Divorce & custody resource library

Guidance is useful.
A paper trail is better.

Practical articles for parents in high-conflict separation: documenting custody issues, preserving evidence, preparing for court conversations, and staying calm when the other side is making chaos look like a project plan.

Document issuesTurn daily conflict into structured, date-based records.
Capture evidenceConnect files, photos, and notes to the right incident.
Prepare factsBuild factual summaries for court, counsel, or support professionals.
Stay groundedUse documentation to reduce emotional guesswork.

Search by the problem you are dealing with today.

Browse articles on custody conflict, evidence, court preparation, support, boundaries, and emotional recovery. Showing 159 matching resources.

Divorce

Forced Out of the Home: Tracking Stability, Access, and Safety

Undated · 2 min read

Being pushed out of the home can create housing, parenting, financial, and emotional instability. Clear records help capture the timeline, access issues, safety concerns, and practical consequences.

Divorce
Divorce

Cut Off From Bank Accounts: Why Financial Access Records Matter

Undated · 1 min read

Losing access to bank accounts or credit cards during separation can create immediate pressure. Documenting balances, transactions, account changes, notices, and expenses helps protect the financial record.

Divorce
Divorce

Changed Locks During Separation: Documenting Access and Housing Disruption

Undated · 1 min read

Being locked out of the home can affect housing stability, access to belongings, parenting routines, and financial stress. A factual record helps capture what happened and what support may be needed.

Divorce
Divorce

Does an Affair Affect Divorce, Custody, or Support? Focus on the Facts

Undated · 1 min read

An affair may feel central to the breakdown of a relationship, but custody, support, and property issues often turn on specific facts. Good records help users focus on what can be reviewed and proven.

Divorce
Divorce

Late or Missed Custody Exchanges: Turning Frustration Into Evidence

Undated · 1 min read

Missed pickups, late arrivals, and last-minute changes can disrupt parenting time and create avoidable conflict. Consistent tracking turns frustration into a useful pattern of dates, times, and outcomes.

Divorce
Divorce

When Children Feel Second to Stepchildren: Recording Concerns Without Escalation

Undated · 1 min read

Blended-family tension can leave children feeling overlooked, compared, or displaced. Documenting concerns carefully helps separate observable patterns from emotional assumptions and supports better conversations.

Divorce
Divorce

False Police Calls During Separation: What to Track and Preserve

Undated · 1 min read

Police involvement during separation can quickly change the tone of a custody dispute. When allegations are false or exaggerated, users need a clear timeline, supporting evidence, and calm factual notes.

Divorce
Divorce

Repeated Children’s Aid Calls During Custody Conflict: Keeping a Clear Record

Undated · 1 min read

Repeated child protection calls can create fear, stress, and confusion, especially when allegations are disputed. Organized records help capture what was reported, what was investigated, and what actually happened.

Divorce
Divorce

When an Ex Badmouths You to the Children: Documenting Patterns Calmly

Undated · 1 min read

Negative comments made to children can be painful and destabilizing. The safest response is not escalation. It is calm documentation of dates, wording, context, impact, and repeated patterns.

Divorce
Divorce

Affair and Alimony: Separating Emotion from Legal and Financial Records

Undated · 1 min read

When infidelity is part of the separation story, it is easy for emotion to overwhelm the practical issues. Clear records help separate what happened, what matters legally, and what still needs to be resolved.

Divorce
Divorce

Mail, Cheques, and Separation: Documenting Financial Boundary Violations

Undated · 1 min read

When mail, cheques, or financial documents are accessed without permission after separation, the issue should be documented carefully. Dates, bank records, messages, and supporting evidence all matter.

Divorce
Divorce

Joint Account Withdrawals After Separation: Why Financial Records Matter

Undated · 1 min read

Financial disputes after separation can escalate quickly, especially when joint accounts are still active. Keeping records of withdrawals, dates, statements, and communications helps create a clearer timeline.

Divorce

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