The Sunday Post (Dundee)

You can’t cage cats

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SO Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie are to divorce.

What’s happened to Hollywood’s golden couple?

Although they only married in 2014 the film stars, whose combined fortune was estimated at £308 million, had been together for 12 years.

They travelled the world making films, buying properties, working for charity and living a glitzy lifestyle.

One thing is certain, their decision will hit their children hard.

They have six children aged between eight and 15 – Shiloh and twins Knox and Vivienne, and adopted kids Maddox, Zahara and Pax who were born in Cambodia, Ethiopia and Vietnam respective­ly.

Both parents wanted a big family and insisted that in the divorce proceeding­s their children’s interests would come first.

I’m sure they will. Like most couples with huge difference­s, the one thing they have in common – love for their children and concern for their happiness – is paramount.

Whether you’re Brangelina or just Mr and Mrs Average, you desperatel­y don’t want your kids to suffer from the fallout.

They help you to act with civility and to compromise. And quite rightly so.

No matter how bitter the rows, children seldom want mum and dad’s togetherne­ss to be breached.

Children like certainty. Separation and divorce are uncharted waters for any family but with a willingnes­s to put the kids first, couples can manage to do it with dignity.

It means not being determined to have the last word. Not denigratin­g one partner to another. Rememberin­g that your children need both of you and that their happiness matters more than point-scoring.

So if you have separated it’s worth making the arrangemen­ts for them to see their other parent without stress and tension.

Don’t make Christmas or birthdays a big issue – listen to what your son or daughter is telling you. Don’t force choices. Help them through it.

Some parents manage this brilliantl­y while others make it confrontat­ional and difficult for everyone involved. They can’t see that they are using their own unhappines­s to get at their partner, causing huge tension for their children.

The harsh truth about relationsh­ips is that sometimes love dies. When it does there are decisions to be made and none of them are easy – whether you’re Brangelina or not.

But if both parents can decide not to use their children as a pawn in the divorce game, they can build a better future for every member of the family – this includes grandparen­ts on both sides who often lose out.

Be the bigger person. Hard though it is, put your hurt to one side and try to understand what’s needed. Compassion works wonders and your children will thank you for it. AS a cat lover I’m not too pleased with Dr Peter Marra, who wants our furry friends to be kept indoors or put on a lead.

In his book, Cat Wars: The Devastatin­g Consequenc­es of a Cuddly Killer, the scientist claims the animals kill 55 million birds in the UK every year and are destroying wildlife.

So he reckons our poor moggies shouldn’t be allowed the freedom to roam outside. Really? Cats are independen­t creatures. They are not little lapdogs to be trotted around on a lead, Dr Marra. And birds have wings – they can fly off if they’re being stalked by a cat, surely?

It’s about the survival of the fittest.

Let cats be cats and birds be birds, Dr Marra. Without the challenges of nature what kind of world would wehave?

 ?? Margaret Clayton ??
Margaret Clayton

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