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Alison Patton

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What Smart Women Do After Divorce

Posted: 03/ 9/2012 12:00 pm

"Why do some women do well after divorce, while others get stuck?" a divorcing client asked me, confronting her worries head on. "I want to be happy again. I want to rely on myself and not be afraid of the future. I can't make it without his support, but it's tough being tied together for so many years through the kids and the money."

Indeed, financial entanglement is a double-edged sword. Moving on is much harder for women (and men) who remain connected via a custody share, child support or alimony. How do you get closure when the contact and financial dependency continue? What's the key to regaining your independence and confidence?

My answer is something most people already know, but nonetheless is the greatest challenge of divorce: You commit to being happy or commit to being right. The smartest women I know choose happiness, and this has been the key to rebuilding their life. I've observed five actions and attitudes these women adopted that made the difference in their recovery process. It's never too late to start.

#1: No More "Woe Is Me" (ideally after the first year)

Smart women make that mental shift from victim to survivor, and they take the necessary steps to get there fully.

By far the most important (and most difficult) step is to impose a statute of limitations on feeling sorry for yourself, even if the conflict is ongoing. The first year, it's normal to dwell on the loss, to cry, grieve, vent to your family and friends about every last detail. But after that, even though you're still raw, it's important you make a deliberate mind shift from seeing yourself as a victim. Regardless of what your husband did or is still doing, you don't want to make the pain of your divorce your identity and your calling card.

Your negative feelings won't disappear miraculously, and of course this isn't a one-time mind shift. Sadness and despair roll in when you least expect it. You're not unusual (nor should you be embarrassed) if you need antidepressants for some period of time to get unstuck. Many women also find it beneficial to examine their feelings in a therapeutic setting, such as private therapy, a divorce support group, or counseling services from their church/synagogue.

Friends can be a great resource, but don't use them only as a sounding board for self-pity. If you're hanging around a friend -- divorced or otherwise -- who spends her time man-bashing and telling you how you've been screwed, that friendship is keeping you stuck. Spend time (and connect online) with women who are upbeat and can be role models for moving forward with strength and optimism. Two blogs I like, created by women who did something constructive to deal with their divorce, are Chick Chain Walking Club and One Mom's Battle.

One client summed up her recovery process: "I developed the strength and discipline to give my victim feelings a shelf life ... I'd say to myself, 'I get tonight to feel sad and then tomorrow it's back to business.'"

An added benefit of taking this step is you'll be a role model for your children, especially a daughter, about how to recover from a life crisis.

#2: Accept the Economic Reality of Divorce

The smartest women come to terms with the reduced lifestyle they have after divorce. They reaffirm their priorities or commit to changing their lifestyle. They do not rely on their ex-husband as their long-term financial solution, nor do they see "finding another man" as the solution.

Unless you're wealthy or a movie star, your economic level will decrease as a result of divorce. The same income that used to run one household is now running two. Women often don't get paid the same as men for comparable work, and women's careers are impacted by choosing to raise children -- but these are facts, but not obstacles to happiness. Smart women deal with these realities in one of two ways:

• They accept this reduction in lifestyle. Their joy comes from other things, like their children and the opportunity to be an involved parent or appreciation of their job and the flexibility it affords them even if it doesn't pay as well as a high-paying career.

• If/when the timing is right, they make the decision to increase their earnings through their own means, such as a better job, increased hours, or additional education and training.

Either of these choices leads to greater peace and self-confidence.

#3: Develop a 10-Year Financial Plan

Smart women take charge of their finances during and after divorce. They hire a financial planner or an accountant to review and organize their finances and map out spending and goals for the next decade. Although daunting at first, this step is immensely empowering.

Divorce may be the first time you've managed the family finances and planned for the future. Although it feels overwhelming, don't stick your head in the sand with the naive hope that you'll be able to make it forever on what you're getting in support and assets (or that you'll meet someone who will take care of you).

First, educate yourself about financial planning through a book, seminar, or online resource. Second, find an expert (an accountant or financial planner) with whom you can review your finances and spending. (I strongly suggest you choose an expert who charges by the hour instead of on a commission basis.)

