divorce, Unlike Marriage, Is FOREVER When There Are
Kids

Unless you really wish to lose your position as a parent (which
is THE hardest on kids), you will have family occasions, graduations,
shared holidays, christenings, weddings and funerals that
will continually bring you together over the years. Those
knots in your stomach at shared public events÷ especially
in the beginning÷ are known only to others who have been through
divorce. No one else has a clue. Approaching your ex first
with a friendly word at such events puts everyone else at
ease and is a worthwhile practice. And with practice÷ and
some history÷ you may find those stomach knots actually loosening.
Mortal enemies have been known to actually become friends÷
sometimes good friends÷ and many find they can be kind of
comfortable "cousins."

8. If You Don't Hate Your Exiting Spouse When You First
Separate, You Will Within 3 Months to 3 Years

It's next to impossible to skip this one though it always
seems to come as a surprise. Why, I'm not sure. Now you both
have different agendas and no way will your priorities (usually
money concerns or kid issues) be the same as your ex's. It's
okay ÷ and sometimes even important ÷ to be angry with your
ex (for a certain amount of time÷ not forever) but it's not
okay to share or show that anger with your children or in
front of your children. Not easy, but for their mental health,
their need for a safe haven and their need to love both parents,
you've got to keep these volatile feelings to yourself...or
limit them to your therapist or support group.

9. The Day Your Ex Remarries Is REALLY PAINFUL.

The only thing worst than hearing your ex is remarrying from
a third party is actually hearing the news from your ex. Obviously
a no-win situation. No matter how glad you are that your ex
is your ex, you'd never take him/her back and you're thankful
you're divorced, it's still a painful time. It's that last
nail in the coffin of what was once your marriage÷ and your
hopes and your dreams. If you know anyone whose ex is getting
remarried, don't let them spend that day alone. And if you
know your ex is getting remarried, don't spend it by yourself÷
unless you really enjoy digging a dark hole and crawling into
it. (Obviously the kids will be attending the wedding and
unsure of how to be of comfort to or deal with the other parent.)

10. After All This, Know That There Is Still Such a Thing
As A GOOD DIVORCE

Yes, you read that line correctly. Now this is not to be confused
with divorce is good, but there are ways of turning this lemon
into lemonade. Read up on how to do it. There are lots of
/books to help you÷ even I've written one. Making peace with
life's changes is good for you, for your kids and for your
life. Divorce is not the path to be recommended easily, but
it's not a terminal illness or a contagious disease either.
I did not come up with the term "good divorce."
I'll credit that to Constance Ahrons, author of the book,
The Good Divorce. "A good divorce," she says,
"is not an oxymoron. Astonishingly, in my studies, I found
half the divorcing couples we interviewed had civilized÷ and
many amicable÷ relations with each other. Another surprise
was that almost everybody wished to be on better terms with
his or her ex÷ even the ones who had bad relationships. I'm
tired of the doomsday reports and the label of the `broken
home.' We have been so inundated with negative stories of
divorce that men and women need to hear the message that they
can make their families work better, minimize stress and not
feel like total failures. In a good divorce, a family with
children remains a family÷ one that is sufficiently cooperative
to permit kinship bonds to continue. Perhaps if we begin to
revise our expectations of what divorce means, all parents
who divorce can do so with civility and respect."
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