Archive for the ‘Healing’ Category


“My ex brings the fuel and I refuse to light the match.”

This wonderful nugget of wisdom comes from CD, an active member of the CoParenting101.org group on Facebook.  CD also made the following observation from the trenches of his co-parenting situation:

Funny how standing your ground (or reinforcing established boundaries) is more effective when you don’t return anger. In most cases, anger is a clear sign of needs and/or wants unfulfilled.

CD’s words bring to mind several truths that can help us to be our best selves as co-parents:

1. The only person you can control is yourself.

2. It takes two to fight.

3.  Just as we teach our children to take responsibility for their actions and choices, we must do the same.  You can’t say, “My ex made me light the match!”

4. Maintaining boundaries is essential to a functional co-parenting partnership.

5. Your co-parent may lash out at you, but her vitriol isn’t always about you.  But it’s easier (and more familiar) to fight with your ex than it is to be introspective, to take responsibility for what’s missing in your own life, or to do the emotional work required to truly put the old relationship behind you and move on.

CD’s fuel/fire analogy reminded us of something another co-parenting dad shared  once:

My ex reminds me of Wile E. Coyote, always trying to blow up the Roadrunner (that’s me) or drop heavy objects on him.  And all of his schemes backfire, and while he ends up burned to a crisp or flattened or falling off the edge of a cliff, Roadrunner just keeps speeding past, oblivious, not even acknowledging him I’m not oblivious to my ex’s anger, but I don’t let it destroy me either.

Sometimes humor can help you keep your cool when things get heated.

We reject the cultural presumption that divorce has to be synonymous wit acrimony and that kids have to be casualties, even years down the road because one parent or both wouldn’t stop playing with matches.  You don’t have to be friends with your ex, but you can commit, for your children’s sake, to being the bigger co-parent.  That’s not always an easy task, but your children deserve your best effort.

So the next time your ex wants you to light his fire, refuse. Because–to paraphrase the immortal words of Smokey the Bear–”Only YOU can prevent co-parenting fires.”

Come join the conversation on our Facebook page!  A diverse group of co-parents engage there, and they have lots to say about not letting their exes’ anger get the best of them.

More
Tags: , , ,   |  Posted under Bigger Co-Parent Fatigue Syndrome, Co-Parenting ABCs, Healing, Quote of the Day, Resources  |  Comments  No Comments  |
  • Share/Bookmark
Last Updated on Thursday, 2 February 2012 | 03:59

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

“Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.”

It has been said that the co-parent’s charge is: “Love your child more than you hate your ex.” While Dr. King was not directing these words at co-parents specifically, they certainly ring true for us. These, like so many of his words, are full of universal truth, challenging us to be our best selves.

We bring light when we make loving our children and meeting their needs–not scheming against, competing with, or playing tit-for-tat with our former partners–our priority. We bring light when we remember that two wrongs don’t make a right. When our parenting priorities are in order, we drive out the darkness and brighten our children’s lives.

What are you committed to–light or darkness? Remaining locked in high-levels of conflict with your ex…or giving your children the emotional freedom and lightness that comes with being spared a front-row seat at their parents’ never-ending battle royale? You can’t do both. Choose light…for your children’s sake.

More
Posted under Co-Parenting ABCs, Healing  |  Comments  1 Comment  |
  • Share/Bookmark
Last Updated on Monday, 16 January 2012 | 09:40