Looking at the economic reality is a wake-up call for most women. One client said after her meeting, "I quickly saw that I need to be much more thoughtful about how I use my assets and how I spend what I am getting in support. I'm now focused on my short-term goals -- reducing my spending and finding ways to supplement my income -- and my long-term goals of getting the kids through college and saving enough to have a dignified life in later years. I feel more in charge of my future and less anxious as a result."

# 4: Repeat After Me: "I Cannot Change My Ex"

Smart women recognize they can't change their ex-husband. They pick their battles, they let go of issues that don't really matter or can't be changed, and they accept with grace and maturity the general unpleasantness of an ongoing custody share -- knowing this is just the reality of divorce.

It's normal to want to have a say in how your ex behaves -- particularly related to the kids. But save yourself the struggle. In a strange way, this step is about taking control of your inner life by letting go of outside control.

Sharing custody involves a lot of frustrations. The most common ones I hear from women are: he cancels or is late; he feeds the kids junk food; there are no limits at his house on TV, video games or computer; he buys them toys/electronics you said no to, instead of buying the shoes and school clothes they need; he gripes about expenditures for the kids' extracurricular; he lets them stay up past their bedtime; he doesn't return their clothing or returns everything dirty; he doesn't make the kids do chores, so they complain when you enforce this rule at your house; he has joint custody but you still have to take the lead on doctor and dentist appointments, school, homework, extracurricular activities and sports.

Is this behavior fair or considerate? No. Is it worth getting upset over? No. Unless he is abusing the kids or repeatedly not showing up, you can't generally control these kinds of actions. It's a costly endeavor to try.

I'm not saying smart women allow themselves to be doormats -- they definitely don't. Sometimes you have to put on the business hat and confront an issue with your ex. Sometimes legal action is required. Be sure the issue warrants it and has a good probability of resulting in change. And work to let go of the rest.

#5: Focus on the Future, Commit to Growth and Introspection, And
Build a Relationship with Yourself

Smart women channel their energies post-divorce into examining their life, their goals, their mistakes and how they can learn from the past. Instead of jumping into another serious relationship (or spending their time complaining about their ex), they focus on their own life issues. They redefine their priorities and discover what's meaningful to them. They mature fully into themselves as women whose identity is not tied to the role of mother or wife.

We've seen this or been there ourselves -- how men and women "lose themselves" in marriage. For many women, their identity becomes tied to their husband or children early on, and so when the marriage ends and these roles are lost or diminished, the woman feels unsure of who she is. This is one reason divorce can be a real moment of crisis.

The smartest women I've observed use their divorce as an opportunity for growth and maturity. They take inventory of their life, mistakes and all, and devote time and energy to discovering who they are and what they want for their future. This process takes time, patience and dedication, but in the end, these women are able to put their divorce behind them. They go on to be centered, stable, self-assured, capable women who find the happiness they felt they had lost. In fact, when I asked these women if they could turn back the clock and stay married, the answer was overwhelmingly a heartfelt "no" -- they would never go back, even with all of the known challenges.

What would be on your list for recovery?

 

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"Why do some women do well after divorce, while others get stuck?" a divorcing client asked me, confronting her worries head on. "I want to be happy again. I want to rely on myself and not be afraid o...
"Why do some women do well after divorce, while others get stuck?" a divorcing client asked me, confronting her worries head on. "I want to be happy again. I want to rely on myself and not be afraid o...
 
