Protecting your children from conflict does not require perfection. It requires intention. Even small changes in how parents communicate can have a significant impact on a child’s sense of safety and security.
This week, commit to trying a few of these practices:
✓ Communicate directly with the other parent. Resist the temptation to use your child as a messenger, scheduler, or go-between.
✓ Keep adult issues between adults. Discuss legal matters, finances, parenting disagreements, and relationship issues with your attorney, mediator, therapist, or trusted support—not with your children.
✓ Pause before speaking. Before making a comment about the other parent, ask yourself: “Will this help my child, or am I trying to relieve my own frustration?”
✓ Do not ask your children to report back. Questions about the other parent’s home, relationships, finances, or activities place children in the uncomfortable position of feeling like they must choose between honesty and loyalty.
✓ Make transitions peaceful. A warm goodbye, a friendly greeting, or a simple “Have a great time!” helps children move between homes without carrying the emotional weight of their parents’ relationship.
✓ Repair when necessary. If your child overhears an argument or becomes aware of adult conflict, acknowledge it. You might say, “I’m sorry you had to hear that. That was an adult conversation, and it wasn’t your responsibility.” Repairing these moments helps children feel safe and reminds them that adult problems belong to adults.
✓ Focus on what you can control. You cannot control the other parent’s behavior, but you can control your own. Children benefit enormously when even one parent consistently models calm, respectful, child-focused behavior.
Divorce changes a family, but it does not have to rob children of their sense of security. Every time you choose to keep them out of adult conflict, you send a powerful message:
“You get to be a child. The adults will handle the adult problems.”
With warmth,
Diana
