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Some Possible Reactions to Divorce in Children
Children react in many different ways to the news of divorce. Some
go on to look perfectly normal and don't experience any overt signs
of difficulty until dating age.
The best children learn from divorce tends to be that no one loves
anyone enough to stay.
Thus, at dating age and on into young adulthood, children of divorce
often become commitment phobic. They also fear conflict because for
them it means someone may leave.
This article speaks to the 50% of children who do become symptomatic
as the divorce occurs.
Children often don't know how to describe their feelings or what to
do with them. Thus, they are more prone to acting them out.
Anger is a common reaction to divorce in children. The anger may
evolve from several issues. They may be angry at one parent for
"letting" another parent leave--or forcing them out. They may show
anger because they feel guilty aboaut the separation.Sometimes the
anger shows up when there is diminished time for the child as things
change.
The anger may show up in a drop in school grades, acting out at
school or at home or withdrawl from adults.
Children may feel guilt because they feel responsible for all that
has happened. They may think they are bad and that is why a parent
left. The guilt may come out as fear or anxiety.
There is also grief. The grief needs to be openly expressed and if
parents express their sadness, children will feel more permission to
do so. Normalize the feelings.
There may also exist a rejection of reality. They may deny the whole
event. This is usually outgrown.
Children may get resentful that one parent is gone or that their
family is different from that of their friends.
It is possible that children may demonstrate fear of the future.
Especially if the parent with whom they live is depressed, they may
worry about what will happen to them.
They may worry that the care-taking parent will leave as well or
fear that the leaving parent will reject them. They may be afraid
to ask questions. Whining and unusal behaviors are some signs of
anxiety and fear.
Children my well feel loss in the separation. Insecurity is common
as as the family dissolves so it is very important to make as few
changes as possible especially in the beginning.
Lonliness is common for both parents and children. Parents take
heed here. It is critical to keep yourself together for the sake of
the children.
I recommend therapy with a good licensed relationship therapist when
people go through a divorce. Parents need the support so that they
can parent their children effectively. If parents look like they
are falling apart, the children fear there is no one to take care of
them.
This is where we may see kids who get into some kind of problem or
trouble and don't tell the parent(s) because they fear that their
parents couldn't handle it.
In addition to needing support to parent, anyone going through a
divorce, is well-served to find out what went wrong and to fix
his/her part in it so that the same mistakes are not repeated.
Lonliness is common in divorce for both parents and children. There
is loss and with the loss is the need to have loved ones close by.
Children may act out lonliness with attention-getting
behaviors--that is, negative attention is better than none.
It is often easier (but not practical) to ignore children until
there is a problem.
Other behaviors that may show up include sleep refusal, poor sleep,
fear of food, pleasure, or play. Another is doing poorly in school,
fighting, whining, crying, unusually noisy or quiet behavior,
regressions such as bedwetting and all these may occur at home or at
school or both.
Through all the difficulty, it is important for parents to maintain
a running dialogue with the children about what is happening and
what to expect.
I have always believed that families could get through anything if
they would talk about it;
talk about how they see things and ask kids to talk about their
perspective as well.
Maintain routines as closely to normal as possible. Children read
parents well. If you try to make up to the children for the guilt
you feel this gives a message that you are not really in charge of
things and this makes the children feel insecure.
Don't talk about your own anxieties in front of the children. Don't
give them false hope of a reconciliation. Take time for yourself.
It will make you a better caretaker. Do your best to help the
children have a sense of continuity with both parents.
This means, also, helping the parent who is not there to see the
children with ease by not having to worry about your reactions as
the kids are transitioned back and forth. Stay pleasant and keep
any conversations child-focused.
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