Divorce Effects On Children

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Effects of divorce on children
Mental
Divorce is related to reduced mental well-being in children and adult children/child of divorced parents, including greater unhappiness, less satisfaction with life, weaker sense of personal control, fear and stress-related, depression, and greater use of mental health services. A majority of evidence points to/shows that there is a (proof that one thing definitely causes another) effect between divorce and these results.
Children of divorced parents are also more likely to experience conflict in their own marriages, and are more likely to experience divorce themselves. They are also more likely to be involved in short-term (related to living together) relationships, which often dissolve before marriage. …show more content…

Examples of this are asking children to carry messages between parents, grilling children about the other parent's activities, and putting the other parent down in front of the children. High-conflict divorce or custody cases can experience changing/different forms of Parental Loneliness/irritation. The Family Courts often consider Parental Loneliness/irritation as a form of child (very mean, unfair treatment). Specific examples of Parental Loneliness/irritation include (changing someone's mind through force and tricks) the child to stop their relationship with the other parent, telling the child that the other parent does not love them, teaching the child to call another adult by a parental name in effort to replace the other parent, limiting communication between the child and the other parent, and limiting quality time between the child and the other parent. If evidence shows/tells about that a parent is actively abandoning/irritating the child from their other parent, their case for custody can be very badly …show more content…

Several (machines/methods/ways) are likely to be responsible. First, watching/following obvious conflict between parents is a direct upsetting thing for children. Observational studies show/tell about that children react to inter-parental conflict with fear, anger, or the stopion of normal behavior. Preschool children - who tend to be self-centered - may blame themselves for marriage-related conflict, resulting in feelings of guilt and lowered self-confidence. Conflict between parents also tends to spill over and negatively affect the quality of parents' interactions with their children. Researchers found that the associations between marriage-related conflict and children's externalizing and (making a part of you) problems were mostly helped settle (an argument) by parents' use of harsh punishment and parent-child conflict. What's more, modeling verbal or physical (angry, violent behavior), parents "teach" their children that disagreements are resolved through conflict rather than calm discussion. As a result, children may not learn the social skills (such as the ability to negotiate and reach compromises) that are necessary to form (to both people or groups equally) rewarding relationships with

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