Co-Parenting
By
Armin Brott
Dear MrDad: My soon-to-be ex and I both want
to spend a lot of time with our children and we're trying to
work out custody plan that both of us think is fair. A couple
we know that got divorced are co-parenting their children. But
other people have told us that sharing custody causes problems
for everyone. Who's right?
A: The best way to maintain a strong relationship
with your children is to spend as much time with them as you
possibly can.
Joint physical custody provides the best guarantee of regular
contact with your kids. In most states, joint physical custody
is defined simply as "frequent and continuing contact," which
covers everything from equally splitting expenses, decision-making,
and time with the kids to arrangements that are basically indistinguishable
from sole mother custody with occasional visitation by the father.
So pursue as much physical custody as you can reasonably manage.
This is probably going to be somewhere between 30 and 50 percent.
Unless there are extenuating circumstances, don't shoot for more
than 50 percent: your children need their mother just as much
as they need you and your ex needs them just as much as you do.
Why go for co-parenting? Simply put, because it's the best thing
for everyone.
* Parents like it. Former couples who share physical custody
of their children are happier with their custody arrangements
than those who don't. They fight less and are generally more
satisfied with the overall outcome of their break-up.
* Fathers like it too. Co-parenting dads are "more likely
than nonresidential fathers to share in decision making about
their children and to be satisfied with the legal and physical
custody arrangements," says researcher Margaret Little.
* Judges like it. Parents who co-parent are half as likely to
go back to court to settle their disputes as sole-custody parents.
* Kids feel more secure. Seeing their parents break up can make
children feel frightened and out of control and, perhaps, unloved.
And if one parent disappears--or almost disappears--these feelings
get worse.
* Everyone wins. "At its best joint custody presents the
possibility that each family member can 'win' in post divorce
life rather than insisting that a custody decision identify 'winners
and losers,'" writes social policy expert Ross Thompson. "Mothers
and fathers each win a significant role in the lives of their
offspring and children win as a consequence."
* It increases father-child contact. Fathers who share physical
custody of their children have far better visitation records
and keep in much closer contact with their children than dads
who don't have as much time with their kids.
* It nearly eliminates child-support default. The US Census Bureau
found that over 90 percent of men with joint physical custody
pay their entire child support obligation on time. Compliance
goes up even further when adjusted for unemployment, underemployment,
disability, or other legitimate inability to pay.
* It promotes flexibility. In the early stages of co-parenting,
some kids may find it a little confusing. But it usually doesn't
take them long to get used to the idea. Co-parented children
quickly learn to cope with and accept the different ways their
parents do things.
When it works and when it doesn't
Most experts now agree that co-parenting is the best option.
But they also agree that there are times when it just won't
work and shouldn't be implemented.
Co-parenting works best if you and your ex....
* Live near each other. Even though they're moving back and forth
between two homes, your children should be able to keep going
to the same school and participate in the same extracurricular
activities.
* See each other's value to the children. You and she must recognize
how important it is for the other to have a healthy relationship
with your children, and how important those relationships are
to the kids themselves.
* Can cooperate. You need to be willing to shelve your personal
differences in the interests of working together. This means
trying to come up with a set of common rules for behavior, discipline,
and parenting style. And if you can't agree completely, at least
accept and respect each other's choices.
* Don't fight in front of the children. Experts have found that
the single most accurate predictor of children's long-term adjustment
and well-being after divorce is the level of conflict between
the parents.
Co-parenting won't work if you and your ex ...
* Are constantly at each other's throats. Even supporters of
co-parenting agree that it's not a good idea in cases where
the parents are verbally, emotionally, or physically abusive
to each other in front of the children. Realistically, though,
this is pretty rare. Although about 25% of divorces fall into
the "high-conflict" category, only 10% of them--2.5%
of all divorces involving children--show any kind of correlation
between joint custody or frequent visitation arrangements and
poor child adjustment, says John Guidubaldi, a Commissioner
with the United States Commission On Child & Family Welfare.
* Put your kids in the middle. Too many parents use their children
to carry messages back and forth and to inform them of the other
parent's activities. Researchers Christy Buchanan and her colleagues
found that adolescents with higher feelings of being caught in
the middle were more likely to experience depression and anxiety
and engage in more deviant behavior such as smoking, drugs, fighting,
stealing than adolescents who experienced more cooperation between
their parents.
* Live too far apart.
Since its debut, Armin
Brott's New Father series has been making life easier--and
a lot more fun--for fathers and mothers around the world.
Overflowing with practical advice and month-by-month developmental
descriptions (of fetus, baby and dad), the books in the New
Father series also examine the roles of fathers and
encourage men to continually take an active role in rearing
their children.
Visit Armin's website.