Child Custody Blog: A Blog about Child Custody and Divorce
 

Child Custody Blog was created to provide our visitors with helpful and news worthy content, information, media, and commentary on the subject of Divorce and Child Custody. While this blog is primarily textual, you will find images, video and other media related to custody and divorce such as famous child custody battles, famous divorces, custody tips and more...

Newsweek’s Not Your Dad’s Divorce - A Story that Illustrates the Benefits of Sharing Custody From a Child’s Perspective

December 19th, 2008 · No Comments

Not Your Dad’s Divorce provides a story that illustrates the emotional impact of divorce on children and the benefit of a shared parenting arrangement (joint physical custody) versus the standard “every other weekend” visitation arrangement from a child’s perspective. The following is a paragraph taken from the article:

In the morning, we sat the girls on the sofa and told them. They cried, and were confused, but they didn’t ask the big questions we thought they would. They wanted to know where they’d live, and whether they would still have the same last name. When we showed them the calendar, our older girl turned it a few pages ahead to her birthday month, which we hadn’t colored in yet. She panicked. “But Mom, is my birthday red or purple?” Her dad and I looked at each other and said, “Both. We’ll both be there.” She would not rest until we filled the day in with red and purple. And with that, our new family life was born.

Birthdays had been part of the initial conversations my ex-husband, Jorgen, and I had had about how the schedule would work. When his parents divorced in the 1970s, they adopted the standard every-other-weekend-with-dad setup. He remembered missing his father tremendously and didn’t want that for our kids. We talked about sharing time with them more equally—legally it’s called joint physical custody, as opposed to the more common joint legal custody, where the child may live primarily with one parent, but both parents make big decisions, like which school the child goes to, together.

Joint custody meant that the girls would be spending several nights a week with their dad. Switching would require collaboration and communication about homework and school projects and the thousand other things that kids need from day to day. To make it work, we’d have to live near each other for the next 13 years, until the youngest girl was off to college. It was a commitment not unlike marriage, and, given that feelings were still raw post-divorce, neither of us thought it would be easy.

No child custody schedule is. It can involve long commutes and budgets strained by the costs of maintaining two households. The traditional dad-gets-every-other-weekend formula is logistically easier than what Jorgen and I planned. But ours is an increasingly common arrangement.

As pointed out in the story, while it may be “easier” and cheaper to adopt the standard “every other weekend” visitation schedule for the noncustodial parent (usually the father) it often falls short of serving the children’s needs and best interest — the need to spend significant time living and bonding with both parents.

For the full story click here.

Tags: Shared Parenting · Divorce · Family Law · Parenting · Child Custody · Custody Battles

0 responses so far ↓

  • There are no comments yet...Kick things off by filling out the form below.

Leave a Comment