How Divorce Sometimes Benefits Children

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The day of your wedding is supposed to be the happiest day of your life. Like 50% of US citizens, it commonly ends in divorce. But what if they have kids? Finances are split, as are the families that experience divorce. But its not always as bad as people make it out to be. Kids who have experienced divorce emerge more self-reliant, adaptable, and can even grow closer to family members. Divorce isn’t always as bad as people portray it. Commonly realized, divorce isn’t a great thing to happen to a family. But being in a bad relationship can have more negative effects on a child than divorce. In a study conducted of 98 couples, that later divorced, 80% of their children felt that their parents split was a good decision. Of the 20% that felt it wasn’t a good decision, most came from more abusive families. Being together in a bad relationship can actually cause more harm than good. Parents commonly think that by staying together for the kid’s sake will it eliminate negative effects and help their kids thrive. Nevertheless they see their parents unhappiness creating a more tense environment. Provided that the parents are abusive or are more vocal about their opinions then it can actually create a traumatic environment around the child, making them feel unsafe or timid constantly. What the minority of people know is that divorce can actually give kids positive vibes. Divorce can teach kids to focus on the positives and keep moving forward in life. In a Harper Collins book it says (We’re still family: What grown Children have to say about their parents divorce) that “ kids more commonly emerge wiser in spite of- or perhaps because of- their complex histories.” Multiple studies have proven, kids who have experienced divorce emerge mo... ... middle of paper ... ...is economy we live in today, relationships with others are important. This means whether it’s with parents, friends, business associates, or colleagues; we need beneficial relationships to succeed. In every divorce there are doubts.. But moving on from them is what makes us stronger. Learning from our mistakes and adapting to our situations is what makes people great. Divorce hasn’t effected kids in the past so why do people think it effects us so badly now? Why do they assume that because we have been through hard times, it makes us fragile? These are the questions I ask people. These are also the question they struggle to answer. Divorce doesn’t make a child fragile, but more self-reliant, adaptable, and can make their relationships with family members/parents even stronger than they were before. Why focus on the negatives, when you can focus on the positives.

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