Affair and Alimony: Separating Emotion from Legal and Financial Records
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.
DivorceWhen Love Ends, the Bills Don’t
Divorce can change financial stability overnight. Benefits, support, housing, parenting expenses, and records all matter. Clear documentation helps you understand what changed and what needs attention.
DivorceFalse Police Calls During Separation: What to Track and Preserve
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.
DivorceDoes an Affair Affect Divorce, Custody, or Support? Focus on the Facts
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.
AccessDenied Court-Ordered Access: What to Document Before Taking Next Steps
When court-ordered access is not followed, emotions can run high. Before escalating, capture dates, times, messages, missed access, patterns, and supporting evidence so the situation can be reviewed clearly.
Divorce RoadmapThe 5 Phases of Divorce: What to Watch For at Every Stage
A practical roadmap through the five phases of divorce, explaining what to expect, what to document, and the common mistakes to avoid at every stage.
The First 90 DaysPhase 2: The First 90 Days Since The Divorce Notice Can Be The Most Important Days Of Your New Life
The first 90 days after divorce notice can shape parenting patterns, finances, communication, and future disputes. Stay calm, avoid rushed decisions, and document what happens.
DivorceChild Tax Credit Disputes: Track Eligibility, Time, and Communications
Government child benefit disputes can create financial stress and confusion. Document parenting time, eligibility assumptions, payment history, communications, tax-related notices, and any agreements or court terms.
DivorceReligious Changes After Separation: Recording Decisions That Affect the Children
Disagreements over a child’s religious upbringing can become highly emotional after separation. Factual notes help capture decisions, communications, child impact, school or community changes, and unresolved concerns.
Custody and AccessCustody vs. Access: What Parents Need to Understand
Custody and access are often confused. Decision-making, parenting time, visits, schedules, and responsibilities are different concepts, and documenting each clearly can reduce conflict.
Change ReligionReligious Holidays and Custody: What to Do When Access Is Denied
Religious holidays can become flashpoints in custody disputes, especially when one parent denies access or makes major religious decisions without agreement. Review the court order, document missed access, avoid hostile communication, and seek legal guidance before the pattern hardens.
DivorceWhen Access to Your Children Is Blocked: Responding to False Allegations and Restrictions
Being prevented from seeing your children is one of the most painful parts of a high-conflict separation. When allegations are raised through CAS, police, or court channels, emotional reactions can make things worse. This guide focuses on calm documentation, professional advice, and protecting the parent-child relationship through facts.