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 157 matching resources.

CAS

How to File a Complaint Against a Children's Aid Society (CAS) in Ontario

Undated · 1 min read

If you believe a Children's Aid Society has acted unfairly or made decisions that harmed your family, you have the right to file a formal complaint. This guide walks you through the three official channels available to Ontario parents.

Divorce CAS
Custody Trials & Their Impact on Kids

Custody Trials: What to Expect and How to Protect Your Children

Undated · 1 min read

A custody trial is one of the most emotionally and financially demanding experiences a father can face. Going in unprepared is the biggest mistake most men make. This guide covers what to expect at every stage, how to build your case, and how to shield your children from the process.

Divorce Custody Trials & Their Impact on Kids
Forced To Leave Your House

Forced to Leave Your Home After Separation: How to Protect the Record

Undated · 5 min read

Leaving the home during separation can affect parenting time, access to documents, finances, and the appearance of the status quo. The first priority is to document what happened and preserve the facts.

Custody Documentation Forced To Leave Your House
Court Order Violations

Court Order Violations: What to Document Before You Escalate

Undated · 6 min read

When a court order is ignored, the strongest response is not anger. It is a clear, dated record of what happened, what the order required, and how the breach affected the child or parenting arrangement.

Custody Documentation Court Order Violations
Unable To See Your Children

Unable to See Your Children: Turn Pain Into a Timeline

Undated · 6 min read

Being denied time with your children is painful. The most useful response is a clear timeline of scheduled access, missed access, communication attempts, and the impact on the children.

Custody Documentation Unable To See Your Children
Divorce

Double Standards in Separation and Divorce

Undated · 1 min read

Many fathers feel judged before the facts are reviewed. Documentation, respectful communication, parenting-time records, and evidence-based reporting help keep the focus on children and fairness.

Divorce
Divorce

Why Documentation Is Your Most Powerful Weapon in a Custody Dispute

Undated · 1 min read

In a custody battle, memory is not enough. Courts, police, and Children's Aid require evidence — organized, timestamped, and accessible. Without a documentation system, even legitimate claims can fail. Learn what to capture and how to do it right.

Divorce
Decision Criteria

How a Judge Decides Custody and Access: The Factors That Matter

Undated · 1 min read

Judges do not decide custody randomly — they follow a structured framework centred on the best interests of the child. Understanding exactly what they are evaluating gives you a significant advantage in how you prepare, document, and present your case.

Divorce Decision Criteria
Courts Reject Your Claim

When Your Custody Claim Is Rejected: Learn, Document, Rebuild

Undated · 6 min read

A rejected custody claim can feel devastating. It should also trigger a disciplined review of what evidence was missing, what assumptions failed, and what needs to be documented going forward.

Custody Documentation Courts Reject Your Claim
Document & Report

Document and Report Custody Interactions With Evidence

Undated · 6 min read

Custody interactions can become important later. Capture what happened, when it happened, who was involved, and what evidence supports the record.

Custody Documentation Document & Report
Capture Evidence

Capture Evidence and Attach It to the Right Journal Entry

Undated · 6 min read

Evidence is most useful when it is attached to the correct date and issue. Photos, screenshots, files, and receipts need context, not just storage.

Custody Documentation Capture Evidence
Child Profiles

Store Child Profile Information in One Place

Undated · 6 min read

Children’s birthdays, schools, medical details, preferences, friends, activities, and notes should not be scattered. Centralized profile information supports calmer parenting and better records.

Custody Documentation Child Profiles

Don’t just read about documentation.
Start building the record.

CustodyMate gives parents a private system to capture incidents, attach evidence, track custody time, record payments, and prepare factual summaries.

Start free trial — 14 days free