Protecting children from divorce
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In a perfect world, families would include a mom, a dad and kids.
They would love and support each other and communicate effectively.
But at least half of the family world in America is far from perfect.
This half results in divorce, which, despite any evidence you’ve
read to the contrary, is devastating to children.
Divorce happens for one reason and one reason only: Couples do not
take enough time to really get to know the person with whom they plan
to spend the rest of their lives. They don’t take the time to sniff
out any substance abuse potential, any violent tendencies or their
future mate’s ability to manage finances.
Money problems are a major reason why couples divorce. Money
problems are also a chief reason why divorces go bad and result in
vicious displays of pettiness and revenge, often witnessed by the
children who had no responsibility for their parent’s mistakes.
I don’t like to think of divorce and families. It hurts me to do
so, because I conjure up images of sad kids.
Violet Woodhouse is an attorney and certified financial planner
who also doesn’t like to see sad kids. So she wrote a book to try to
help divorcing parents minimize the financial hassles of a divorce so
that the hurt to kids is kept to a minimum.
If you’re in a good marriage, count your blessings, but please
don’t stop reading this because you don’t think divorce doesn’t
matter to you. The chances are good that you know someone who is
going through a divorce, and if so, I want to recommend Woodhouse’s
book “Divorce and Money” (Nolo Press), written with Dale Fetherling.
“The book was written to helps separate the financial issues from
the emotional ones,” Woodhouse told me. “When you’re in a divorce,
it’s hard to hard to see the forest for the trees.”
We got on the subject of divorce and kids.
“A child’s needs don’t lessen during a divorce, they increase,”
Woodhouse said. “During a divorce, parents have more stress and it
seems like it doesn’t stop. One reason is that the money doesn’t
increase, it decreases. People then become less productive because so
much time devoted to the demands of litigation. And people shut
down.”
One of the areas that parents shut down is in the care of the
kids. Somehow, we’ve been conditioned to accept the “resiliency” of a
child; that in the long run, they’ll be OK.
That is nonsense. Kids are a high maintenance proposition and, as
Woodhouse pointed out, even more needy during a divorce than ever
before.
“Kids are concerned about any changes in their environment,”
Woodhouse said. “They need stability more than anyone else in the
divorce process because they are concerned about the loss of their
parents. Kids don’t want a 20% parent, they want a 50% parent.”
In many divorces, parents own a house in which they live with
their kids. During the divorce, the house gets sold so the profits
can be shared equally. But kids lose because they are yanked
heartlessly from their world and put into another.
But one couple I know kept the house and, instead of making the
kids leave and shuttle them back and forth between two new homes, the
kids live there permanently -- same schools, same friends and almost
the same world. The parents take turns moving in and out each week.
It’s not the best option -- that would be reconciliation -- but it
beats selling the house.
I like Woodhouse and I like the book. Actually, they are a mirror
of each other. Both are straightforward, intelligent and full of a
lot of common sense. The book has financial advice from A to Z, plus
most of a chapter on child support and the emotional issues of a
divorce.
Topics covered include custody considerations, child support,
child-rearing costs, including college, health insurance and the
aforementioned emotional matters.
The practical advice Woodhouse dispenses is obvious to anyone not
going through a divorce.
“If divorcing couples are not able to communicate effectively,
they can figure to spend 10 times more in attorney fees because
they’ll fight each other to the death,” she said. “That’s a major
shift of wealth from them to their lawyers.”
As for advice to parents, Woodhouse says: “Tell the kids it’s not
their fault. Parents need to stop dragging their kids into the
divorce. Leave the children out of it. Parents will determine how
well or how poorly their children survive the divorce.”
Violet Woodhouse will be signing copies of her book “Divorce and
Money” at the Borders store in South Coast Plaza on Feb. 8 at 2 p.m.
For more information, call the store at (714) 279-8933.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer.
Readers may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at
(949) 642-6086.
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