The #1 Thing I Wish Someone Had Told Me about Divorce

Posted by Delaine - February 1, 2011 - Children, Dealing with the ex, Grief/ Anger - 4 Comments

Don’t expect to be friends with your ex.  Not at the start anyways.  This is what I wish someone, or many people, had told me at the beginning of my divorce.

I’m not saying you should expect to be enemies; no, not at all.  I’m saying you should aim for something in the middle – like a ‘professional working relationship.’  It should be polite, somewhat distant, but functional.  No more, but no less.

“But why Delaine?”  You ask.  “Isn’t it in our best interest to be friends?  Isn’t it in the kids best interest?”

Because I’ve seen the same negative cycle repeat itself over and over again with me and my ex, AND other divorcing girlfriends:  We start getting along well with the exes, it feels good…we may go the ‘extra mile’ for them in some way like drive the kids somewhere far away to meet them, or invite them in for dinner…and then IT happens:  a mini-bomb, some kind of comment or event that hurts us, angers us, and leaves us spiralling for days, if not weeks. We all thought we were ‘moving forward’, that things were going so well, that we were ‘big enough’ to move beyond the enormity of the divorce crisis…

grieve-sorrow-divorceBut we are human.  And we are grieving amidst a huge life transformation – ALL of us are, exes included. And even though it feels good to connect with our exes, even though it seems comfortable in some ways (though in some ways it’s also strange), the bottom line is our sensitivity levels are high, and people grieve in different ways.  Each person needs the time, space and consideration to grieve in his/her own way and if that isn’t offered, if time isn’t allotted to the recovery process, it’s a countdown till explosion.

I really wanted my ex and I to be friends at the beginning for the kids’ sake.  I wanted to ease the transition into their lives, as any good parent wants, of course.  But two things I MUST point out: first, it is very confusing for the kids to have dad at the dinner table one night, only to then have mom in tears for days and ignoring him the next time he comes by for ‘pick-up.’  It’s no good for the kids to have an unhappy mom, period.  And even though we do our best to hide our sadness and anger from them, little ears pick up on our phone conversations with girlfriends.  Little eyes see when we’re vacantly staring out the window with swollen eyes…. You get my point, I’m sure.

Secondly, in my opinion, young kids (which is what I and my friends all have) are more resistant to change than we give them credit for.  Many of the fears I had around the effects of divorce on my kids were just that: mine.  Yes, I had to work hard to ease the change, yes, I had to ’get in the know,’ read books, and always monitor their speech and action for signs of emotional damage.  But children respond to how WE ( us and our exes) are handling the crisis.  If tension, criticism, and anger abound, they feel it, even if they don’t see or hear it.  On the other hand, if they see mom and dad smiling at each other, talking politely, and acting ‘professionally,’ their world seems safer cause mom and dad are showing kindness and setting a good example of how life change can and should be handled.

So this is the #1 thing I wish someone had told me about the divorce process.   And if I were sitting having coffee with you, this is what I’d have said to you as a friend; one warrior woman to another.

(written year two after divorce)

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4 comments

  • T says:

    I like it.

    I am fortunate that my ex and I are friendly with each other. People that are around us say we act much the same as we did when we were married. We were always friends first. Even when we divorced, we just felt like we were better friends than spouses. A LOT of pain and healing had to be done. We lost tons of trust there. But we both wanted to keep the kids first and worked on a “professional” relationship first. The friendship was something eventual, that happened later. He still irks me, I still piss him off, but we can always go to our own houses to cool down now.

    Whew!

  • gettingby says:

    I can see myself getting sucked into that cycle you talk of Delaine. You’re right, its always a countdown till we have some kind of blow up and sometimes I’ll feel upset and depressed for days afterwards.

    I wish I did have a friend like you to sit and chat with about this stff. Cause most of my friends are all married and don’t get this. Thank you for creating this site – I’m sure many tohers need the outlet too.

  • Delaine says:

    Thanks for your kind words gettingby. I really do believe that women learn and grow by gernering the experiences of other women. And when it comes to divorce and infidelity, our mouths still tend to stay shut for many personal and social reasons.

    In the end, I think friendship with our exes is what a great aspiration, and we need to hold onto that vision. But while in the throes of the choas, we have to be smart AND compassionate towards ourselves. The whole thing is very overwhelming and we need TIME to refind our footing.
    XO
    Delaine

  • Laura says:

    I divorced my ex because he became a nasty controlling man. There is no reason to try to be nice to someone who I spent years being nice it, it didn’t make me happy then, it certainly won’t now. And my kids, they need to know the damage that happens when a man is mean or when people don’t get along. There needs to be a real break in the relationship, not the development of a pseudo-relationship.

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