Adjustment to Divorce: A World of Uncertainty

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One late summer night when AAM was ten years old, she was cuddled up with her younger brother and sister in piles of sleeping bags on the floor. The pain of the last few months had graciously excused itself that night while hope, instead, was finally welcomed in. She remembers the night feeling carefree; especially once her parents came into join them. However, the happiness quickly vanished and heart-crushing fear began to set in as her parents said, “We have something to tell you.” Her heart began to beat unsteadily with each breath catching in her throat. She looked around to find her little brother and sister pale and lifeless. Her dad looked distant while her mom was epically failing at hiding her tears. All too soon the four most horrid words AAM would ever hear were said. “We are getting divorced,” her parents stated. At that moment, the entire world crashed down around her; leaving her helpless and alone. All she remembers today is her mom’s piercing cries in her parents’ old bedroom, and the terror-stricken fear of not knowing what will happen tomorrow.

Unfortunately, over one million new American children will have to suffer the divorce of their parents each year (Kirn, McDowell, Padgett, Sachs, & Thigpen, 2000). For adults, divorce is simply just a conclusion, but for children, it is the start of uncertainty. Where will I live? Will I still get to see mommy and daddy everyday? Why don’t they love each other anymore? These are a few questions children of divorce ask themselves when hearing the devastating news. According to historian John Sommerville, marriage initially emerged to create “security for the children to be expected from the union;” whereas today, “the child’s interest in the permanence ...

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...orce leaves behind sadness, despair, and unforgettable moments that carry through their lives forever. Some people believe that staying together in an unhappy marriage teaches children the wrong things about love, but divorce only teaches children to give up when things get hard. It is the easy way out when in struggling situations and engraves doubt into children’s minds. Divorce has irreversible impacts on children’s future views of family, life, and love.

Works Cited

Kirn, W., McDowell, J., Padgett, T., Sachs, A., & Thigpen, D. E. (2000). SHOULD YOU STAY TOGETHER FOR THE KIDS? (Cover story). Time, 156(13), 74.

MOSES, M. (2013). Helping Children Endure Divorce. Tennessee Bar Journal, 49(1), 34-38.

Tyre, P. (2005). The Secret Pain of Divorce. Newsweek, 146(17), 14.

Zinsmeister, K. (1996). Divorce's toll on children. American Enterprise, 7(3), 39.

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