Dont Pressure Your Kids into Taking Sides

During divorce children can feel torn, especially if they witness one parent suffer due to the actions of the other parent. Add a parent to the equation who revels in the idea of the children taking his/her side and much damage can be done. There is a big need by some parents to place blame during a divorce. If they feel their ex did them wrong, they may pressure their children to take their side in an attempt to punish the other parent.

Essentially, there are some parents who are willing to promote estrangement between their children and the other parent out of a self-righteous belief that their need to punish is more important than their children’s need for two loving parents.

A parent’s job is to help their child feel free from the burden of being stuck in the middle and having to pick sides. I’m afraid that is a foreign concept to some parents.

Forcing children to “take sides” in divorce can cause long-lasting psychological damage. As studies consistently show, rates of anxiety and depression are higher in children of divorce with high-conflict co-parents. On the flip side, the lower the conflict between co-parents, the better kids are able to thrive. Below we discuss why you shouldn’t encourage your children to pick sides in a divorce.

INCREASED MENTAL HEALTH

Because it’s the conflict between parents and not divorce in and of itself that’s the cause for most emotional issues, children with mutually supportive co-parents experience less anxiety, less depression, and better academic performance before, during and after their parents’ divorce.

DEVELOP COMMUNICATION SKILLS

Your children are watching you to learn how to relate to others. Treating your ex with respect, compromising when appropriate, and resolving conflict in as peaceful a manner as possible will teach your kids how mature adults are supposed to interact – even when they disagree.

HEALTHY RELATIONSHIPS

When children are free to bond with both parents, they grow up to believe that relationships are safe harbors. Securely attached children tend to become securely attached adults who feel that they deserve a good relationship.

BE A BETTER CO-PARENT

Respect your ex’s boundaries. Accept the fact that you have different households. Don’t meddle, pump the kids for details when they come back from visitation, or give them the impression that they can come to you if they don’t like their other parent’s rules, unless you have evidence that your co-parent is behaving in ways that legitimately threaten your children’s safety.

The best thing you can do for your child is to facilitate their relationship with their other parent. If you follow the steps above, you will teach your kids that people can overcome their differences and that families are there to support each other. You want them to grow up believing that their well-being is far more important than your feelings about your ex.

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