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New York couples who choose to end their marriage often wind up in long court battles. If children are involved, this can create a lot of tension and anxiety within the family dynamic. Although married couples might disagree and have contention between them during this time, one thing they probably share in common is wanting to protect their children. Having a child-centered divorce can achieve that.
Depending on the circumstances of your divorce, it might be difficult, but avoid fighting openly in front of your children. Any unpleasantness can lead to a slew of problems in your kids. They might have trouble sleeping, suffer depression and anxiety and even start failing in school. Avoiding a fight in front of your children can make a big difference.
Your children come first, even when you’re in a divorce. Keep your focus on them and maintain your loving relationship. Even if you are the one who moves out of the family home, stay in regular contact with them and spend time with your kids as much as possible. If you have to, create temporary custody orders to ensure that you can maintain contact while going through the divorce.
Divorce is complex and often contentious, but keep recovery in mind instead of winning. There’s no winner or loser; you and your spouse may be done with your marriage, but healing is the best way to have a child-centered divorce. Your children will see you in a positive light for it.
If you want a child-centered divorce, avoid traditional court divorce proceedings and, instead, consider mediation or collaborative divorce. Either alternative lets you work with your spouse while negotiating all terms of your split. Both options are cheaper and can help you finalize things faster as well.
A child-centered divorce is also a peaceful divorce. It can benefit everyone in your family.
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