Children and Divorce
By Jeanette Pollock
A recent statistic shows that almost half of all marriages
end in divorce. Divorce is difficult for everyone involved,
but maybe the hardest on children. Most often they experience
many feelings that they do not understand. They go through
a range of emotions and need their parents to understand.
If you are going through a divorce getting to understand
how your children are dealing with it is important.
When parents divorce they often put their children
in the center of arguments and a game of emotional tug
of war. To avoid this sort of thing parents need to
work together. Even though their marriage is over they
are still parents together. The child needs to understand
many things about the divorce. Parents need to keep
in touch with their children and understand the many
feelings they may be having. Older children, especially,
can go through periods where they act out as a way to
cope with the divorce. Many times children feel the
divorce is their fault. They may worry about the future
and how to deal with other events, like parent’s
day at school. Both parents need to show the children
that they can work together and not fight. At the same
time it is important to let the children know that you
are not getting back together. Establishing some sort
of family structure is a necessity to help children
get back to “normal”.
Children will react different depending on their age.
The following list explains a little about each age
group and how they react to divorce.
Age 3-5: Regression to a more infantile
state, problems sleeping, fear of separation
Age 6-8: Fantasies of parents getting
back together, open emotions
Age 8-11: Anger, treat one parent
as good the other as bad, take a caregiver role
Age 12-18: Depression, violent actions,
judgmental of parents, develop anxiety about own relationships
Learning to help your children cope through divorce
is possible the most important step in the divorce process.
Children have no choice in the matter and may feel completely
left out if their feelings are not recognized.
Jeanette Pollock is a freelance author and website
owner. She publishes articles and reports in various
ezines and also contributes on a regular basis to FreeNetPublishing.com. |