Hey I see the threads on divorce, the unfairness of it all, the process, payments etc, and it's very obviously related to a topic - one VERY dear to my heart.
What is written below is my personal experience. It in no way implies anyone in here will experience the same, or inflict same on their kids. My reason for writing is to simply lay cards on the table that can open some eyes to the possible effects of divorce - especially one handled in a less than perfect manner.
Credit where it's due first - I'm 100% certain my parents did the best they knew how. They are both good people, I get on with them both very well to this day...
Children of divorce - the expurgated version.
I was 13, sitting in the lounge one afternoon with my brother and sister and could hear Mum and Dad working through something... voices were not loud... forcibly hushed is how I would describe it.
The door opened and Mum and Dad were standing there, and simply said things had come to an end, and each of us needed to choose if we were going with Mum or staying with Dad. A life changing decision on the back of my world being torn asunder... there and then, on the spot.
So... we chose. My siblings went with Mum, I stayed with Dad. My rationale was a very simple one - Mum was the one that had done something wrong... 'nuff said.
Looking back, I spent the next few months growing rapidly. My father was an emotional puddle. I remember well seeing him cry quietly in his office under the stairs, in the house he'd slaved to earn and own. That house became a bitter monument to his familial failure. He needed someone to care for him - so I did. No option. Looking back I now see I went from being my father's son, to my father's father. The effects of that are still being uncovered, but I can assure you they were widespread and very well hidden. Over the next few years I completed school and got a job, moved in with Mum and my Step-Father to be (who I naturally had a falling out with... what are new Step-Father's for... poor sods...).
Mum spoke ill of my father, saying she shouldn't have married him (causing anxiety for me.. "I might never have been born!"), marry your equal... she didn't and she paid the price etc. Nothing said "your father is a good man". That was a key omission. He was quite naturally my role model... someone I am genetically predisposed to be like... and he's "no good". Not good for the fragile ego of a teen. I could go on, but will resist the urge to complete this book... my point is simple...
If you find yourself in the unfortunate position of separating, please consider the kids... I would personally say above all else although I realise mine will be a heavily biased view. Don't underestimate the medium and long term fallout that will impact the kids. They need answers (I still do), and honest ones. Put the emotion aside and speak to the facts. Consider the future events too. Little things like Christmas. Don't save the big meal "for when the kids are there"... the poor kids have to eat two or three hearty meals and go home feeling truly ill... about to leak from every orifice.
Birthdays the same. 21st birthday is a goody... who puts on the party - what flavour of party (the divorced parents often grow apart and change lifestyles so where there would have been a family style party... there is now going to be a more conservative one, and a less conservative one.) Likewise graduations, weddings of the kids etc. Both parents were there for these very important days for me, and I am eternally grateful to them for it.
THE highlight of my wedding day was to see my father actually talking to my step-father... both smoke - both had been ostracised accordingly... and they simply chose to put things aside, and move on. I quite literally have the photo.
It's those little things that make up the memories of my past.... far beyond the divorce itself, but all heavily flavoured by it.
All I ask is you tread very carefully, and seek advice to see what you could or should do in handling this... for the kids. It will pay dividends bigger than you will ever know. You'll also avoid heartache for those kids... a lot of heartache.
MDU over and under
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