Raising the Kid You Love With the Ex You Hate
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Raising the Kid You Love With the Ex You Hate - Edward Farber
AUTHOR
INTRODUCTION
Colin was seven when his parents divorced. He lived with his mother and she made most of the day-to-day decisions, but Colin’s father was involved in academic, health, and extracurricular activity decision making. Colin frequently spent time with his father on weekends and knew he was a part of his life.
Father remarried and took a position in California. Once a month, Father would come to DC for work and arranged the trips so he could be in Washington over the weekend. The parents’ flexibility allowed him to see Colin weekday evenings when Father was in DC, too. Father always stayed at the same suite-style hotel, and the hotel stored a duffel with some of Colin’s clothes, games, books, toys, and pictures to make the suite feel like home. Father would always tack Colin’s school projects to the walls, arrange his books and an extra Game Boy around his bed, and place photos of Colin’s dog, baseball team, and family vacations in picture frames around the room. Colin had access to a laptop and video games at the hotel.
A few days before Father planned a visit, Mother would email him the title of whatever book Colin was reading, and Father would make sure to get a copy to leave by Colin’s bed in the room. Colin only had to add his weekend sports uniforms to the homework in his backpack on the Thursdays and Fridays his father would pick him up from school. Colin could invite friends on the weekend, and, especially during the winter, the hotel’s small indoor swimming pool and gym were a hit with his buddies. Teacher meetings and routine pediatrician visits were often arranged during the week of visitation so Father could attend, and during that week Father took over transporting Colin to sports practices, religious school classes, and piano lessons.
Even though parental decision making became more and more Mother’s responsibility, Father was involved during his monthly visits. He provided money for Colin’s care, and his input was welcome. Parental conflict was kept to a minimum.
The parents agreed that Colin would fly to California several times a year over long weekends and extended school holidays using Father’s frequent flyer miles, but the difficulty of transportation quickly became apparent. Colin was anxious both about flying by himself, even as an accompanied minor, and about missing sports and friends over the breaks. Although he enjoyed seeing his father and stepmother, he had no friends in California and was often bored. Transcontinental travel also disrupted Colin’s sleep, and Colin would be tired for several days after he came home. Father didn’t have a piano, so Colin couldn’t practice while there, either.
Then one President’s Day weekend, a major storm delayed Colin’s plane. His nonstop flight ended up landing in the Midwest and was then diverted away from LAX to an alternate airport in California. After nearly twenty hours of commuting, Colin had had enough, and his parents agreed that short three- and four-day visits to California would end. Instead, Colin would go to California for part of his Christmas holiday, spring breaks, and a month in the summer. Since Colin still didn’t have friends in California, his summer visits were arranged so that he could attend local summer camps most of the month. His father even bought an electric keyboard, hoping that Colin could use that to practice the piano over the summer.
The few conflicts the parents had were relatively easily resolved, and Colin didn’t display major problems other than some anxieties. He was a somewhat shy, slow-to-warm-up boy, hesitantly adapting to new situations. Father backed off over imposing his feelings about Colin’s development, learned how to give his opinions in a non-forceful manner, and honored his financial obligations. Father didn’t challenge the cost of orthodontist consults or longer piano lessons. Thanks to their extended monthly visits, Father and Colin had a comfortable, solid relationship, and Father actively participated in his son’s growth and development.
When Colin was eleven, his father was promoted to senior management. Along with greater job satisfaction and financial rewards, however, came what others would have seen as a plus, but for Colin’s dad was a major negative: He no longer had to travel monthly to Washington. Instead, he now traveled regularly to company headquarters in Seattle. Financially, Father could afford to fly east to see Colin once a month, but now he didn’t have the time. Ramped-up job responsibilities meant he couldn’t take off during the week; he could fly in only on long weekends. The suite where Father had spent one week a month no longer kept his duffel. Father could no longer be relied upon to drive Colin to practices and religious school once a month. Now too, Colin’s stepmother was pregnant, and, for Father, the idea of regularly traveling back east became less and less viable. The arrangement that had been working so well at giving Colin meaningful contact with both parents was now in jeopardy.
When It’s All About Hate
Every day in my office I see parents, embittered by divorce and so grateful to finally be physically and legally apart from a partner they once loved and now hate, struggling to co-parent and jointly make decisions about their children.
Every day, adults who once loved each other so much that they promised to stay together until the end of time storm into my office, dragging behind them children dejected and battered by Mom and Dad’s rage toward each other.
