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 150 matching resources.

Divorce

Divorce as a Public Health Issue: Why Families Need Better Support Systems

Undated · 2 min read

Divorce is not only a legal event. It can create stress, medical needs, counseling demand, and wider pressure on family support systems. Clear records and early support can reduce the downstream harm.

Divorce
Divorce

When Children May Be Harmed During Divorce: Document, Protect, and Escalate Safely

Undated · 1 min read

Concerns about a child’s safety must be handled carefully, calmly, and seriously. The priority is protection, not winning an argument. Record observable facts, preserve evidence, seek professional guidance, and escalate through appropriate legal or child-protection channels when needed.

Divorce
Detailed Reporting

Detailed Reporting for Custody Matters: Patterns Beat Panic

Undated · 6 min read

Reports help convert daily records into patterns. Parenting time, missed access, expenses, flags, and evidence become clearer when summarized consistently.

Custody Documentation Detailed Reporting
Divorce

What Happens to Your Child's RESP After Divorce?

Undated · 1 min read

Education savings can become complicated after separation. Parents should clarify ownership, contribution history, withdrawal rules, and how RESP decisions will be documented and communicated.

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

Distance Is Sometimes the Consequence, Not the Choice

Undated · 1 min read

Sometimes distance is not punishment. It is the result of repeated hurt, ignored boundaries, and lost peace. Walking away can be the first step toward healing and stability.

Divorce
Divorce

When a Partner Withdraws From Work and Family Life

Undated · 1 min read

When one partner steps back from work, household responsibilities, or family life, the pressure can land on everyone else. Keep the discussion practical: finances, responsibilities, support, and records.

Divorce
Divorce

Child Profile Information After Separation: Why Accuracy Matters

Undated · 1 min read

Children’s details can become fragmented during separation: schools, birthdays, medical notes, routines, contacts, and preferences. Keeping child profile information accurate supports safer, clearer decisions.

Divorce
Divorce

Staying Child-Focused During Separation

Undated · 1 min read

During separation, children need consistency more than adult conflict. Keep decisions grounded in routines, communication, safety, school, health, and documented parenting time.

Divorce
Divorce

Account Hacking During Separation: Protecting the Digital Record

Undated · 1 min read

Digital account access issues can quickly become stressful during separation. Track suspicious logins, password resets, device alerts, messages, and security steps so the timeline stays organized.

Divorce
Analyze Issues

Write Down, Dialogue With, and Analyze Custody Issues

Undated · 7 min read

Writing down issues creates distance from the emotion. Structured reflection helps you understand what happened, what matters, and what response is proportionate.

Custody Documentation Analyze Issues
Divorce

What a Coffee Shop Argument Can Teach About Divorce Conflict

Undated · 1 min read

Sometimes a public argument reveals the same patterns that appear in divorce: escalation, blame, poor timing, and no structure. The lesson is simple: calm documentation beats emotional reaction.

Divorce

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