CO-PARENTING DURING THE HOLIDAYS
Don’t let your divorce spoil the holidays for you and your kids. With a bit of planning ahead and flexibility you can make the most of the season, no matter how different it looks this year.
Don’t let your divorce spoil the holidays for you and your kids. With a bit of planning ahead and flexibility you can make the most of the season, no matter how different it looks this year.
COVID-19 continues to change the landscape of our reality as well as the day-to-day practice of family law. The pandemic has also had an impact in transforming the underlying substantive law related to the practice of family law.
So, are you ready to move forward with a divorce but not sure what to do next? Feel like you
should get an attorney, but don’t know how?
If you are were in a relationship where you experienced domestic violence, regardless of whether it was physical, emotional, or verbal, it is likely you deal with some ongoing anxieties relating to that trauma. But if you have a child with an abusive partner, the nightmare doesn’t always end when the divorce papers are signed.
By filing first, you ensure that the proceedings commence only when you are in a comfortable
financial situation.
Most people are familiar with the term co-parenting. But have you ever heard of parallel
parenting? In an ideal divorce, parents would separate but be capable of co-parenting their
children.