Mental Effects Of Divorce On Children

1243 Words3 Pages

About half of marriages end in divorce. Divorce is a big change to people but have you ever thought how their children were affected by the divorce? Children are affected in many different ways, but having their parents divorce is by far one of the most stressful life experiences. Would their be more of a negative or positive affect on these children? There is a lot of proof on either side of this argument, but there is more proof of there being a negative effect on these children with divorced parents. In many cases, it can be a physical effect or it can be a mental effect, it all depends what age the child is. Either way children should not have to be affected in these ways. ”Children are always the losers in the divorce” (Shaffran).
“Because …show more content…

Psychological problems, depression, and substance abuse can all result in suicide.“Troubled children are particularly likely to develop problems with anger disobedience, and rule violations” (How Divorce Affects Children).
Mental effects usually happen more frequently than physical effects. Mental effects can include blaming themselves for the divorce, problems trusting other people, and having faulty beliefs of why the divorce happened in the first place. “Effects of kids under the age of nine tend to blame themselves for the divorce and dream about their parents getting back together” (Effects of Divorce…). Mental effects can get so harmful they have to get help from a therapist or even a medicine doctor. “Working with mediators getting the entire family into family therapy; getting the divorcing couple to go to couples therapy to do ‘uncoupling’ therapy and/or sending the children or adolescents for individual therapy are all great ways to assure good mental and physical health for the children. Sometimes, medication or alternative medicine could also benefit the children of divorce” …show more content…

There is also the effects of going to court. Children have to stand trial if their parents fight over custody. The parents don’t even get to choose their children's schedule, the court does it for them. Which can be a good thing and a bad thing. “Witnessing loss of love between parents, having parents break their marriage, commitment, adjusting to going back and forth between two different households, and the daily circumstances in which to live” (The Impact of Divorce…). Adjusting to going to a different household everyday can be a good thing because the child would get to see their parents everyday, but it can also be a bad thing because you are traveling each day and worrying what is going to happen day by day. Another example would be if the child’s parents lived far apart, then it would be less traveling but less frequent you get to see the other parent. Either way the traveling is going to be a struggle for the

Open Document