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Photo: Jonathan Pendleton
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A how-to guide for separated parents

Thomas Meyer
1-2-2022
Translation: Veronica Bielawski

A separation is always a tribulation. With children in the mix, it’s even more challenging, because the relationship doesn’t end. Instead, it takes on a new form. Here are some tips to help you deal with the psychological challenge in a constructive way.

Childless couples who break up are in luck, all things considered: they can leave and choose to never interact again. Parents, on the other hand, don’t have this luxury. They remain intertwined through their children. And for the children’s sake, they must remain civil in their interactions. Easier said than done. After all, the breakdown in communication likely goes way back, and you’re likely dying for some peace and quiet after the separation.

Which pitfalls should you avoid in this situation? How can you avoid them? And what can you do if you find yourself caught in one? Here are my eight tips – based on ten years of experience as a separated father.

1. Recognise when enough is enough

But is avoiding what may well be a difficult – but ultimately brief – period of upheaval really worth it? After all, the alternative is emotionally crushing yourself and your children for years to come through an atmosphere of perpetual dishonesty, stress and frustration

You know when enough is enough. And as shitty as a break-up can be, it’s way shittier to live a life of anguish because you’re determined to endure something that, frankly, no longer works.

2. Understand what a separation really is

It’s very important that you see your separation for what it really is. It’s not something you’re doing to your partner, and it’s not something being done to you; it’s a necessary stepping stone that will lead you both to a better place.

3. Embrace the paradox

There are two sides to separated parents: first, they’re people who have just gone through a break-up and are carrying feelings of hurt, grief, and anger. Second, they’re parents and have to keep the daily routine going. The two seem impossible to unite: how are you supposed to deal with someone you’d preferably deport to Pluto? And how are you supposed to deal with all the accompanying emotions in addition to caring for your child?

Embrace this paradox. It’s not your enemy; it’s part of your new life as a separated parent, and it holds a whole set of valuable lessons for you:

Of course, you can also reject these lessons and sink into resentment and self-pity instead. You can demonise your ex-partner, declare them the culprit for everything that goes wrong in your life and sulk away the rest of your days. The number of people who do just that is not insignificant. However, this decision – and it is a decision – will cause you, your ex-partner, your children and any new partners to suffer. So, try to resist the lure of your wounded pride.

4. Tame your thoughts

The emotions that arise from a break-up are fierce, leaving even a physical mark. It’s only normal for your mind to fight them with all its might and get lost in a string of ifs, buts and whys. But – it won’t do you any good to dissect and lament your new life situation. It won’t undo the break-up, and your mind’s protest is really an attempt to keep difficult feelings at bay.

What feels bad about a break-up is not the break-up itself – it just makes you sad. What actually feels terrible is the mental resistance we exert to avoid feeling this sadness. So, as soon as you notice that your mind is only thinking about the break-up and all the ways it could have been avoided, tell yourself, «Stop!» – out loud, and as many times as it takes to feel better. Or to feel at all.

5. Celebrate your emotions

There’s a fitting idiom that comes to mind: «to bottle up your emotions». It’s how we typically deal with unpleasant feelings. Namely, we don’t. We like to think of ourselves as being «above that» and just want to «get over it». We pretend that everything is dandy and under control. But after a separation, nothing is under control.

6. Communicate constructively only

Accusations are nothing more than badly communicated needs. This method didn’t work during the relationship, and it doesn’t work afterwards either. There’s nothing to discuss now that concerns you as a couple, because you’re no longer a couple. If there’s anything you’re desperate to get off your chest, write a letter to your ex, sleep on it, and only then decide if you want to send it.

One of the biggest pitfalls of co-parenting is continuing the previous dynamic, but at two different addresses. To avoid this, talk only about your children and their care. Be sure to find an appropriate channel where you can regularly vent your emotions (forest, car, shooting gallery, therapist).

7. Each child has four parents

In psychology, there’s the concept of an emotional bridge between the parents, on which the child walks. It doesn’t matter whether the parents are a couple or separated – what’s important is how they contribute to the stability of this bridge. You can also look at it this way: each child has four parents – mother, father, the father’s image of the mother, and the mother’s image of the father. And the child needs to feel safe with each of these parents.

You strengthen the emotional bridge by trust, appreciation, tolerance and willingness to cooperate. You weaken it by devaluation, mistrust, aggression and sabotage. In other words: you can find your ex-partner’s behaviour as dumb as you want, but spare your children from these thoughts at all costs. If you don’t, you’ll cause your child confusion and distress, and, in the worst case, conjure up a tangled web of loyalties in which everyone loses.

Always have the welfare of your children in mind, not the welfare of your ego. Ask yourself this: if I was the child in this situation, what would help me most? And what wouldn’t help me at all?

8. In a nutshell

Header image: Photo: Jonathan Pendleton

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Author Thomas Meyer was born in Zurich in 1974. He worked as a copywriter before publishing his first novel «The Awakening of Motti Wolkenbruch» in 2012. He's a father of one, which gives him a great excuse to buy Lego. More about Thomas: www.thomasmeyer.ch.


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