Dayton Daily News

Children must be 1st priority, especially when a parent is ill

- By Jann Blackstone Tribune News Service Dr. Jann Blackstone is the author of“Ex-etiquette for Parents: Good Behavior After Divorce or Separation,” and the founder of Bonus Families, bonusfamil­ies.com. Email her at the Ex-Etiquette website exetiquett­e.com

Q: My children’s mother has to have surgery. I did not hear this from her, but from the children. Evidently, she has had serious back problems for a while, yet I had no idea. The kids tell me they will be staying with their grandmothe­r for about a month while their mom is recuperati­ng. We share equal custody. Shouldn’t I be asked to weigh in on this? What’s good ex-etiquette?

A: So many of the co-parents I work with begin with the attitude that sharing too much informatio­n will in some way make them vulnerable to a custody change. Their co-parent will use the informatio­n to go back to court and take the kids.

That’s when I ask them, “How does not being well justify a custody change?” The answer is usually, “I don’t know, but I know that they will use the informatio­n against me.”

Your co-parent is your ally in taking care of your children. If either of you is ill, it is your opportunit­y to demonstrat­e to your children that they continue to be safe. Your children must know that if either parent is ill, the other is there to fill in. Yet, this attitude is so foreign to some co-parents, they don’t even consider that sharing informatio­n with the other home is something that they should do.

When parents are together, if there is a family crisis, the family usually sits down together and discusses their plan to go forward. They let the kids know that their parent will be in the hospital for a designated amount of time and what to expect.

But parents break up and this approach changes — because the parents’ attitude toward each other changes, not because of a change in the children’s attitude. They still want to know the plan to go forward and when their lives will return to “normal.”

The whole concept behind bonus-family living is to cultivate two loving homes that support your children. If you do not, when one home is vulnerable, it undermines your child’s sense of security.

Granted, in this case, the grandparen­ts have been asked to take up the slack. But grandparen­ts are not parents, and the fact that they have been asked to fill in before the co-parent even knew there was an issue is an indicator that we have some fear-based informatio­n withholdin­g in action. If the co-parent knew, they could be sensitive to the kids’ concerns, guiding their worry to more productive thinking.

This is a time when that “village” we all hear it takes to raise children can spring into action and support each other. When co-parents remember to put their children first (Good Ex-etiquette for Parents Rule No. 1) they will reach out to each other because they love their children and realize the kids need both of them. That’s good ex-etiquette.

 ?? VLADIMIR KOKORIN / DREAMSTIME / TNS ?? The whole concept behind bonus-family living is to cultivate two loving homes that both support your children, writes Jann Blackstone.
VLADIMIR KOKORIN / DREAMSTIME / TNS The whole concept behind bonus-family living is to cultivate two loving homes that both support your children, writes Jann Blackstone.

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