Parenting teenagers during divorce makes working out
a visitation schedule challenging, to say the least. While
your teen is busy trying to exert independence, you still need to
lay some ground rules to make sure that the other parent stays
involved in your child's life. The following article will give
you some tips to help keep visitation fights to a minimum.
Teens and Visitation By Brette McWhorter Sember
If you and the other parent
divorced while your child was younger, the teen years can present some
challenges in terms of your visitation schedule. A schedule that worked for an
elementary school age child is not going to fit a teen. And, if you and the
other parent have split during your child's teenage years, it can be difficult
to devise a plan that will work for everyone involved simply because the teenage
years are so difficult to parent during.
Big But Not Big Enough
The first thing to remember is that teens may look and
act a lot like adults, but they aren't yet completely mature. They still need to
have two parents and they still need to have those parents involved in their
lives.
Teens are working hard at learning to be independent, and this means that
they do need special consideration, but it does not mean that you and the other
parent should throw up your hands and say "there's nothing we can do."
It can be difficult to continue to parent someone who doesn't want to be
parented, but that's your job right now.
Flexibility Is Key
Friends, school, sports, activities, dating, and jobs are
essential to teens. If you have a visitation schedule that severely restricts
your child's ability to enjoy those essential activities, all you'll end up with
is resentment. Instead, you need to try to create a balance in your teen's life.
He or she should have plenty of time to do the things that matters to him, but
he's also got to make some room for spending time with his parents.
When you all lived in one house you probably did not tell your daughter she
had to skip the field hockey game because you wanted to spend time with her. You
didn't tell your son he couldn't hang out with friends on Friday night because
your spouse wanted to spend time with him.
As the divorced parent of a teen, you've got to flex the parenting schedule
to incorporate the things that make your kid who he is. If your spouse has
visitation this weekend, but your teen has a dance to go to, the parent whose
scheduled time it is should take the teen to and from the dance, and spend the
rest of the available time with him. You need to find a balance between your
teen's need to be a kid and the need for him or her to have time with both
parents.
Create a Minimum
Since teens schedules are busy and your and the other
parent's schedules are also probably pretty packed, it's important to agree to
some kind of minimum time per month with the non-custodial parent.
For example,
decide that you'll try to arrange things so that the non-custodial parent sees
your child for at least four overnights per month and 4 other evenings or
afternoons - this is the flexible way to fit in the "every other weekend
and one night a week" plan into a busy life. Fit parenting times in where
they go the easiest.
Be creative with your time sharing. Take turns taking your
daughter to basketball practice. Have one parent commit to teaching him how to
drive. Have the other parent be involved with weekend band or cheerleader
activities. Some parents have a hard time being so flexible because it feels
like a loss of control. In fact it is just the opposite - you set a minimum and
then work with your child to make it work for everyone. It takes a bit more
cooperation, but in the end, you will both have a better relationship with your
child and he or she will feel more fulfilled and connected.
Stay Connected
Teens are big on technology, so the non-custodial parent can
maintain a close relationship with text messaging, cell phone calls, and instant
messenging. Non-custodial parents can have a difficult time staying connected
during the teen years - teens certainly aren't know for being open with their
parents! And, if a family divorced when the daughter was 7, she's a very
different person at 15 and it can be hard to stay in the loop. Find out about
her interests and activities and make yourself a part of them - either by
showing up to cheer, by offering help, or just by asking friendly, non-intrusive
questions.
Surviving the teen years requires a mutual understanding - you take your
teen's life seriously and he or she will take both parents seriously as well.
Copyright 2005. Brette McWhorter Sember is a retired family attorney and mediator and
nationally known expert about divorce and parenting after divorce. She is the author of How to Parent with Your Ex:Working Together for Your Child's Best Interest,
The Divorce Organizer and Planner, and many
other titles. You can visit her web site at www.BretteSember.com