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Smart Parenting During and After Divorce: How to Set Up a Long-Term Visitation Schedule (page 3)

By Peter J. Favaro, Ph.D.
McGraw-Hill Professional
Updated on May 7, 2010

Be Reasonable

When you are creating schedules, be open-minded. Do not be so quick to count the number of "sleepovers" as being that meaningful. The only useful thing you can do while your kids are sleeping is spend time figuring out how you are going to pay for your lawyer. Consider instead the quantity and quality of face-to-face time you will have with your children. When your children are awake you can tell them how much you love them, and until they are old enough to disappear with their friends and use your residence as a boardinghouse, you can spend your time playing with them and educating them. Those are the important moments, and that is the type of time and contact you should be seeking.

Quick Tips

  • There is no compelling research-based evidence that shows kids are better off when they spend the majority of time with one parent for the sole purpose of having a "home base."
  • Don't let your dislike of the co-parent determine your child's need to spend time with her. Visitation is not about you; it is about your children.
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