What Kids Want Most

BEVERLY WILLETT Written by Beverly Willett

I’m willing to bet the house that no child who sat on Santa’s knee this past Christmas wished for mommy and daddy to split up and live in separate houses.  And I don’t need a scientific survey to back that up.

It’s not complicated, folks.  Unless family life is literally a living hell (most marriages are low-conflict), kids simply don’t wish to be part of a broken family.  And they don’t want to travel back and forth between homes.  Or negotiate for attention with stepmoms and stepdads, stepbrothers and stepsisters, boyfriends and girlfriends.  Somehow I don’t think that’s what the little girl in AT&T’s “more is better” commercial had in mind either.

Every year, however, approximately one million kids get what they don’t wish for. Each year more couples file for divorce in January than in any other month, too, playing Santa on Christmas and pulling the plug on New Year’s.  It was hard enough when my ex left right before Christmas.  Do other parents really think they’re sparing their children by waiting until after the holidays?  Giving children one last moment of innocence and the next showing them the limits of just how far Santa is willing to go when it comes to Santa’s happiness versus theirs?  If there’s a teachable moment in bombarding kids with a banquet of new electronics, sports paraphernalia, dolls and gadgets in one moment and rendering the family obsolete in the next, I’m missing it.

It’s mind-boggling to me, too, when proponents of shared parenting say that equal visitation time is fair because it gives children a voice, thereby serving their best interests.  Let’s not delude ourselves.  Forcing divorce down our children’s throats, splitting them in two and doling out their parts equally between mom and dad has nothing to do with what kids really want.  I don’t doubt some shared parenting advocates (and parents) have their hearts in the right place.  It’s true there’s rampant injustice in our family courts.  Undoubtedly some parents get the shaft when it comes to spending time with their children post-divorce.  But it’s the children of divorce who are the primary and most consistently ignored group of victims in America.

And if divorce professionals and parents truly wanted to honor the best interests of children, those wishes could drive down the number of family courts, matrimonial attorneys and divorces.  More people and more resources would support efforts to help spouses solve their marital discord and hold their families together.  Communities would unite to help shore up families.  And state legislators across the nation would begin counteracting the tremendous damage of no-fault divorce by enacting divorce reform legislation.

A few weeks ago I conducted a small non-scientific Internet survey of articles and blogs on the topic of what children want most.  The most prevalent answers boiled down to this – children want to be loved and valued, to know that they’re special, and to spend time with their parents.  There’s no better way to accomplish that than for parents to make every effort to repair their marriages and keep their families together.  Research shows that marriage is far and away the gold standard when it comes to the welfare of children on every significant level of well-being. Children of divorce, on the other hand, face a host of difficulties, including dying on average five years earlier than their peers from intact families.  And no amount of shared parenting, mediated divorces or improvement in co-parenting skills can ever compensate for those losses.

So here’s my advice to parents in 2014, whether you’re separated or still together but contemplating divorce.  Don’t listen to your lawyers or your therapists (unless they’re of the pro-marriage variety).  Don’t listen to friends who tell you to split either.  Listen to your kids instead.

That doesn’t mean putting them on the spot, of course, merely so they can validate what you want to hear.   Kids want you to be happy, and that means they’re also eager to please.  But put yourself in their place and listen to their hearts; that will tell you all you need to know.

And if you still have doubts about trying to save your marriage get your hands on every book and article you can about the effects of divorce on children.  Find a marriage-friendly therapist and turn that next stone.  Rent a copy of The Parent Trap and watch it with your kids.  It’s no mystery why that movie was so popular.

But my situation is different, you say.  No it’s not.  Not unless you’re among the minority of marriages with high conflict or physical abuse.  You’re just like everybody else — you want to be happy, your spouse wants to be happy, and your children want to be happy.  And the best way to make that happen is to save your marriage and your family from divorce if you can.

It’s true that saving your marriage may depend on getting your own spouse on-board, too, especially if you want in and he or she wants out.

Still, it all begins with a wish.

Post By beverlyw (105 Posts)

Connect

Comment Policy:This website will not share or publish your email address. Make sure you enter the (*) required information where indicated. Basic HTML code is allowed.

Leave a Comment

*

Coalition For Divorce Reform

The Legal Journey of No-Fault Divorce in America

by Matt Johnston Introduction The evolution of no-fault divorce in the U.S. is intertwined with cultural and social transformation. Originating from revolutionary reforms in early 20th-century Russia, the concept of dissolving a marriage without proving or even claiming fault found its way into American discourse, challenging traditional views on marriage and divorce. It is no […]

 

 

 

Navigating Your Child’s First Christmas After Divorce: Tips for Emotional Support

By Cathy Meyer The first Christmas after a divorce can be an emotional rollercoaster for children. It’s a time typically filled with family traditions and comforting routines, but this year, those traditions might feel different—or even broken. As a parent, your heart aches to shield your child from the sadness and uncertainty this season may […]

 

 

 

Standing for Marriage Even After Divorce

By Lisa Ann McKinley My name is Lisa Ann McKinley and I’m standing for my marriage. This is my testimony about where I am in my marriage and how my faith journey changed after attending the November retreat by Catholics for Marriage Restoration and the Archdiocese of Atlanta. I originally wrote this for my family […]

 

 

 

No-Fault Divorce is Bad For Kids. Divorce Justice is the Answer.

By Katy Faust My name is Katy Faust and I am the founder and president of Them Before Us. We are a global movement defending children’s right to their mother and father. That makes us fierce opponents of divorce. “Divorce” is another term for the death of a family. With it often comes the death […]

 

 

 

Strengthening Marriages in Florida: A Template for Divorce Reform, Complemented by the Latest in Technology

By Seth Eisenberg In the spring of 2000, Jane and Michael stood hand in hand at the altar, excited yet mindful of the challenges that lay ahead. They were like any other young couple—full of hope, but also cautious about the realities of married life. Two years earlier, Florida had introduced the Marriage Preparation and […]

 

 

 

Suffer Little Children

by Jason Williams Getting older is weird, at least if you have kids. It’s like doing 30 on the Interstate. Everything else is moving around you so fast that you feel like you’re standing still. I see it the most in my kids’ clothes. Pants, dresses, etc., start out too big so they can grow […]

 

 

 

The Latest Scare Cards to Prop up No-Fault Divorce

By Beverly Willett After a rash of rumors about a Republican plot to end unilateral no-fault divorce, a writer for The Atlantic has weighed in. The piece devotes exactly one paragraph to the claim, asserting that “Texas has a chance of actually doing it” because Republicans occupy top seats in the executive branch and control […]

 

 

 

Talking Points from The Longevity Project

1. Children from divorced families died almost five years earlier than those from intact families [page 80]
2. Facing parental divorce during childhood was the single strongest social predictor of early death, many years into the future [p. 80]
3. Having one’s parents divorce during childhood was a much stronger predictor of mortality risk than was parental death [p. 80]
4. The experience of parental divorce was strongly linked to earlier mortality from all causes, including accidents, cancers, and cardiovascular disease [p. 82]...Read more
 
 

Study Demonstrates Reduction in Military Divorce Due to Marriage Education

Findings from a large, randomized controlled trial of couple education are presented in this brief report. Married Army couples were assigned to either PREP for Strong Bonds (n = 248) delivered by Army chaplains or to a no-treatment control group (n = 228)...

DOWNLOAD FULL STUDY HERE