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Divorcing Dads

Eran Magen, Ph.D.
Divorcing Dads
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  • She Is Kind to Me In Ways That Are Very Foreign to Me
    Fourteen months after the divorce, Mark is enjoying time with his new girlfriend and learning what it's like to be in a healthy relationship. While Mark and his girlfriend are getting ready for their kids to meet, Mark is working through his relational insecurities. Mark reflects on how his experience as a child to parents who argued often shaped his sense of being responsible for other people's happiness, and contributes to his worrying that his girlfriend is quietly upset or displeased with him. We talk about how to communicate and synchronize with a new romantic partner about goals, meaning-making and disagreements. On a separate front, Mark's ex informed him that she will be moving to a different town that is about 20 minutes away by car. We talk about the implications of living in different towns for the kids, as well as for Mark.Topics include:• When kids and romantic partners meet• Navigating insecurities in romantic relationships• Communicating/coordinating/synchronizing expectations and behaviors with a romantic partner• Is it okay to make mistakes in a romantic relationship? (hint: yes, good relationships allow the grace of recovering from mistakes, together)• The importance of sharing the burden of leadership in a relationship in a way that works for both people• How to figure out what you want in a romantic relationship, and how to communicate about it with the romantic partner• Deciding when and how to progress with physical intimacy in a new relationship• When the ex announces she is about to move away• Real challenges, false challenges and advantages of living farther away as co-parentsUse This Link to Send Us Quick Feedback Join our mailing list for articles, videos, and notifications about additional resources. To talk about your experience with Dr. Magen and be on this podcast, email [email protected]. For more support resources for divorcing dads, visit https://DivorcingDads.org. To learn more about Dr. Magen's parenting work, visit https://ParentingForHumans.com. If you are feeling unsafe, hopeless or suicidal, please call 988 for free and confidential counseling, 24/7/365. To find the number if you are outside the US, visit https://brenebrown.com/international-crisis-resources or https://findahelpline.com/i/iasp.
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  • Maybe She Wasn't Out to Hurt Me
    More than 13 months after the divorce, Mark is excited about a woman he started dating, who shocked and delighted him by bringing him flowers on Father's Day. We talk about how Mark introduced  his new relationship to his kids, and how he experienced their response to the news. Mark continues to process his reactions to his ex, and is moving toward considering her more as unaware and unempathetic than as intentionally malicious.The book Forgive for Good (by Frederic Luskin) has been helpful for Mark as he seeks a sense of internal closure regarding his ex.This is our first conversation we recorded since the first episode of the podcast came out, which offered an opportunity for interesting meta-conversations about our conversations.Topics include:• The shock of realizing a romantic partner can take care of us, rather than only us taking care of the partner• How knowing our kids miss us when they're away can be a source of mixed emotions for us• Considering the possibility that the ex's hurtful behavior stems from lack of awareness, rather than out of malicious intent• How expecting a consistently inconsiderate ex to behave considerately is a way we set ourselves up for disappointment• The benefit of telling kids, clearly and explicitly, about starting a new romantic relationshipUse This Link to Send Us Quick Feedback Join our mailing list for articles, videos, and notifications about additional resources. To talk about your experience with Dr. Magen and be on this podcast, email [email protected]. For more support resources for divorcing dads, visit https://DivorcingDads.org. To learn more about Dr. Magen's parenting work, visit https://ParentingForHumans.com. If you are feeling unsafe, hopeless or suicidal, please call 988 for free and confidential counseling, 24/7/365. To find the number if you are outside the US, visit https://brenebrown.com/international-crisis-resources or https://findahelpline.com/i/iasp.