Day in and day out I find myself saying the same things over and over. Your child needs a meaningful relationship with both of her parents…Control your frustrations and anger and deal with your ex in a businesslike manner…Your son needs both of you to make the decisions important for his development.
Your war with your ex is hurting your child more than you can ever imagine—much more than you are hurting each other. You and your ex must learn to work together to raise your child. Think of raising your child like running a business. Business partners don’t have to be friends; they may not even like one another. But they know that, for their business to succeed, they must work together and make decisions together. You have a business that produces a priceless product: the child you love, whom you must raise with the ex you hate.
Sometimes my insights help the people in my office. Sadly, sometimes they don’t, when warring exes cannot get far enough past the hate they have for each to think first of the child they both love. But more often than not, the angry exes do learn what they must do to raise their child together. Their marriage is at an end, but the child they jointly brought into this world demands that they enter into a new kind of relationship.
I hope that this book can show you how to enter into this new relationship and make life a whole lot better and a whole lot healthier for you and your child.
Ultimately you and your ex have a choice. You can either work together to launch your child into a future filled with promise and potential, or you can continue to fight and squabble, most likely sentencing your child to a future filled with doubts, insecurities, and self-blame—and that’s just for starters.
Years ago, I didn’t realize the stakes in divorce were so high. As a clinical psychologist I had worked with many children who had suffered terrible traumas. My patients were children who had lost a parent, adolescents with chronic diseases, and young people sexually abused by authority figures whom they had trusted.
When I first started to see children of divorce, I thought their problems would be mild compared to those of my seriously traumatized patients. But over the years I have seen custody battles lead to the most serious of tragedies for the children: from failure at school and chronic illness to drug addiction, debilitating mental challenges, and even murder.
The bottom line is that the out-of-control battles parents wage over raising children after divorce leave deep and dangerous open wounds and scars on their children long after the parents have moved on, making their children the real casualties of that war. I see these wounds every day in the children who come into my office. Their grades have plummeted. They act out at school and on the ball field. They are angry or sad. Their physicians raise red flags. Their teachers are concerned. I see children, emotionally and behaviorally hurt by the war between their parents, trying frantically to create stability as their world changes too quickly for them to keep up—and so they fall.
There must be a better way.
Making It Work—for the Child
Colin’s father, a math whiz who had always been the go-to parent for math and science homework, had an idea. Colin would call Father in California whenever he got stuck with a math problem. Father approached Mother with the idea that he would be the parent primarily responsible for homework. Most school evenings between 7:00 and 8:00, eastern standard time, Colin sat down to do his homework. Father arranged his office schedule to be open between 4:00 and 5:00, Pacific standard time. Father purchased his own set of Colin’s textbooks and got Colin a fax machine and scanner so that Colin could send him his worksheets and assignments. Colin and Father spent the first five minutes of homework time reviewing the tasks to be completed that day. Colin would then send his completed work to check. After Dad checked the work, he and Colin would communicate either by phone or online. Periodically, of course, there were problems: Colin would rather play games on the computer than study or, when Father was quizzing him over the phone, he was reading his answers off of a study guide. Father even bought a videocam for Colin’s computer so that he could see Colin doing his homework—but somehow Colin never figured out how to make the camera work.
Although Colin now saw his father only a few times a year, the two maintained a consistent, meaningful, real, and ongoing relationship that continued to evolve over time. The consistency of contact about homework taught Colin that both his parents were involved in his life. He saw his parents actively communicate with each other. Yes, they squabbled at times, but they successfully resolved conflicts. Regularity of contact, even through the unconventional technologies of Facebook, faxing, scanning, and cell phones, proved to Colin that his father was involved and caring.
Conversations about homework easily drifted to other topics—sports, friends, extracurriculars. Colin never really understood what it meant for his father to block off work time to help him with his homework, but what he did understand was that the homework hour was his father’s way of staying involved in his life. Colin’s mother, initially hesitant to give up her role of overseeing his homework, was satisfied with her son’s academic progress. Father was exacting about homework performance. Colin would often shout at him over the phone, complaining about being asked to email yet another draft of an English paper. However, that proved the relationship was real; these conflicts could well have materialized had Colin’s parents still been together. The conversations between Colin and his father were not forced. There was little of the generic What did you do in school today?
and Who did you eat lunch with?
