What 3 Greatest Gift You Can Give To Your Children by
Co-Parenting?
A successful divorce is one in which the parents divorce each
other but do not require the child to divorce one of the
parents, either as a result of parental conflict or by one
parent not being available to the child.
It is a well-established fact that a child experiencing the
dissolution of the family structure will do better if the
parents are able to get along and reduce trauma in an already
traumatic experience. Co-parenting can be a viable option when
it is implemented by parents who want it to work because they
understand that the child's needs supersede their own self
interest, and it can be successful and rewarding for both the
child and the parents.
So, what exactly the 3 greatest gift you can give to your
children by co-parenting? Read on and I will reveal it to you
the 3 greatest gift you can give by co-parenting.
1. Co-parenting will let your children focus on what really
matters to them.
Supportive co-parenting is important for a child's well being.
Children need to experience a strong and cooperative
relationship between their parents. Mothers and fathers who
agree on most parenting issues and who support each other's
efforts create an environment that allows children to grow and
thrive. This type of atmosphere gives children the opportunity
to focus on what matters to them, such as school, their friends
and activities and not their parents' disagreements.
Children experience supportive co-parenting when they receive
the same message from both parents and when they observe their
parents supporting each other's parenting efforts.
When mothers and fathers can agree on parenting decisions, the
positive benefits of co-parenting are seen. These decisions
range from the routine, such as agreeing that bedtime is 8 p.m.,
to the philosophical, such as beliefs about what is best for the
child.
2. Co-parenting will minimize the level of stress your divorce
brings to your children.
Cooperative co-parenting becomes the single most important
element in creating a stress-free and conflict-free family plan.
Divorce brings about many changes in the life of the children.
One stressful change may be in their immediate support network.
This might mean a loss of friendships and school ties if the
divorce requires moving. It might also include changing
relationships with extended family members after the divorce.
Cooperative parents strive to keep changes at the minimum. They
know that children best benefit from keeping the relationship
ties in their lives that were meaningful and important to them
prior to the divorce. When changes are necessary, informing the
children ahead of time will help them adjust better.
3. Co-parenting will help not put your children in the middle of
your divorce conflict.
The hallmark of effective co-parenting is effective
communication and negotiation skills. Learning these skills will
help children develop better, grow better and rarely be put in
the middle of divorce conflict. Remember children don't deserve
to be caught in the middle of divorce conflict. It hurt them.
Divorce is never the children's business.
You now have the 3 greatest gift you can give to your children
by co-parenting. Co-parenting will let your children focus on
what really matters to them. Co-parenting will minimize the
level of stress your divorce brings to your children. And
lastly, co-parenting will help not put your children in the
middle of your divorce conflict.
If you are having difficulty parenting with your children's
other parent then make your move now. Remedy your situation by
getting a free copy of my ebook "8 Essential Steps to
Cooperative Parenting and Divorce." Likewise, you can learn
effective divorce parenting from my other ebook "101 Ways To
Raise 'Divorced' Children to Successfully." For more
information, please visit my website.
With the above information, I hope you will become an empowered
divorced parent and believe that you can raise healthy, happy
and successful children even if you're divorce.
Copyright by Ruben Francia. All Rights Reserved.
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