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  • To Protect My Kids, There are Certain Feelings I Must Not Feel
    Nearly a year after the divorce, Mark is planning a 2-week trip with his kids, and enjoying his ability to share more of his culture of origin with his kids than when he was married.Mark continues to explore dating, and finds that his anxiety around dating diminishes as his goal shifts from wanting to be liked to checking if the connection feels like a good match.While much of Mark's life feels good, Mark is becoming increasingly aware the anger he feels toward his ex and her affair partner. We discuss Mark's conviction that, in order to protect his kids, it's important for him to avoid feeling to too negatively about their mother. We also consider different ways Mark can reduce the intense reactivity he feels when he comes into contact with his ex's partner.Topics include:• The benefit of expressing preference for boundaries with ex, even if the ex does not respond or honor it• Thinking of dating as an opportunity to check for mutual match, rather than as an opportunity to be liked or to impress someone• The challenge of being a people-pleaser when dating, both with respect to wanting to be liked and with respect to deciding not to go on another date• Do I need to have clear goals when dating?• Talking with the kids when they're with the ex: Scheduled? Ad-hoc? How long should calls be?--> • Kids getting more of the parent's culture after the divorce• What is an appropriate level of contact and reactivity with the ex's affair partner?• How to become less reactive to the ex and her affair partner? (minimizing exposure, reducing reaction, speeding up recovery)* The benefits of making new friends after the divorce, people who don't know the ex* Wanting to give grace to the ex because she is the kids' mother* Shifting anger from the ex to her partner* The natural--and dangerous--impulse to treat the kids as little judges, so they know we are Right and the ex is Wrong* Creating space to feel and process the full spectrum of emotions toward the exUse This Link to Send Us Quick Feedback Join our mailing list for articles, videos, and notifications about additional resources. To talk about your experience with Dr. Magen and be on this podcast, email [email protected]. For more support resources for divorcing dads, visit https://DivorcingDads.org. To learn more about Dr. Magen's parenting work, visit https://ParentingForHumans.com. If you are feeling unsafe, hopeless or suicidal, please call 988 for free and confidential counseling, 24/7/365. To find the number if you are outside the US, visit https://brenebrown.com/international-crisis-resources or https://findahelpline.com/i/iasp.
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  • What She Did Was Cruel
    Eleven and a half months after the divorce, Mark finds himself repeatedly rattled by unexpected close encounters with his ex' affair partner, and he is processing the anger and hurt that he feels toward his ex and her partner. We discuss ways for Mark to set clear boundaries with his ex in order to make sure these encounters don't take him by surprise. We also talk about ways to handle those times when his ex ignores his requests, including how to communicate about those times with his ex, and how to manage his own internal reactions.Topics include:• Being triggered by meeting the ex's (affair) partner• Organizing and hosting birthday parties for the kids with the the ex• Feeling excluded from shared events because of wanting to avoid the ex's presence• The advantages and disadvantages of disclosing discomfort to the ex with her behavior• The persistent hope that the ex will wake up to recognize her hurtful behaviors• Reducing impact of negative triggers through (1) reducing contact, (2) Reducing reactivity, and (3) speeding recovery• Considerations for and against informing the ex's family about the ex's hurtful behavior• The danger of hoping the ex will start behaving differently, and the benefit of letting go of this hope• Remembering the parts of the co-parenting relationships that are working, even when some parts are not working in very irritating waysUse This Link to Send Us Quick Feedback Join our mailing list for articles, videos, and notifications about additional resources. To talk about your experience with Dr. Magen and be on this podcast, email [email protected]. For more support resources for divorcing dads, visit https://DivorcingDads.org. To learn more about Dr. Magen's parenting work, visit https://ParentingForHumans.com. If you are feeling unsafe, hopeless or suicidal, please call 988 for free and confidential counseling, 24/7/365. To find the number if you are outside the US, visit https://brenebrown.com/international-crisis-resources or https://findahelpline.com/i/iasp.
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  • I'm Happy I Got Divorced
    Eleven months after the divorce, Mark and his ex switched to the new 2-2-5 parenting schedule, and Mark is still figuring out how well the new schedule is working for him and the kids. Mark also realized that the pet birds he was stuck with and is caring for are a vestige of taking care of his ex, which is not something he wants to keep doing. Mark is grateful that his kids are doing so well, and reflects on the incredible hidden blessings that resulted from his divorce. We also talk about our reasons for making these conversations available as a podcast, and our hopes for its impact.Topics include:• Adjusting to a new 2-2-5 parenting schedule• Buying ourselves gifts• Getting stuck with unwanted pets post-divorce• Accepting times when kids miss the ex• How recovering from the divorce is not the same as recovering from the marriage• The benefit of reaching out for support throughout the post-divorce periodUse This Link to Send Us Quick Feedback Join our mailing list for articles, videos, and notifications about additional resources. To talk about your experience with Dr. Magen and be on this podcast, email [email protected]. For more support resources for divorcing dads, visit https://DivorcingDads.org. To learn more about Dr. Magen's parenting work, visit https://ParentingForHumans.com. If you are feeling unsafe, hopeless or suicidal, please call 988 for free and confidential counseling, 24/7/365. To find the number if you are outside the US, visit https://brenebrown.com/international-crisis-resources or https://findahelpline.com/i/iasp.
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About Divorcing Dads

Honest conversations with divorcing dads about staying connected to your kids while building a life that you love. Topics include co-parenting, fatherhood, divorce recovery, parenting tips, and emotional well-being.
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