 
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05:30 PM on 04/22/2012
Alison Patton's blogs are informative, well written, and inspiring. Several of my friends going through a divorce have found them to be of immense help.
12:43 AM on 03/16/2012
I love this article. I have been divorced for 1 year following 14 years of marriage and 3 beautiful children and it's the best decision I made. I purposely chose to be happy, look cute, and invest in my education. I strongly believe you have to forgive (it takes a while to forget) in order to move forward. You have to remove those walls of bitterness, anger, frustation and hurt; replace those thoughts with happy thoughts and see yourself where you want to be.
09:45 PM on 03/14/2012
Smart....right on! No room for bitterness, focus on the future and growth. Love this article. Thanks.
12:04 PM on 03/14/2012
What a fantastic article! I'm approaching the 1 year mark (asked ex to leave when my daughter was 10 weeks old after finding out he started an affair during my 9th month of pregnancy and didn't intend to work on the marriage). Since that day I have consciously decided to live as newly empowered, building a life of my choosing rather than being trapped/consumed by an unhealthy marriage. I fight every day to learn & grow from this experience, and it is a fight, because this will not define who am I but rather will become a part of my strength and wisdom going forward. My divorce was quick & amicable, ex did not get a lawyer, though I did, as I was transparent and fair with the proceedings. He sent a thank you note on the day the divorce was final! I still can't stand the site of him, and didn't do it for him, but acted as a woman my daughter can look up to one day.

As the 1 year mark hits, so has the common post-divorce depression and I'm trying to not put arbitrary expectations or timelines on how I feel, as I'm getting frustrated that I'm not 'feeling better' after a year, though I'm doing everything in my power to take this experience as an opportunity to grow. I write a little blog to share some of my experiences in case there are others who can relate wonderwomananew.blogspot.com
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Alison Patton
03:45 PM on 03/15/2012
dianap2010: The gift of being done with the legal divorce is you can now really concentrate on the healing process. That can take another year or more. From what you've written, I'd say you're doing remarkably well after just 1 year.
03:19 PM on 03/13/2012
..married my spouse for all the right reasons,things were great. As he became
more involved with his high-profile profession, there was less and less time
for our 3 children...and none, for me. Being Head Coach of an excellent college football
program...a job he describes as 24/7/365 ! Anytime day or night, we know
there can be a phone call about players...but that does
not require him to short his family.

Seeing other marriages in this profession and yes, some fail...but many are thriving.
These others have found a way to give time, attention and energy to their spouses.

After 20+ years, I began feeling like I wasn't really married anymore...that I was a
personal assistant and nanny. I stuffed away all of my needs that were not
being met until there wasn't room for any more. A younger man started paying
attention and one thing led to another...My ex..would not and could not...agree
to marriage counseling because it would have required a major change on his
part in behavior and attitude. Divorce came swiftly. The grieving took several
years...mostly because of the two decades we were together...and knowing
how good it once was...and how bad it became and the children barely knew
him the last few years.

I never wanted to change anything about him...but HE changed himself and
refused to acknowledge that.
06:48 PM on 03/14/2012
Right.

He pursued successfully a career. You did not.

You had a affair.

But it was all his fault. AND the children agree with you, of course.

BUZZZZZZZZZZZ.
12:41 AM on 03/15/2012
Oh I did have a career...coach's wife and soccer mom...household engineer ... and
personal assistant to take care of everything in his life outside of work.
You are obviously male...and condescend to women who give up careers
to do what I did. He was having an affair with his work...The children seldom
had any meaningful conversation other than good morning and good night.
We finally got ourselves to lower our expectations so that the disappointment
was less. He was home when he had to sleep...I spent a long time
explaining and defending the hours he chose to put in. The children
had their own opinions...I did not have to do it for them.

Within six months HE suddenly had the time, energy, desire and motivation to seek,
to find, to nourish and to enjoy a much younger woman. Failure of his marriage
dented his ego...and he fell into a mid-life crisis...to prove to himself and his public
that HE still ''had it''. Lasted two years....five years after that ...he came home.
06:14 PM on 03/12/2012
Depressed people get more of a psychological boost from marriage than people who aren’t depressed, even though depressed people tend to have poorer quality marriages, a U.S. study finds.In the study, a team at Ohio State University (OSU) in Columbus analyzed data on 3,066 single people, aged 55 and younger, who took part in the U.S. National Survey of Families and Households. The OSU researchers identified people who married during a five-year follow-up period and asked them about the quality of their marriages and changes in their psychological health.