Instead they were focused on Colin’s real everyday life. Father talked about his own work and values during their ten-minute breaks from homework. This gave Colin an appreciation of accurate writing and communication skills in the workplace. Colin remembers the day his father forwarded him a poorly written email from a subcontractor bidding on Father’s work project, accompanied by Father’s explanation of why he had given the bid to another firm.
Now in high school, Colin still has regular contact with his father. Although by now most of Colin’s work is independent, Father still edits and reads much of Colin’s writing. The 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. time slot is no longer set aside for them; instead Father and Colin schedule other times to review or quiz. Colin knows his father and his father knows him, even though they physically see each other only a handful of times a year. Summer visits now last only a week or two, with Colin joining Father’s new family for vacations. Colin’s adjustment to school, sports, and social life is good. Colin knows his parents have a respectful, businesslike relationship for discussing significant issues in his life. His mother still worries that Colin may one day get mad at her and announce he wants to move to California. Yet she also knows she will accept this if it is best for her son.
It Should Be All About Love
Colin’s positive growth and development are a direct result of two parents creatively and non-conventionally adapting to new situations to insure that their son will have meaningful and caring relationships with both his parents. Their family situation is certainly not perfect and obviously not what either of Colin’s parents envisioned life being like when they began their marriage, back in the days of wine and roses. But it’s a whole lot better than an unfortunate majority of post-divorce situations. You too can learn a better way of co-parenting.
Raising the Kid You Love with the Ex You Hate draws on my thirty years of experience as a clinical psychologist working with families in transition and conflict to minimize the negative impacts of separation and divorce on their children. This book will teach you the philosophy, the principles, and the methods necessary to raise a healthy child by co-parenting. The goals of co-parenting are simple—to maximize positive outcomes for your child after divorce and to immunize your child as best you can against the ravages of parental hatred.
Raising the Kid You Love with the Ex You Hate demonstrates how you can parent effectively despite the acrimony divorce leaves behind. It helps immunize your children against the ravages of separation and shows warring parents how to develop a new, post-divorce language and healthy style of interaction essential for co-parenting.
Whether you are thinking of separating, are in the process of divorcing, have been divorced for several years, or are trying to develop a parenting plan, this book gives you the tools necessary to raise—together with your ex—the child you both love.
Part One
CO-PARENTING
101
CHAPTER 1
Congratulations, You Are Divorced—Now Start Co-Parenting
If you enjoy fighting with people, you are now in the right position. Probably never before in your life have you been in a place where every decision you make, large or small, is so likely to be challenged by someone else, sometimes for good reasons and sometimes just because this person hates you and doesn’t trust a word you say or a thing you do. And to make matters worse, your challenger has a legal agreement that virtually mandates conflict.
Bound by the court, you must not only consult with your ex before doing anything related to your child, but now the two of you must also agree on matters that in the past you likely decided on your own. And the fact is that you and your ex are stuck together, at least until the child reaches maturity and likely for many years after that. Your murderous fantasies are just that—fantasies.
Your ex now is involved in every aspect of your life as a parent: what you feed your kids, how you discipline them, what activities you drive them to, when they see their friends, what time they go to sleep, what kind of clothes they wear, when they visit your family, when they visit your ex’s family, how they pray, and when they do their homework.
You now also have new, unanticipated controls on your own life. They affect your earnings and hours at work, how you spend your holidays and vacations, whether or not you can move, your freedom to introduce new people into the life of your family, even whom you have sex with, and when.
After ending your marriage from hell, you don’t really want your ex, through a binding custody agreement, controlling your love life. Yet your custody agreement states: No non-blood family member of the opposite sex shall spend overnight in either parent’s residence in the presence of the minor children.
That means not only can your new boyfriend not stay over but also that your married sister and her husband have to stay in a hotel when they visit from out of town. You are free to date every other weekend but have to remember that weekend visitation is subject to out-of-town business plans, in which case seventy-two hours’ notice shall be given in writing and visitation shall occur the following weekend.
You may want to get back in shape, so you decide to sign up for an exercise class every other Wednesday night because your ex has visitation every other Wednesday. Of course, that assumes your ex shows up on time, doesn’t cancel, and doesn’t bring the kids back early. You cannot move without permission: Both parents agree to remain in the greater metropolitan area with the intent of co-parenting the children.
If you get a raise, you are likely to find yourself back in court to ante up more for child support. If you get fired, you have to prove that this was not a deliberate attempt on your part to increase the support your ex pays.
You now need permission from your ex to take your children to your parents’ anniversary party if it falls during your ex’s