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Feelings Related To Divorce
You may be facing divorce despite your desire to stay married. You
may be facing divorce because you see it as the only alternative.
No matter, the case, divorce in many ways is like a death. It is
the death of your hopes and dreams for the marriage. It is a loss
for everyone involved and is accompanied by a multitude of feelings
that change often--for you and for the children. You can get
through this, especially if you can appreciate that what you are
feeling is normal. Hopefully, becoming more comfortable with your
many feelings will help you to act as sensibly as possible.
Adult Feelings
Adults experience a variety of feelings during separation and
divorce that continue throughout the process and for some time
afterwards.In the initial crisis, people may experience intense
feelings of denial, rage, anger, and blame. The transitional stage
may bring feelings of frustration, hostility, bitterness and
resentment. As things settle and the divorce finalizes, people may
feel jealousy, doublet, loneliness, failure, and finally acceptance
of the process. Some feelings may reoccur throughout the process.
many adults desire to keep reliving the situation in an attempt to
discover what happened.
Handling This Difficult Time
I recommend that people find a good relationship therapist to help
them discover what did go wrong and how not to repeat the same
mistakes.
Parents with children need help to parent at this time and a good
therapist can aid this as well as identifying supportive family
members to take the burden off parents until such parents can regain
their feet.
It is very important for parents of children to take care of
themselves at this time. If you are okay, your children will do
better than if you are falling apart. Take time for yourself, be
with friends, and be aware that your patience may be stretched thin.
As much as you might feel justified, please do not criticize the
absent parent. This makes children feel worse and increases divided
loyalties--that sense that children can only love the parent who
cares for them and that to love someone with whom the parent they
live with is angry, is a betrayal to that parent.
Children's Feelings
Children are most apt to feel abandoned and confused. Your child
may feel loss of family, loss of the absent parent, loss of status,
money, and security. You may feel these things as well.
Your child may feel that he has no control over the future and what
happens to him. You, however, know that you have control over what
ultimately happens and that you will never leave him. Reassure him.
Your child may be angry with you. He may blame you for the
divorce. He may act negatively--with anger at you-- by regression
IE. bed wetting.. His grades may fall. He may fight with other
children.
I tell my clients that there are only two things to do with
feeling. We can talk about feelings or we can act them out.
What To Do
Talk to your child/children about the facts of the divorce. Keep
them informed about what is coming.
Help your children to be aware that feelings may be the same for you
and them or different.
Talk to children about appropriate ways to show anger--by running,
hitting a punching bag, talking about our feelings, get some sponges
they can throw.
Watch how you show anger. You may be short-fused at this time.
Watch yourself to keep from taking frustrations out on the kids.
This is a time when you may punish your child unreasonably. You may
yield to wished indiscriminately because you feel indifferent or
guilty..
Sometimes you may resent the child's presence. This is especially
true for custodial parents. It may go back as far as the fact that
the pregnancy was not planned or was planned in hopes of
strengthening the marriage.
There may be annoyance at the absent parent for favors given to the
child and this may be held against the child when he returns home.
Whatever the case, all of these feelings are normal for adults and
children. The more you can discuss what everyone is going through,
the less negative behavior may occur.
Did You Know? Your child's behavior is a demonstration of how he is
feeling--help him put it into words.--It may also be a demonstration
of how he thinks that YOU are feeling. Help him put what he senses
into words as well.
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