People who married and divorced during the five-year period were excluded from the study.

The researchers found that, overall, participants who got married scored an average of about 3.5 points lower on a 12-item depression test (a score of 23 or higher indicated depression) than when they were single.
http://www.pennybailbonds.com
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dancinggrandma
Therapist, writer, dancer
01:15 AM on 03/13/2012
Having been a therapist for 30 years, my observation is that depressed people often couple with depressed people. It's also true that not having adequate relational skills can itself create depression.
10:46 AM on 03/12/2012
Another male bashing article. Its never the womans fault.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Alison Patton
06:07 PM on 03/12/2012
Sadlyme: Did you read the article? The main points of it (addressed to women) are: stop feeling sorry for yourself & don't hang around friends who are man-bashing, take financial responsibility for yourself, accept reduction in income and lifestyle with grace and don't expect your ex to change that for you, stop trying to change your ex's behavior with regards to co-parenting, and focus on healing and building your own future. How is that a male-bashing article?
10:56 AM on 03/13/2012
I apologize if I came across to harsh. It just seems as if there are more articles that deal with how women should or will be after a div or a sep. There are so few from the guys perspective.
Im my case, she wants to leave after 27 years and i am having a hard time dealing with it. The loss of my marriage, she was my best friend, our kids, our home. I cry almost daily and it has been going on for 7 months now. I know she means it because i just found the paperwork for a lawyer she retained last week. Just waitting to be served with papers, what a way to wake up every morning. This is not how envisioned my life. I am having a hard time coping with this.
So again im sorry.
08:43 AM on 03/12/2012
Marriage and smart people don't mix
03:40 PM on 04/03/2012
All-encompassing generalizations and smart people don't mix.
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KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
04:21 AM on 03/12/2012
The smart things I did for myself after divorce were

1. take an international vacation
2. sleep with every woman that was willing
3. buy the car I wanted instead of what she wanted me to have
4. find more willing women to sleep with
5. repeat all the above
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dancinggrandma
Therapist, writer, dancer
12:56 AM on 03/13/2012
And when you return to an adult level of functioning, may you create a truly meaningful life. You sound like a college freshman living only for immediate gratification.
08:29 AM on 03/13/2012
did it work?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
08:58 AM on 03/13/2012
o yeah
11:07 AM on 03/11/2012
marriage is good business for women.They are terated like princes in divorce courts,lawyers help them,they can send thir husbands to jail any time they wish.It is awesome power given to women.Plus they get good alimony for entire life.
A friend of mine paid his wife's tuition fess for degree in computers.Then she got a 6 figure job and left him.This guy had to pay alimony and child support out of $5000 he was getting as teacher.But court didnt consider wife was earning more salary than him.Some justice.
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dancinggrandma
Therapist, writer, dancer
12:58 AM on 03/13/2012
In both of my divorces (one after 10 years; the other 29), my husbands did far better financially than I did. It's not always the woman who "wins" in divorce, so please don't generalize?
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Alison Patton
02:54 PM on 03/13/2012
When I last checked, single/divorced women with children rank high on the list of groups living below the poverty line. I don't see many women getting alimony for life these days and also don't see women being treated as princesses in divorce court. Divorce is financially harsh on everyone, unless you are divorcing a multi-millionaire/celebrity/professional athlete (then yes, you do come out pretty well). Most run-of-the-mill, middle class divorces leave both people with less than before.
08:30 AM on 03/13/2012
that doesnt seem right
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dancinggrandma
Therapist, writer, dancer
12:11 PM on 03/13/2012
Much in this life isn't "right" and leaves us with a choice: focus on how unfair a situation is and feel victimized; OR, accept what's real and focus on the abundance of each moment (and move on). Neither husband (referred to as "wasbands") was or could ever be a compatible partner in life, so divorcing was a tremendous gift to myself each time. I've thought about writing a book for older divorcing women & calling it, "I Have All the Closets to Myself!" I've come to believe that a few of us were wounded in such ways very early in life that we're probably best off not partnering during the last leg of this journey........for the most part, I've made peace with this probability and allow myself to grieve a little bit more of this loss when it comes up (like watching chick flicks!). What I have discovered (delightfully) is that own company is just about the best I've ever enjoyed. I've worked hard to develop this most important of all relationships and, in just the last 3-4 years, have fully suceededm
08:27 AM on 03/11/2012
#4 I cannot change my ex. I am a divorced mother of 2 who have now grown and left the nest. While I was raising them, I don't think that I ever resented being the one to take them to the Doctors or to manage their school/extra curricular activities. I hear women complain about this all of the time and frankly, I don't get it. It is called being a mother, most of us had to do it anyway within the marriage, what difference does it make doing it outside of the marriage. I cannot think of anything better for a mother to do with her time. When I look at what the women who are complaining about doing it do with their time, the activities are always the same, warming up bar stools with other clucks, spending the child support money on facials, pedis, hairs and nails and looking pretty for the next date. I have learned a lot from other women. I prefer to spend time with the kids.
01:02 AM on 03/11/2012
The article you have written is one for the good wife/mother-bad husband/father situation as witnessed by the things women complain of regarding their husband as a parent. It is just as valid for a man in a good father/husband-bad mother/wife situation and this is not as uncommon as you might think these days.
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Alison Patton
01:10 AM on 03/12/2012
robinpbhps: I agree with you on both counts.
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OneMomsBatlle
Divorcing a Narcissist- One Mom's Battle
07:14 PM on 03/10/2012
Bravo to Alison on a fabulous article!

