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August 15, 2025“When my marriage ended, I thought the hardest part was over. I was wrong. Trying to explain to my 7-year-old why Daddy wouldn’t be living with us anymore while I was barely holding it together myself? That nearly broke me.”
Your Kids Are Watching Everything
What I wish someone had told me: it’s not the actual divorce that shapes how well your kids cope, it’s how the adults handle it. Kids are resilient, but they’re also like emotional sponges. They pick up on everything: the tense phone calls, the eye rolls when the other parent’s name is mentioned, the quiet moments when you’re trying not to say something during pickup.
The good news? This means you have way more control over your child’s emotional well-being than you might think. Even if your relationship with your ex is complicated (and whose isn’t?), there are concrete things you can do to help your kids feel secure and loved through this whole process.
We’ve worked with divorced families over and the ones where kids do best have one thing in common: parents who put their children’s emotional needs first, even when it’s incredibly hard to do.
What Divorce Really Looks Like Through Your Child’s Eyes
Before we talk about strategies, let’s think about what your child is actually experiencing. Kids don’t understand divorce the same way adults do. They’re not thinking about irreconcilable differences or growing apart – they’re wondering if it’s their fault, if they’ll still see both parents, and if their whole world is about to fall apart.
The Questions Running Through Their Mind
“Did I cause this because I was bad?” This is probably the biggest one, especially for younger kids. Children naturally think the world revolves around them, so when big changes happen, they often assume they’re to blame.
“Will I still see both my parents?” Even if you’ve explained the custody arrangement a hundred times, kids need constant reassurance that both parents are staying in their lives.
“Where will I live? Where are my toys going to be?” The practical stuff matters to kids. They want to know where they’ll sleep, can bring their favorite stuffed animal to both houses, and how their routine is going to change.
“Are Mom and Dad going to keep fighting?” Kids pick up on conflict even when you think you’re hiding it well. They worry about future arguments and often feel responsible for keeping the peace.
Age Makes a Big Impact
How kids react to divorce really depends on their age and what they’re capable of understanding:
Preschoolers (Ages 3-5)
Little kids often blame themselves and might regress to earlier behaviors. You might see:
- Going back to thumb sucking or bedwetting
- Becoming more clingy or having separation anxiety
- Acting out or having more tantrums than usual
- Asking the same questions over and over: “When is Daddy coming home?”
The key with little ones is keeping explanations simple and reassuring them that both parents love them no matter what.
Elementary Age (Ages 6-11)
School-age kids understand more but still struggle with the concept. They might:
- Hold onto hope that you’ll get back together
- Feel caught in the middle and try to fix things
- Worry about practical things like money or where they’ll live
- Have trouble concentrating at school or show changes in their grades
These kids need clear, honest information presented in age-appropriate ways.
Teenagers (Ages 12+)
Teens often have the hardest time because they understand what’s happening but feel powerless to change it. You might see:
- Anger directed at one or both parents
- Taking sides or feeling pressure to choose
- Acting out or engaging in risky behaviors
- Withdrawing from family or friends
Teenagers need respect for their feelings and some control over decisions that affect them.
The Golden Rules of Protecting Your Kids
Keep Your Adult Problems Away From Your Kids
This is probably the hardest thing we ask parents to do, but it’s also the most important. Your kids shouldn’t hear about financial disputes, custody disagreements, or what a jerk you think your ex is. They love both of you, and hearing one parent criticize the other puts them in an impossible position.
Save those conversations for your friends, your therapist, or your lawyer – not your children.
Your Ex is Still Their Parent
Even if your ex-partner drives you absolutely crazy, they’re still your child’s parent. Kids need permission to love both of you without feeling guilty about it. When you speak respectfully about your ex (even when you don’t feel like it), you’re giving your child a gift.
This doesn’t mean you have to pretend everything is perfect, but there’s a difference between “Your dad and I disagree about bedtime” and “Your dad never follows through on anything.”
Consistency is Your Best Friend
When everything else feels chaotic, routines and consistency become even more important. Try to keep bedtimes, mealtimes, and other daily routines as similar as possible between both houses. If you and your ex can agree on basic rules – like homework time, screen limits, or chore expectations – your kids will feel more secure.
We know this is easier said than done, especially if both parents have different parenting styles, but even small consistencies help.
Common Co-Parenting Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them)
Using Your Kids as Messengers
“Tell your mother I need the support check by Friday” or “Ask your dad why he can’t pick you up on time” puts kids in the middle of adult conflicts. They shouldn’t have to relay messages between parents. Use email, text, or a co-parenting app instead.
Making Kids Choose Sides
Never ask your child who they want to live with, which parent they love more, or make them feel like they have to pick a team. Kids love both parents, and forcing them to choose creates guilt and anxiety that can last for years.
