Posts About ‘Relationships’

Dealing as Dad in Divorce PT 2: The Conversation & the Second Hardest Thing You Will Do in Your Life

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

In Part 1 (all those months ago – sorry!), I talked about some of the emotional stages many men experience when making the final, gut-wrenching decision to move on from a failing relationship and how the crippling thought of breaking this news to your children can effect that decision. After months, sometimes years, of traveling down this path, you have come to the decision that two happy parents in two different places will be a better quality of life for your kids than two miserable parents under one roof.

Now, how do you approach the single hardest thing you will ever do in your life? How do you tell your children that Mommy and Daddy will no longer be living in the same house?

Before we get to that, let’s talk about the second hardest thing you will ever do in your life… putting aside your feelings of hurt/betrayal/anger and talking sensibly and with sensitivity with your soon-to-be-X about what is truly best for the kids and how you will BOTH calmly sit down and talk to them.

Swallowing your male instincts to react to “hurt” by being aggressive and stubborn is a big enough pill to swallow for most men. We all do it. Either in a Passive-Aggressive manifestation or in a case such as mine, reverting to my Italian heritage and yelling at everyone.

This is a crucial, defining moment in your child’s life. You do not get to be selfish about it.

This is not about you.

It’s not about her.

It’s not about the myriad things you’ve done to each other that brought you to this.

As obvious as this may sound, please take a moment to absorb these words… the way you handle this approach will become part of the identity and attitude of the person your children will grow to be.

This is a milestone in your child’s life that (assuming they’re older than a toddler) they will remember until their dying day. It will shape their overall ability to “adjust” and their emotional response mechanism to relationships, in general. It will inform their instinctive interactions with their own children. Think about how often you’ve heard your parent’s voices coming from your mouth?

Find the strength, some might say, the TRUE strength of being a man, to be a father first and find that common ground with your child’s mother. Regardless of all the pain you’re causing each other, being parents to your children will always be the one thing you have in common. Long after the divorce proceedings have passed and you have both moved on, possibly even to a new marriage and family, you will STILL be a “Parenting Team” for the children you have together. Divorce does not mean you are getting rid of each other. The sooner you get that out of your head, the easier it will be to focus on how you will both manage the immediate conversation with the children and all of the arrangements that follow.

One quick thing I’d like to address with regards to “arrangements”. Kids need their dads. PERIOD! Do not let anyone ever make you feel like it’s acceptable to be the “every other weekend and two weeks in the summer” part-time dad. This notion is archaic and will do unspeakable damage to your children emotionally. If you’ve been following along with this series since Part 1 and laboring similarly, chances are you would fight tooth and nail against this dated mindset anyway. Still, it’s important to be said. Say it to yourself now – my kids NEED their Dad. Believe it buddy!

Your wife and yourself have somehow managed to come to a calm consensus that truly represents the best thing for the people you love most in your life. It may have taken weeks or months but you have both arrived.

First of all, take a moment to acknowledge this in each other. It’s OK to give each other credit. I guarantee it was as difficult for her as it was for you.

The literal moment of truth – you and your spouse sit your children down. This will be emotional and that’s OK. You’re allowed to feel. Just tread lightly between representing emotion and exuding a sense of confidence in what you’re saying. Too far to either side and your incredibly intuitive little people will feel like you’re selling them a line. Just be Dad.

A few bullets to consider:

• Decide, prior to the talk, which of you will open the conversation.

• Let each other (spouse) talk. Don’t talk over each other.

• Use “we” when talking about the decisions that have been made

• Physical contact with your kids (holding a hand, rubbing the back, etc)

• Make it absolutely clear that they are the best kids that have ever walked the face of the Earth and tell them how loved they are and how proud you are of them

• Show respect for your spouse (even if you sense it isn’t returned)

• Make it clear to them that you will always be there and lay out your plan “how”

• Answer every question with honesty but remember who your audience is. Find a “glass half full” way to answer them.

• Make eye contact

• Get physically down to their level (kneel or sit)

• Acknowledge and validate their feelings

• Let them know they can talk to both of you ANYTIME and the conversation doesn’t have to end after this talk if they have questions.

• I know this is about as uncomfortable as it gets but don’t rush through this

• Tell them how much you love them

All I can think of when I remember back to this moment in my life is the lyrics to Sarah McLachlan’s “Hold On”. “Hold on to yourself, this is gonna hurt like hell”. It will be hard — plain and simple. Doing everything you can, ahead of time, to eliminate the potential for “regrets” will pay dividends throughout the lifetime of your children.

Support: Don’t be too proud to ask for help going into this and again on the other side. Having a positive support system that understands and accepts your decisions is key. The “one-sided sympathizers” are frequently really unhelpful, though their intentions are good. “Your wife is a bitch” is not a constructive comment or demonstration of support.

KNOW that you are doing the right thing and best of luck. You can do this.

(Im)Patience?

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

You. Yes, you over there.  The one with the vein popping out of your forehead and the swollen temples.  Why so serious?  The baby won’t be here for another three months.  You’ve done everything you can to prepare, so why the short temper and the long face? Say what? Your patience is being tested?  Really?

