Uticopa Blog

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Tag >> divorce

Divorce is a stressful time for all-concerned. Depending on the personalities involved, the transition can move along on co-operative lines, via angry skirmishes or by plain suffering and doubt on all sides.

In a so-called ‘co-operative' divorce, both parents work together to restructure their own relationship and their family to allow the children as normal a relationship with each of them as possible. This means co-operating with each other as to finances, logistics and family commitments as well as actively supporting the children's emotional relationships with the other parent and the extended families. In co-operative divorces the parties consciously try not to engage in behaviour they understand to be inflammatory to the other side.

However, an angry divorce doesn't have to be an alienating one. Alienation occurs when both parents use their children to meet their own emotional needs or as innocent pawns to inflict retribution on the other side. The focus in determining whether or not there is alienation in an angry divorce must be, not on the degree of rage or loss expressed, but on the behavioural willingness to involve the children.


  • I need both of you to stay involved in my life. Please write or text me, make phone calls and ask me lots of questions. When I don't hear from either of you, I feel as if I'm not important and that neither of you really love me.
  • Please stop arguing and work hard to be friends. When you argue about me, I think that I must have done something wrong and I feel guilty.
    I want to love you both and enjoy the time that I spend with each of you. I feel as if I need to take sides and love one of you more than the other.
  • Please communicate directly with each other so that I don't have to send messages back and forth.
  • When talking about my other parent, please say only nice things, or don't say anything at all. When you say horrible, unkind things about my other parent, I feel like you are expecting me to take your side against the other one.
  • Please remember that I want both of you to be a part of my life. I desperately need both of you to bring me up, to teach me what is important, and to help me when I have problems.

Most children feel angry, sad and frustrated about the prospect of their parents splitting up for good. How you deal with the situation will have an effect on your child throughout their life.

Ways to help your children

As well as reminders that they will be loved and cared for, reassure them about what they may fear. For example, "I know you are upset about moving, but we will make sure you can stay in the same school".



No matter whose decision it is to separate, fathers suffer stress, anxiety and loneliness when living apart from their children.  All fathers in such situations say they feel cut off from reality, unable to sleep or work.

Some fathers in these situations try to take the law into their own hands. One civil rights group, Fathers4Justice, does just this as a means of giving a generation of children the right in law to see their fathers. Founded in 2002, it sets out to give parents, grandparents and children a fair, just, open and equitable system of family law.

There is no doubt, though, that when a marriage breaks down, trying to work things out between both parties out of court is always the easiest solution, both practically and for each other's state of mind.


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