Putting your children’s best interests first

February 29, 2008

The Best Interests of Your Children

 

While conducting some research for an upcoming book within The Smart Divorce® series I had an interesting conversation with a child protection lawyer about the best interests of the children. From this lawyer’s perspective and what I see in my consulting practice and watching what goes on around me, we agreed that people often talk about it, but don’t necessarily do it – that is put their children’s best interests first. What does best interest of the children really mean? Is it fitting your schedule into your children’s or the other way around?

Defining Children’s Best Interest

There are many definitions as to what best interest means. The Geneva Convention defines it as acknowledging that every child has certain basic rights, including the right to life, his or her own name and identity, to be raised by his or her parents within a family or cultural grouping and have a relationship with both parents, even if that means they live in two different households. It sounds straightforward, but it isn’t necessarily that easy because divorce is complicated by emotions. And – these emotions if not managed, can impair your parenting skills – causing you to think you are putting your children’s best interest first, but many parents are not! This can happen when parents are overwhelmed with their own emotions causing their parenting skills to be weakened.

Simply put, the best interests of the children means doing what is best for your children. How do you achieve this when you might be feeling raw and bitter? You need to:

  • deal with your emotions (use your support network for help such as a therapist, clergy, support groups, friends and family)
  • Put your emotions on the shelf so that you can be the best parent for you children.
  • Let your children participate in activities and do what they would normally have done if you were married.

 

Children should not be punished because an

activity falls on one parent or the others time

While a parent might be supportive of an extra curricular activity, they don’t let the children participate because it falls on their time – thinking that it is punishing the other parent, when actually it is the children who suffer.

You need to recognize, that children are not possessions they are not “my children, not your children”– they still have 2 parents, you need to reframe your thinking into these children being our children.

Entry Filed under: best interests of the children, binuclear family, children, divorce, emotional divorce, family relationships, parenting, parenting support, smart divorce, the children's best interest. .

1 Comment Add your own

  • 1. Rosalind Sedacca  |  April 13, 2008 at 11:31 pm

    I appreciate your wisdom about children and divorce. It’s such a tough area with no simple answers.

    The way parents handle issues regarding their children can either be life affirming or destroying, depending upon how each parent approaches the circumstances. Parents who are blinded by blame and anger are not likely to learn much through the experience. They see their former spouse as the total problem in their life and are convinced that getting rid of that problem through divorce will bring ultimate resolution. These parents are often self-righteous about the subject and give little thought to what part they may have played in the dissolution of the marriage.

    Parents at this level of awareness are not looking to grow through the divorce process. They are more likely to ultimately find another partner with whom they have similar challenges or battles and once again find themselves caught in the pain of an unhappy relationship.

    There are others, however, for whom divorce can be a threshold into greater self-understanding and reflection. These parents don’t want to repeat the same mistake and want to be fully aware of any part they played in the failure of the marriage. Self-reflective people ask themselves questions and search within – often with the assistance of a professional counselor or therapist – to understand what they did or did not do and how it affected the connection with their spouse.

    These introspective parents consider how they might have behaved differently in certain circumstances. They question their motives and actions to make sure they came from a place of clarity and good intentions. They replay difficult periods within the marriage to see what they can learn, improve, let go of or accept. They take responsibility for their behaviors and apologize for those that were counter-productive. They also forgive themselves for errors made in the past – and look toward being able to forgive their spouse in the same light.

    I encourage all parents to consider these questions before moving on. After all, we are all models for our children.

    Best wishes,
    Rosalind Sedacca, CCT

Leave a Comment

Required

Required, hidden

Some HTML allowed:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Trackback this post  |  Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed


Categories

Links

Feeds

Calendar

February 2008
M T W T F S S
    Mar »
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
2526272829  

Recent Posts

Archives

Recent Comments

The Smart Divorce on Help, my teenager doesn’t wa…
JoAnn on Help, my teenager doesn’t wa…
LaShon Williams on More workshops added…
melody grenville on 5 steps to post divorce h…
Mark keenan on Tips to keeping organized duri…

Pages

Top Clicks

RSS The Smart Divorce