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

Retrieving Personal Belongings After Separation: Keep It Safe and Documented

Undated · 1 min read

When an ex refuses access to personal belongings, emotions can escalate fast. Document what belongs to you, requests made, proposed pickup times, responses, witnesses, and any safety concerns.

Divorce
Divorce

Denied Access During Separation: Track Patterns Before They Harden

Undated · 1 min read

Access disputes during separation can quickly become the new normal if they are not documented. Record proposed schedules, denied visits, communications, reasons given, child impact, and attempts to resolve the issue calmly.

Divorce
Divorce

Denied Access Despite a Court Order: Build a Clear Record

Undated · 1 min read

Being denied parenting time despite a court order is painful and serious. A factual record helps capture the order, scheduled access, refusal details, messages, child impact, and evidence of each missed exchange.

Divorce
Divorce

When an Ex Refuses Separation Papers: Document Attempts and Responses

Undated · 1 min read

When separation or divorce papers are refused, the problem becomes process, proof, and timing. Keep a clear record of delivery attempts, messages, dates, witnesses, and next steps without turning the dispute into another fight.

Divorce
Divorce

Court Order Non-Compliance: Tracking Missed Obligations and Impact

Undated · 1 min read

When court orders are ignored, the issue is not just frustration — it is pattern, timing, impact, and proof. Document missed obligations, dates, communications, financial effects, parenting impact, and evidence.

Divorce
Divorce

When an Absent Parent Returns: Protecting Stability for the Children

Undated · 1 min read

When a parent who was absent wants to re-enter the children’s lives, stability matters. Track history, contact attempts, child reactions, proposed access, safety concerns, and steps that support a gradual transition.

Divorce
Divorce

Perceived Influence in Agencies or Court: Stay Factual and Evidence-Led

Undated · 1 min read

When you believe the other parent has influence with agencies or court-connected people, emotion can quickly take over. Focus on documented interactions, names, dates, decisions, inconsistencies, and evidence you can verify.

Divorce
Divorce

Relocation Concerns: When an Ex Wants to Move the Children Away

Undated · 1 min read

A proposed move can disrupt parenting time, school stability, routines, and family relationships. Organized notes help capture notice, reasons for the move, distance, schedule impact, and child-related concerns.

Divorce
Divorce

Status Quo Parenting Time: When an Ex Tries to Change the Arrangement

Undated · 1 min read

Even without a formal court order, an established parenting pattern can matter. Document the current schedule, exchanges, missed time, proposed changes, communications, and the practical impact on the children.

Divorce
Divorce

Changing the Children’s School: Documenting Education and Stability Concerns

Undated · 1 min read

A school change can affect routines, friendships, transportation, support needs, and parenting schedules. Clear records help show what was proposed, what was agreed, what changed, and how the children were affected.

Divorce
Divorce

Religious Changes After Separation: Recording Decisions That Affect the Children

Undated · 1 min read

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.

Divorce
Divorce

Changing a Child’s Last Name: Tracking Consent, Notice, and Impact

Undated · 1 min read

A proposed name change can raise emotional, legal, and identity concerns for both parents and children. Record notices, conversations, documents, child impact, and any consent or disagreement clearly.

Divorce

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