The Decision to Divorce and Its Impact on Children
By Reb Brooks
Licensed Psychologist
Over the years there have been a plethora of studies and research
projects designed to examine the effect that parental divorce
has on children. Researchers and health care specialists have
tried to answer such questions as whether it is better for the
children if parents avoid divorce even if it means living in a
“bad marriage”, the classic example of “staying
together for the children”, or if divorce is a better alternative
for all involved. Is the effect of divorce more pronounced for
younger children versus older children, or vice versa? If parents
choose divorce, what is the best plan for visitation and custody?
For every study or case that supports “staying in the marriage”,
there is another that would support the opposite and for every
case where a professional reasonably demonstrates that it would
be better for the children if the parents remained married there
is most likely another who could reasonably argue for divorce.
One of the main reasons these questions are so hard to answer
is that there are so many factors that affect children it is impossible
to identify which are specifically related to the divorce itself.
For example, divorce often results in a change of living arrangements,
school placement and socioeconomic status. How are we to separate
the effect of these changes on the child as separate from those
of the divorce itself? If a child’s parents divorce at the
time a child is moving from elementary school to middle school
and there is a drop in grades and social functioning, is it possible
to relate this to the divorce or is it more closely related to
the difficulty of adjusting to the changes of puberty or changes
in school structure that occur at this time?
Despite all this confusion, there do appear to be some things
we know with some certainty. Yes, divorce does have an impact
on children. It is a significant event in their lives and as a
result has a significant effect on them. It also appears to be
well demonstrated that unresolved marital strife and conflict
have a negative effect on a child’s adjustment. This appears
to be true whether parents remain married or if they divorce.
If divorce effectively reduces parental conflict it does appear
that it may be more positive than continuing a marriage that maintains
high levels of parental conflict. One problem that I have observed
in my years of work with children and families is that parental
conflict not only often survives divorce but also can indeed thrive
in divorce. Situations in which parental conflict remains high
through the separation or where the circumstances of the separation
become used as additional fuel to fire the parental conflict clearly
appear to have the most significant impact on compromising a child’s
positive adjustment. As is the case in most situations it appears
that the more significant issue is not the specific decision parents
make about whether to divorce or not but how they put that decision
into action. Once again it appears that the way we travel the
road is more significant than the specific road we choose to travel.
In my work as a psychologist and in my personal life as a husband
and a parent, I strongly support the goal of helping parents learn
how to resolve conflicts so that they can remain together in a
positive and healthy marriage. In cases where this is not possible,
however, it appears that the best course of action is to help
parents to effectively use divorce as a means of reducing conflict
rather than as a means of punishing one another and continuing
the battle as is too often the case and appears to have the most
severely negative impact on the children involved.
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