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Stability and tactfulness following an Omaha divorce

On Behalf of | Jan 12, 2017 | Parenting Plans And Parenting Time

According to the United States government, 41 percent of first-time married couples will eventually dissolve their marriages through divorce proceedings. Then, with second-time marriages, there is a 60 percent chance of divorce. With third-time marriages the chances go up to 73 percent. Approximately 30 percent of these divorces involve minor children. Couples who have children as a part of their marriages need to consider their children’s best interests throughout the divorce process.

How do you maintain a tactful relationship with your spouse and support a stable environment for your children following divorce? To answer this question, we need to look at suggestions offered by leading psychologists.

According to psychologists, parents have to try to act like grownups throughout their divorce proceedings, which can be hard to do. Conflicts should never expand to be larger than the needs of the children. One way to keep stability for children following a divorce, for example, would be to assist the children in remaining in the same home, the same school and the same church. Also, helping children continue with the same friends and after school activities will also help.

Keeping this kind of stability could mean that parents will have to sacrifice some of their own wants and needs. It could also mean that parents will have to come to agreement and accord on potential areas of disagreement. However, if the goal is to maintain stability for the children, then parents can make it easier to find right direction whenever they are forced to “give something up” in the name of peaceful negotiations.

With the help of an experienced family law attorney, Omaha parents going through divorce can dissolve their marriages in a way that honors their children’s best interest. A skilled divorce lawyer can seek peaceful resolutions where there might normally be disagreement; and, as long as good relations are maintained between both sides of a divorce, it will help support the stability of the children involved.

Source: Deseret News, “What the research says on parenting after divorce,” Lois M. Collins, Dec. 28, 2016

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