Dr. Jonathan Isaacson
Emotional Overload
Many single parents say they deal with a variety of emotional
issues that you might describe as “extra baggage.” Some
examples include:
- Self-pity
- Depression
- Guilt
- Anger
- Envy
- Fear
- Severe money problems
- Loneliness and isolation
- Frustration
- Exhaustion
These issues present such a challenge because they undermine your
daily functioning and emotional well-being. But they can
be managed successfully so that you manage your family in a positive
way.
10 Ways to Speed Your Recovery Process
Becoming divorced or widowed and then facing years of single
parenting is a shock to anyone who experiences it. You will
need to take steps to recover and heal. Here are some
suggestions:
- Some churches, synagogues, counseling centers, and
therapists offer free and low-cost divorce recovery workshops
and grief support groups. Look for them in the newspaper
and Yellow Pages. If you don’t see any listed, call a few
places that may be able to refer you.
- Look for local peer support groups and networks.
- If you have access to the Internet, search for support
services in your area.
- Also on the Internet, look for chat rooms or bulletin boards
where single parents post messages and share ideas.
- Find library books for kids about divorce and single-parent
families, and read them together. Take the time to talk
about how they relate to your situation and encourage your kids
to talk about their feelings.
- Find a support group for children of divorce.
- Tell your children’s teachers and the school psychologist
that you are a single-parent family. Let them know that
you welcome feedback and suggestions on coping with your
circumstances.
- When you are ready, investigate groups like Parents Without
Partners for single adults. You need to be with other
adults who have similar interests.
- Learn to help your kids talk about what is happening to
them.
- Learn conflict resolution and problem-solving skills.
Single-Parent Survival Strategies
In addition to recovering from the loss of a partner, you will
need to take action to survive and thrive in the coming years.
The following strategies provide a starting place.
- Watch out for too many changes in your life as you recover
from both the loss of your spouse and the resulting changes in
your life circumstances. Change causes stress, and you
have enough right now.
- Realize and accept that you must get help with your
single-parenting responsibilities. It is unrealistic to
think that you can do it alone.
- Manage your own emotions so you will be able to help your
child manage his or her struggle. Learn as much as you can
about how children respond to divorce, the death of a parent, or
life in a single-parent home. Do not expect your child to
respond the same way you do. Take your child’s
developmental stage into consideration when responding to his or
her behavior.
- Give your children permission to talk to you about their
feelings.
- Keep appropriate boundaries.
• Don’t give in to the temptation to let your child take care of
you.
• Let your children be children.
• Avoid burdening them with your feelings and the facts of the
divorce or death of your spouse.
• Find another adult to be your sounding board.
- Let people help you.
• If it is impossible to reciprocate, say so.
• People know that your life isn’t like it used to be.
• Don’t let your inability to reciprocate prevent you from
accepting what people willingly offer.
- Let go of your need for perfection. You will have much
more stress if you don’t lower your expectations.
- Even though you are unable to be present as much as in the
past, your children still need adult supervision. Look for
ways for other adults to look in on your kids when they are home
alone, even when they are teenagers.
- Just because your child appears to be handling his or her
emotions well, don’t assume that he or she is okay. Some
kids respond to parent loss by becoming overly responsible or by
closing down their emotions. They may need to hear, “Tell
me how you’re feeling.”
- While it is important to listen and accept your children’s
feelings, it is equally important to set limits on behavior.
- Cultivate your ability to be flexible and find creative ways
to solve problems.
- Learn to set priorities. Do the most important things
first.
- Trust your gut feelings. Pay attention to your
instincts and act on them.
- Simplify as many things as possible in your life. You
cannot afford to keep it complicated.
- Find an outlet for your anger. If a friend is not
available, look for a minister, rabbi, or professional
counselor. If money is an issue, look for a therapist who
will see you for a low fee.
- Teach yourself to let go of guilt. You don’t have time
for it, and it’s not necessary.
- Focus on issues you have control over. If something is
beyond your control, don’t waste your emotions on it.
- Create a ritual to mark the change in your circumstances.
This could be a funeral for your spouse or a ceremony to
acknowledge your divorce.
- Keep a private journal in which you express your feelings.
Be sure to keep it in a private place where your children won’t
find it. A journal provides a place to express anger,
sadness, loneliness, and fear—all of those feelings you feel
every day as a single parent.
- Remind yourself that recovering from divorce or the death of
a spouse will take time. Your recovery will happen on its
own schedule, and it will happen. You will get through
this intact.
- Learn to be assertive. You can’t say yes to every
request, whether it is from your family members or people in the
community who want your time and resources. If you give it
all away, you will have nothing left for yourself.
- Find ways to take care of your body. Get regular
checkups and make time to exercise. You need rest now more
than ever. Watch your alcohol intake.
- Find someone who will listen to you. Sometimes you
have to ask, for example, “I need a sounding board right now.
Can I have 15 minutes of your time?”
- Rent a sad movie and let yourself cry (when the kids aren’t
around). Crying allows you to release the sadness that you
are sure to feel.
- Do at least one fun thing for yourself every week.
- In your private journal, make a list of all the things
you’re afraid of.
- In your private journal, make a list of all the things you
worry about.
- Get together with other single-parent families.
Sharing times with people facing similar issues can make you
feel normal.