Okay, you're divorced. Your hands are always full. You never have enough time to get all the day's tasks completed and your kids could win contests for the most questions asked in a day. Sometimes there are argument at the dinner table and homework is a constant. You probably feel overwhelmed quite often and just want to resign from being a divorced parent.
Children don't understand overwhelm. They don't understand not having enough money. They don't understand that you need advanced notice to make a trip to buy their school project supplies. They don't understand that bunches of kids yelling and laughing can get on your nerves. They don't understand their arguing can drive you nuts. They don't see the full picture.
But you do. You'll need to look a long way out to see the complete picture, because it's keeping that picture active in your mind that allows you to summon up the courage you must have to implement your Great Parenting Plan to best serve your kids. You have made a plan, haven't you? You're not just winging it, are you?
The Great Parenting Plan is where you are all dressed up, dabbing the tears from your eyes, watching your child walk down the aisle at his graduation. It could be a high school graduation or a college graduation. That all depends on your plan. You want to take yourself in thought out to that point in the future where your child graduates and begins to move off into his own life, fully self-sufficient and capable. You've got to see the picture of how to get your child to that "dream" place from where each of you is at the present time.
Working backwards from that moment in the plan, but always keeping it in the forefront of your thinking, will help you get through those challenging moments that create overwhelm, those moments when you might not even want to be a mom or dad anymore. There is no quitting option though. Your kids are here and they deserve your best. It's not a burden. It's an opportunity. You can stretch yourself to accomplish this challenge and have great results for your kids for your having stretched.
It takes courage to persevere with the Great Parenting Plan, and it takes thinking problems through thoroughly to unfold that courage. One of the nicest aspects of parenting is that the things you need to do the job are all built in. Yep. You had them when you were born. You've been building them while you lived your own life. Doing a parent's job is like earning a Doctoral degree. D. in strengthening virtues!
What happens is that your kids provide some test for you - they test your patience, or your courage, or your ability to love. And you have the option to say "Yes, I can" or "No, I can't." Sometimes when you really think that "I can't," you still say "I can" and then you do. Have you ever noticed that in life, when you make a commitment, somehow in someway the fulfillment for that commitment seems to just happen.
When I was a young parent, I needed a reliable car. Car wasn't in the budget that month, but we needed that car. I made the commitment. I don't remember ever not making that payment easily. Magically, when you make a commitment, whatever you've committed to actually happens - somehow, someway.
It will happen the same way with bringing up the courage to persevere. If you determine that, by gosh, you will persevere in doing the absolute best job you can to be their mom or dad, the courage that it takes in the moment (that'd be the moment when you're exhausted and they need a ride downtown,) you will bring up the courage to set yourself aside and provide what they need from you.
And you will do it over and over again throughout your divorce. You won't remember these moments when you see them at their graduation ceremony and you will be such a proud divorced mom or dad. You'll forget about all the overwhelm. Oh they'll have told you "Dad, puhle-e-eze don't cry at my graduation" and you'll try. You'll really try. Only you will know of all the times when you set yourself aside to care for them, of all those hundreds of details you handled to be a good parent, and you won't be able to help those escaping tears. They're tears of joy. I know.
Child Custody Parenting Plan
Every good soldier knows not to cross a battlefield without a map of where the land mines are buried. Your battlefield has become, by default, raising your children in the best manner you know how. For the sake of the children, it would be great if you and the spouse you are divorcing could sit down and create this parenting plan together. If that's not possible, then you need to provide some answers to these questions. Deciding ahead of the time when crucial issues must be decided will give you an edge.
About The Children's Feelings
1. You need to decide just how to share with your children that you're getting a divorce. If you don't think quickly on your feet, write it down ahead of time on paper.
2. Make sure they know it was not due to anything they did.
3. Tell them what changes you know have to be made and that you'll make them together. Let them know you'll try to keep as much the same as you can.
4. Decide that you won't say anything to them (like making promises) that you can't follow through on. Their stability leans on your follow through.
5. Decide not to badmouth your ex in front of your child. He still loves him or her and deserves to.
6. Children need both parents. Try to keep moving out of the picture.
About Custody
1. Keep up relationships with in-laws whenever possible. It's part of your kids stability.
2. Decide here and now not to use your child's time with his other parent as a battering ram to punish your ex. It will hurt your child.
3. If your ex doesn't show up when promised, don't make it a big deal in front of your kids, no matter how angry that absence makes you.
4. Decide right now that you will not grill your children when they come home from visiting their other parent about him/her or their new mate.
5. Keep an information sheet with all statistical data about the child and be sure his other parent and his child care giver has a copy.
6. Determine which holidays and school breaks will be spent with which parent.
7. Share information about the child's health, school, etc. with his other parent.
8. When communicating, remember this: your child's greatest good is the most important thing.
9. If the child support cannot be paid on time, it can be collected by the court.
10. Which one of you will be the health care coverage provider?
About Goals For The Children
1. See if you and your ex can establish the same levels of discipline. Be reasonable. Examine what TV shows they can watch; what bedtime needs to be honored; what language is appropriate for example.
2. Determine that homework has to be monitored by both of you, not just the parent the child is living with.
3. Set up a picture of where you'd like the kids' achievements to be in x number of years and both of you keep that goal in mind.
4. Don't permit your child to become alienated from his other parent. He needs both parents.
5. Children thrive when their routines aren't varied. Each parent should try to honor the child's normal routine. Consistency will help keep your child level and achieving normally.
6. Consequences for misbehaviors have to be kept consistent by each parent. Decide what they will be and then follow through.
7. Determine what your standards are for achievement in school and each of you work to support the child to achieve them.
8. If your children have special needs, address how they will be supplied by each of you.
About Your Feelings
1. Don't confide your personal less-than feelings to your child. She/he is not a therapist. She/he cannot solve for you.
2. You will need some alone time. Set this up with your ex. Do whatever it takes to keep yourself sane and level - bubble baths; gardening; a hobby. You'll know.
3. Get a coach, a minister, an older aunt/uncle who can help you through tough situations that occur. You'll benefit from having a support team.
4. You will have to put your children's needs before your own until they are grown. Don't ignore your own needs, however. They must be addressed.
5. If there are disputes over child rearing, seek the help of an arbitrator. Don't feel so all alone.
6. Admit that you were wrong to your children if you were. They so appreciate honesty and they already knew you were wrong. When you're honest with them, their esteem of you will increase and you'll get to enjoy an open relationship.
These ideas are not all inclusive. There's a lot more you can find on the internet to flesh these in. With a parenting plan, you can prevent your kids from the negative effects your divorce might have on them. It can also prevent a second divorce and your children certainly don't need that. I don't want to see that happen to you either.
Len Stauffenger has sinced written about articles on various topics from Bathroom Home Improvement, After Divorce and Health. Len Stauffenger's parents taught him life's simple wisdom. As a divorced dad, he wanted to share that simple wisdom with his girls. "Getting Over It: Wisdom for Divorced Parents," his book, is the solution. Len is an author, a Success Coach and an Attorne. Len Stauffenger's top article generates over 110000 views. to your Favourites.
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