Over-Sharing About the Divorce
Your 8-year-old doesn’t need to know about alimony disputes or custody battles. Keep information age-appropriate and focused on what directly affects them: “Mom and Dad are getting divorced, but we both love you very much and that will never change.”
Competing With Your Ex
Resist the urge to be the “fun parent” or to buy your child’s affection. Kids don’t need two Disney Dads or guilt-trip moms – they need stable, loving parents who can work together for their benefit.
Assuming Kids Are Fine Because They’re Not Complaining
Some kids become little adults during divorce, trying to take care of everyone else’s emotions. Just because your child seems to be handling things well doesn’t mean they don’t need extra support and attention.
Creating Stability in Two Homes
The Practical Stuff
Help your kids feel at home in both houses by making sure they have:
- Their own space and belongings in each home
- Important comfort items (favorite stuffed animal, blanket) that can travel back and forth
- Photos of both parents in each house
- Similar basic routines and rules when possible
The Emotional Stuff
- Let kids talk about the other parent without feeling like they’re betraying you
- Don’t interrogate them about what happens at the other house
- Respect their relationship with your ex, even if yours is difficult
- Help them stay connected to extended family on both sides
When Your Ex Makes Co-Parenting Difficult
Let’s be honest – not every ex-partner is going to be cooperative. Maybe they bad-mouth you to the kids, don’t follow through on commitments, or seem to deliberately make things harder. This can be frustrating, but there are still things you can do:
Control What’s Actually Yours to Control
Look, I spent months obsessing over what my ex was doing wrong. Was he letting the kids stay up too late? Why wasn’t he packing their lunches the way I would? I was driving myself crazy trying to manage two households from one kitchen table.
My therapist finally asked me, ‘What can you actually change here?’ The answer hit me like a brick wall – practically nothing about him, but everything about me.
So I stopped. I stopped checking what time he put them to bed (according to my 6-year-old’s detailed reports). I stopped sending passive-aggressive texts about forgotten backpacks. Instead, I focused on making our house feel like home when they walked through the door.
Don’t Stoop to Their Level
It’s tempting to fight fire with fire, but this usually just creates more chaos for your kids. Take the high road, even when it’s really hard.
Document Everything
I know this sounds cold, but hear me out. After working with divorced families for over a decade, I’ve seen too many parents caught off-guard in court because they couldn’t remember specific dates or incidents.
One client came to me frustrated because her ex consistently dropped the kids off hours late, but when her lawyer asked for specifics, she could only say ‘it happens all the time.’ That’s not enough for a judge.
I’m not talking about documenting every small disagreement – that’ll drive you crazy and turn you into someone you don’t want to be. But when something directly impacts your child’s safety or well-being, write it down. Date, time, what happened, how your child reacted.
Keep it factual, not emotional. Instead of ‘Ex was being a complete jerk and showed up drunk again,’ write ‘Dad arrived 2 hours late to pick up Sarah on 3/15. Smelled like alcohol, speech was slurred. Sarah seemed anxious and asked to stay home.’
This isn’t about building a case against your ex – it’s about protecting your kids if things get worse.
Get Professional Support
Sometimes, co-parenting gets tough, and that’s okay. When communication starts to break down, getting outside help can make a big difference. Family therapists, mediators, or parenting coordinators can offer guidance, help you find common ground, and give you tools to work through the hard stuff together.
When to Trust Your Gut That Something’s Wrong
Parents always ask me, ‘How do I know if my kid needs help, or if this is just normal divorce stuff?’ After fifteen years of working with families, here are the signs that make me recommend we dig deeper:
Changes That Stick Around (More Than 3-4 Months)
- Your once-great sleeper is up all night or sleeping way too much
- They’ve lost interest in food or are stress-eating constantly
- Grades are tanking even though they used to love school
- They’ve dropped friends and activities they used to be excited about
- Your 8-year-old is suddenly talking like a baby or wetting the bed again
The Emotional Stuff That Feels Too Big
- Crying that seems to come out of nowhere and won’t stop
- Constant worry about things like ‘What if Mom gets in a car accident?’
- Explosive anger over tiny things (like the wrong color cup)
- Saying things like ‘It’s my fault you got divorced’ no matter how much you reassure them
Behaviors That Feel Wrong for Your Kid
- Total meltdowns about switching houses (not just normal sadness)
- Refusing to go to one parent’s house after months of doing fine
- Suddenly becoming the family caretaker – doing everyone’s laundry, mediating fights
- Acting out in ways that are completely new and extreme
The Bottom Line: If your kid’s teacher is mentioning changes you haven’t seen, or if your gut says something’s off, trust that instinct. Sometimes the kids who worry me most are the ones trying to be ‘perfect’ and take care of everyone else.
