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Stick to the facts when conflicts arise - Boston Herald

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My 6-year-old son came home after his time with his mother and confided that each time I called, a “bad word” came up on his mother’s caller ID. This really upset him and now he doesn’t want to see her next weekend. Things are so volatile, I’m afraid to say something. What’s good ex-etiquette?

Your situation is a perfect example how a parent’s feelings are not so secret. Just because you aren’t yelling at each other doesn’t mean your children aren’t impacted by your actions.

Good ex-etiquette for parents rule #3, “No badmouthing,” was chosen for a very specific reason. It protects the children from their parents’ or extended family members’ negative interactions. And it lays the groundwork for better communication.

A child loves both parents. When one parent badmouths the other, a child really doesn’t know what to do with the information. They personalize it, push it down and try to avoid the perpetrator so they don’t have to decide which parent is right or wrong.

“I don’t want to go to mom’s this weekend” is a completely logical response. He’s trying to take himself out of the middle.

Do you think Mom realized that using a “bad word” to describe you on her caller ID would hurt your son so badly? Doubtful. She’s angry, cynical and most likely thought it was funny. It was her way of privately regaining some personal power.

Now your son has read it and it hurt him so badly that he wants a break. She should know that. But how do you tell her if things are so volatile?

Conflict does not have to be a “fight.” It can also be a lesson, an opportunity to grow in empathy and respect for your co-parent (Ex-etiquette for Parents rules #7 and 9) — as well as an opportunity for Mom to regain her son’s respect.

When you talk to her, explain the situation with just the facts. Don’t blame or openly judge the act. Calmly talk about how reading that name affected your son. How it made him feel. Talk about the consequences and then allow her to make amends by taking responsibility for her actions and apologizing to your son. The more respect for the other parent you can demonstrate, the easier it will be for your son to go back and forth between homes. That’s good ex-etiquette.

Dr. Jann Blackstone is the author of “Ex-etiquette for Parents: Good Behavior After Divorce or Separation,” and the founder of Bonus Families, bonusfamilies.com. Tribune News Service

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Stick to the facts when conflicts arise - Boston Herald
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