Tina
www.onemomsbattle.com
06:38 PM on 03/10/2012
The biggest gift of my divorce was not getting rid of a troubled husband, but was learning the joy of letting go. My ex lives a few blocks from me and after many years still tells neighbors falsehoods about me. I know he's hoping for me to react, but I won't. There is nothing he could say to hurt me. The people who know and love me know he's not telling the truth and anyone who believes him is not someone I would want to befriend anyway. Although I was entitled to child support and alimony, he never paid the child support and I never asked for alimony. I struggled financially without help from anyone while the kids were teens. I took on extra jobs and rented out an extra room in the house to help them pay for college because their dad never coughed up to them the money he promised. I have an excellent relationship with my kids that is worth much, much more than the money he never paid. I am so proud of myself because I was raised to be dependent on men, but learned on my own the power I have within me. I now see my divorce as a tremendous gift. Without it I would still be a child and I would never want to go back to that. I may not be rich, but I am secure enough and happier than I've ever been.
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Alison Patton
01:19 AM on 03/12/2012
Your story makes me think of that quote (attributed to Eleanor Roosevelt and sometimes Mae West): "A woman is like a tea bag - you never know how strong she is until she gets in hot water."
08:31 AM on 03/13/2012
thats great, the best revenge is living well
12:03 PM on 03/10/2012
Well written and thoughtful article. Thank you Ms. Patton.

I divorced several years ago and the most important thing for me in shaping my future was keeping my independence. My ex-husband and I negotiated everything ourselves (no lawyers). We had no children, which admittedly made things easier. I could have received alimony, but I did not want that financial tie to my ex (if we had children, I would have accepted child support but would still refuse alimony). I wanted to be in complete control of my own life, no matter how difficult it may be. He kept the house since he could afford the mortgage and I could not. I found a small apartment and furnished it with hand-me-downs from friends and family and thrift store finds (I wanted a fresh start with a few "marital" items as possible).

I refused to feel sorry for myself because I recognized that it was not just one persons fault, or anybody’s fault. It was just life. We grow and change. Sometimes we grow in separate directions. Keeping true to myself, who I wanted to be, and making as clean a break as possible was what got me through. Today (after much hard work) I earn a decent living, own my own home, and share my life with a wonderful man.
04:00 PM on 03/15/2012
A very mature and insightful post. You are a person of character.
05:38 PM on 03/15/2012
Thank you very much for the kind words, "SuperSingleFather". First time I've been called "a person of character". Friends usually just say that I *am* a character. (HaHa).
;-)