Building a New Normal
The First Year Is the Toughest
The first year after a divorce tends to be the hardest, for everyone. There’s a lot of change happening all at once: new routines, different living arrangements, and the emotional reality of a new family dynamic. Give yourself and your children time to adjust. Patience goes a long way during this transition.
Look for the Bright Spots
Divorce isn’t easy, but it can come with some unexpected silver linings for children, especially over time. Some kids end up having:
- Less exposure to daily conflict
- Stronger one-on-one relationships with each parent
- A chance to build resilience and flexibility
- A better understanding that families can look different and still be full of love
Create New Things to Look Forward To
When everything familiar gets turned upside down, kids crave something they can count on. I learned this from watching my own clients’ families find their rhythm again.
One mom told me her 6-year-old was struggling with the back-and-forth between houses. Nothing felt ‘normal’ anymore. So they started ‘Waffle Sundays’ – just the two of them making ridiculous waffle combinations and rating them like food critics. Her daughter still talks about their ‘chocolate chip with sprinkles disaster’ from three months ago.
Easy Traditions That Actually Work:
- Monday Night Movie Pick – Let kids choose the movie and make their own popcorn mix
- Bedtime Story Swap – You tell them a story about your childhood, they make up one for you
- Saturday Morning Kitchen Dance Party – Blast music while making breakfast (neighbors might judge, kids won’t care)
- Wednesday ‘Weird Dinner’ Night – Breakfast for dinner, picnic on the living room floor, whatever breaks the routine
- Sunday Planning Session – Let them help choose next week’s activities, makes them feel more in control
The magic isn’t in doing something Pinterest-perfect. It’s in creating those ‘Oh yeah, we always do this’ moments that make a house feel like home.
One dad started reading the same bedtime book series across both houses – when the kids were with mom, he’d text them which chapter he read that night so they could ‘read together’ even apart. Sounds cheesy, but his 8-year-old told me it made him feel like ‘Dad was still with us even when he wasn’t.
Working With Schools and Other Support Systems
Keep Teachers in the Know
Let your child’s teacher know about the divorce and any custody arrangements that might affect school. Teachers can be valuable allies in watching for signs that your child is struggling and can provide extra support during the school day.
Maintain Other Stable Relationships
Extended family, family friends, coaches, and mentors can provide additional stability during this transition. Don’t isolate yourself or your children from these support systems.
Consider Professional Support
Many kids benefit from talking to a counselor during their parents’ divorce, even if they seem to be coping well. A neutral adult can help them process their feelings and develop healthy coping strategies.
How to Talk to Your Ex Without Losing Your Mind
Let me be honest – most of the co-parenting advice out there sounds great until you’re actually trying to have a calm conversation with someone who knows exactly which buttons to push. I’ve watched parents go from zero to screaming match in about 30 seconds flat.
Here’s what I’ve seen work when emotions run high:
Let Technology Be Your Buffer
- Use co-parenting apps like Our Family Wizard or AppClose – sounds impersonal, but it saves you from those 2 AM angry text spirals
- Set up automatic calendar sharing so nobody has to ask “whose weekend is it?” seventeen times
- Send updates about school events via email – keeps things documented and less likely to turn into blame games
Pretend You’re Coworkers (Because You Kind of Are) I tell parents to imagine they’re planning a work project together. You don’t have to like your coworker, but you both want the project to succeed.
Instead of: “You never remember to pack Emma’s inhaler!” Try: “Emma’s inhaler needs to travel with her to both houses. Can we figure out a system?”
Pick Your Fights Like Your Sanity Depends on It Last week, a mom wanted to argue with her ex about letting their 10-year-old stay up until 9:30 instead of 9:00. I asked her, “Is this really going to damage your child, or does it just annoy you that he does things differently?”
Sometimes the answer is legitimately about your child’s wellbeing. But sometimes – and I say this with love – it’s about control.
The Reality Check Question I Give Every Parent: Before sending that text or making that call, ask yourself: “Five years from now, will my kid remember this issue, or will they remember how their parents treated each other?”
One dad told me that question saved him from at least twenty unnecessary arguments. His kids are happier, and honestly, so is he.
The Long Game: Thinking About Your Kids’ Future
They’re Always Learning From You
I had a mom tell me last month, ‘My 7-year-old asked me why I don’t yell at Daddy anymore when he’s late.’ She realized her daughter had been watching her learn to manage her anger over six months of therapy.
Your kids are studying how you handle the hard stuff – not just what you say, but how you actually act when you’re frustrated or hurt. The way you bounce back from disappointment today is teaching them how to handle their own setbacks twenty years from now.