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I am going to go out on a limb and confess that every so often during our pregnancy, I get painted into a corner where I feel my patience is being tested and worn thin.

In a conversation with a friend today I was recounting a recent back and forth between my wife and I about a stressful situation and I felt that overall I handled it pretty well considering.  I was calm.  I was focused and I was direct in how to solve the problem.  The one thing I probably wasn’t was being was patient.

According to the dictionary, to be patient means to exhibit the quality of being patient, as the bearing of provocation, annoyance, misfortune, or pain, without complaint, loss of temper, irritation, or the like. By definition, I was a shining example of patience — but only by definition.

During our conversation, my friend raised a valid point which is, “am I really being patient or am I being impatient?”  You can still be calm, waiting or allowing for some event to continue to take place, but it is with a different attitude or demeanor.

So, it is possible that I looked and sounded like I was being patient –the reality was that I was more likely impatient, which is to say on the outside I was very much looking and sounding patient, but behind the scenes I simply wanted the situation to be over with.

Even as an expectant father I know my patience will truly be tested and I will have to be on-point in how I handle each situation.  Both where it relates to our newborn son as well as my relationship with my wife.  The question is, how do you show you are really being patient as opposed to just waiting for the tide to go back out (especially when on the outside patience and impatience can appear to others as exactly the same thing)?  Marinate.

Just Because Gifts

Friday, August 7th, 2009

So today on Twitter we had this little conversation about what my wife and I have always called “just because gifts.”

These could be anything from as simple as a candy bar in the middle of the afternoon to a new piece of jewelry. The what is never as important as the why in our book.

Happy Valentines Day Laura

Sure, most every couple out there exchange gifts on major holidays, birthdays and anniversaries. But, those are expected and if they don’t happen you are certainly in the dog house. But, if you really want to keep the playful, fun and romantic nature in your relationship then I suggest getting something for no other reason then to make the other person smile.

Some ideas to help you get started:

  • If you are making their lunch, write a little note or poem to let them know you care
  • Send flowers to their office on a random day. (bonus points because everyone they work with will go ahhhhh….)
  • Come home with their special dessert, from their favorite little bakery
  • Buy (or make) a card for them and send it to them in the mail.
  • Surprise them with a home cooked meal and the kids at a babysitters for the night

The key here is NOT to get hung up so much on what it is. The more simple and playful the better sometimes. The key is to just do it for absolutely no reason at all and do it “just because.”

Guys, do you ever do things like this? Help other guys out by leaving your suggestions in the comments.

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Dealing as Dad in Divorce PT 1: THE CONVERSATION

Monday, April 27th, 2009

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One horrible day, you find yourself in a position you never imagined possible—sitting your child down to explain that Mommy and Daddy will no longer be living together. This is a conversation you can never truly be prepared for, and likely, you have put it off for longer than you should have.

As you sit down with your child/children, your heart is beating so hard you can feel your pulse in your hands… hands that refuse to steady. Your adrenaline seems to be rushing harder through your veins than any confrontation you have faced in your lifetime, except THIS time, it not simply a “confrontation”. This time, you are going to change the world for a little person you love more than you thought you were capable.

Not “change” in the heroic, mental cut-away you had always daydreamed.

You are about to take away a piece of your child’s innocence.

You are about to introduce them to some of the darkness in the world.

You are about to try to explain that “love” cannot overcome any obstacle, while simultaneously attempting to instill that your love for them IS unconditional and more powerful than anything else.

You are about to introduce a complex conundrum that your child will attempt to unravel for the rest of their lives.

Now, take a moment and ask yourself why you have put this off, at the expense of personal liberation from a disintegrating relationship… ask yourself why those hands won’t steady.

When we reach the decision, the moment of inevitability, with our spouses that “perhaps we need time away from each other”, which, in many cases, ultimately leads to Divorce, a natural reaction for men is to run the scenario of breaking it to the kids. We’re problem solvers. It is in our nature.

The danger of running “The Conversation Simulation” over and over and over is that the emotional weight and predicted responses to the scenario becomes nearly debilitating and action moves further into the future. In your mind, you are going to hurt your child, which violates everything you instinctively feel and know. The natural response to this is to recoil, to martyr your own emotions—to put the whole damn thing off.

Sometimes, during the “Martyr Phase” we can even convince ourselves that “hey, what the hell—maybe I CAN live like this. Maybe I CAN live in an emotional void. I’m pretty tough. Maybe I can ‘do it for the kids’”.

Ok tough guy, you just felt your eyes welling up at a Disney movie or over a commercial with Israel Kamakawiwo’ole’s ukulele medley of “Over the Rainbow” and “What a Wonderful World” or just out of nowhere at work. This is your subconscious bleeding into your everyday life. The reality check is usually close behind. The epiphany that two happy homes far outweigh one sad one is at hand. This is the moment the irony hits…you’ve been thinking about yourself. It is akin to a mourning period after a loved one’s death, when one is, quite understandably, preoccupied with what THEY will miss about the departed.

Now you can plan the best approach to “The Conversation”. You will not feel that a great weight has been lifted, but you will finally be able to proceed with clarity. You now honestly KNOW this move is in everyone’s best interest.

But. Is there REALLY a “best approach”?

Stay tuned for PT 2.

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