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Planning for Summer or Holiday Custody (continued)

Source: Bananas Inc.
Topics: Single Parent Families, Divorce Issues

Send a current photo beforehand. If it has been a long time since you’ve been with your child, you will want to catch him/her up on your life before the visit. Sending a current photo might be a good start, especially if there are physical changes (new beard, weight loss or gain, etc.) that make you look different. Tell your child about any important new people in your life. New faces are less threatening if they are expected. However, be sure that your child gets a clear message from you that s/he is not being replaced by your new partner, baby, stepchild, etc. You can let your child “off the hook” by saying you hope s/he will like your new friends but that liking them is not required, and by acknowledging that it always takes time to get to know new people.

Prepare any new friends and/or family for the arrival of your child. Discuss with them the changes that will occur to your lives together when your child comes to visit. Your child may not be the only one who needs to be reassured that s/he is not being replaced by someone else! You may also want to seek out other parents with similar custody arrangements or full-time single parents with whom you can share concerns and ideas. While no two situations are identical, it helps to talk to someone else who’s been there.

Call BANANAS. The practical matters are important too. Find out what recreational or child care programs are available. Begin interviewing care givers before your child arrives. One idea is to look for another parent to exchange child care (that means you trade off caring for each other’s children – no dollars involved). Begin doing some occasional babysitting for that parent ahead of time – first, to get yourself in practice again if you haven’t been around children for awhile, and second, to cement the exchange before you really need it.

Look around your house to see what changes you will need to make in sleeping arrangements, etc. to accommodate your child’s visit. The child should feel like they have a sense of home. Have clothes, toys, books and even a room for your child, if possible, so that they feel like they have a part of themselves in the home. If your child has friends in your neighborhood from past visits, let them know the plans and the arrival date.

Have a doctor and dentist in mind for emergencies. Create an emergency contact list as well. The more you are prepared on the practical level, the easier the transition into full-time parenting will be.

In the end, however, you can’t anticipate every problem which might occur during your child’s stay. The best any of us can do is be well prepared and then cope with situations as they arise. Once your child is actually on the scene, give yourselves time to adjust – don’t expect too much, too soon. Your child doesn’t know you in the same way as s/he knows the other parent. It is important to resist the urge to make negative comments about the other parent or to interrogate your child about the other parent’s new life. It may take a while before your child feels comfortable with you without feeling disloyal to the other parent. It isn’t possible or even desirable for you to suspend your current everyday life for an extended period of time to spend every minute with your child. Time does "march on.” Growth and change are part of that. Remember that parenting under any circumstances (full-time or part-time) brings both joys and challenges.

 

BANANAS Child Care Information & Referral • 5232 Claremont Ave., Oakland, CA 94618 • 658-7353 • www.bananasinc.org

©1981, BANANAS, Inc. Oakland, CA. Revised 2007.

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