Protect Their Relationships
Your kids will grow up and form their own romantic relationships someday. How you navigate your divorce and co-parenting relationship will influence their beliefs about love, commitment, and how to handle relationship difficulties.
Remember Why You’re Doing This
On the hardest days, when co-parenting feels impossible and you just want to give up on being civil, remember that this is all for your kids. They deserve to feel loved and secure, even if their parents’ marriage didn’t work out.
Special Considerations for New Jersey Families
Understanding New Jersey Divorce Laws
New Jersey courts prioritize the best interests of children in custody decisions. If you’re struggling with co-parenting arrangements, family courts offer resources like parenting coordinators and family mediation services that can help.
School District Considerations
Many New Jersey school districts have counselors and social workers who can provide additional support for children dealing with divorce. Don’t hesitate to reach out to these resources if your child is struggling academically or socially.
Local Support Resources
New Jersey has many support groups for divorced parents and children. Organizations like Parents Without Partners and local community centers often offer programs specifically designed to help families navigate divorce.
When Professional Help Makes Sense
For Your Children
Consider therapy for your child if:
- They’re showing significant behavioral or emotional changes
- They’re having trouble adjusting after several months
- They’re expressing concerning thoughts about the divorce or themselves
- You want to give them a safe space to process their feelings
For Co-Parenting Support
Family therapy or co-parenting counseling might help if:
- You and your ex are struggling to communicate effectively
- There are ongoing conflicts that affect your children
- You need help developing consistent rules and routines
- Your children are caught in the middle of adult disagreements
For Yourself
Don’t forget about your own mental health during this process. Kids do better when their parents are emotionally healthy, so taking care of yourself isn’t selfish – it’s essential.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I tell my kids about the divorce?
Have this conversation together with your ex if possible. Keep it simple and age-appropriate: “Mom and Dad have decided we can’t live together anymore, but we both love you very much and that will never change.” Answer their questions honestly but don’t over-share adult details.
Should I stay married for the kids?
Research shows that children do better in a peaceful single-parent home than in a conflict-filled two-parent home. Kids are resilient and can thrive in many different family structures when they feel loved and secure.
What if my child wants to live with the other parent full-time?
Try not to take this personally. Kids often go through phases where they prefer one parent’s house for various reasons. Talk with your child about their concerns and see if there are compromises that might help, but also consider whether this might be in their best interest.
How do I handle it when my ex bad-mouths me to the kids?
This is incredibly hurtful and unfair. Stay calm with your children and resist the urge to defend yourself or criticize their other parent. You might say something like, “I’m sorry that conversation upset you. What do you think about it?” Let your actions speak louder than words.
When is it okay to introduce a new partner to my kids?
There’s no magic timeline, but most experts suggest waiting until you’re in a committed relationship and have been dating for at least six months. When you do introduce someone new, take it slowly and don’t expect instant bonding.
Moving Forward With Hope
Divorce is one of life’s most challenging experiences, but it doesn’t have to define your family’s future. With patience, commitment to putting your children first, and sometimes professional support, families can not only survive divorce but emerge stronger and healthier.
Your kids don’t need perfect parents or a perfect situation – they need parents who love them, support them, and work together on their behalf, even when it’s difficult. Every step you take toward healthy co-parenting is an investment in your children’s emotional well-being and future relationships.
Remember, this gets easier with time. The raw emotions of early divorce will fade, new routines will become natural, and your family will find its new rhythm. Focus on progress, not perfection, and celebrate the small victories along the way.
Ready for Support?
At the ZPH Group, we understand the unique challenges that New Jersey families face during and after divorce. Our therapists have extensive experience helping children, teens, and families navigate this difficult transition with resilience and hope.
Whether your child is showing signs of struggle or you want to be proactive about supporting their mental health, we’re here to help. We can provide individual counseling for your child, co-parenting support, or family therapy to help everyone adjust to your new normal.
Give us a call to discuss how we can support your family during this transition. You don’t have to figure this out alone – we’re here to help you protect your children’s emotional well-being while you all adjust to your new chapter.
Contact us today to schedule a confidential consultation and take the first step toward building a healthier future for your family.
Crisis Resources
If you or your child are having thoughts of self-harm, please seek immediate help:
- National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: 988
- Crisis Text Line: Text HOME to 741741
- New Jersey Mental Health Cares: 1-866-202-HELP (4357)
- Emergency Services: 911
About the Author: The clinical team at the ZPH Group consists of psychologists and professional counselors with experience in family therapy and divorce counseling. We specialize in helping children, teens, and families throughout New Jersey navigate major life transitions with professional support and compassionate care.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical or legal advice. Always consult with qualified professionals regarding your specific family situation and your children’s mental health needs.




