
Director at
Family Law in Partnership
Let’s not sugar coat it, this question “what do I do now?” (at the moment you know you will separate) is the single most important question you will answer in this whole chapter of your life. There will be a lot of other questions that you will be coming to, but get this one right and you should be able to avoid the unreasonable positioning and exhausting demands of a slow process that will cost eye-watering amounts, to achieve to your best possible outcome.
Here are my ten top tips from helping clients through this part of their lives for the past forty-something years.
1. Ensure you are safe
Ensure your safety and the safety of your children. If there is a risk to this then it will dictate how you address the rest of these tips.
Safety at the end of a relationship is a whole topic on its own and planning for it will depend on your situation. In controlling relationships, it is likely that a whole range of strategies will have been put in place around you by your prospective ex, with the intention of making it impossible for you to go. The single most important thing is to reach the realisation that yes you are going to leave – it is then about getting the support to manage your way out of the maze. If you need help to leave safely, there are amazing organisations that can help you manage a safe exit. Everything follows from this.
2. Manage your emergencies
In the same way, some separations have emergencies – personal safety is the most important. Others can include:
- jurisdictional races (where one of you could start proceedings in a different country, you may need to act quickly to ensure your divorce takes place where your needs and those of the children will be met favourably)
- a child being taken abroad to separate them from you (child abduction)
- information or assets being hidden or disposed of
- your being isolated from funds.
Some of these you can address in part – or at least make easier – but many of them are going to require immediate professional help, probably from a solicitor.
The rest of the “to-dos” are subject to emergencies – sometimes you won’t have time to plan your best path, you will feel bounced around by circumstance. Just carry on trying your best, accepting where you are and planning from there.
3. Consider couple counselling
If there are no safety concerns, this is a consideration that you should not skate past. I have worked for too many people who have said their ex has come back to them some years down the road saying “I got it wrong – I don’t know what I was thinking- is there a way back for us?”. For me that points to a missed opportunity for some serious conversation around what was not working in the relationship and each person’s capacity for change. Of course, the result may still be that you decide to separate, but talking things through a counsellor is also likely to reassure and make for better progress if you do decide to part.
4. Be kind if you can
So often, perhaps when people come to me midway through, they seem to be in a terrible situation, which they are finding hard to understand. There might be brutality around disclosure or how the finances are being managed for the interim or how arrangements are being set around the children. It is all a bit destructive and aimless, which is a surprise as they’re decent people. So, what went wrong? Well usually it is about how things started.
Actions like deception and adultery matter (see my blog here on this very point) – perhaps not to the professionals who know the courts don’t care, but they really matter to the person being deceived and to their kids when they find out. Brutal and sharp separations are like throwing a huge slab of concrete into a small pond – the splash and ripples are going to play havoc for a while and in unexpected ways. Stepping out slowly and gently with empathy respect and understanding, can help everyone get through to the smart choices more quickly.
5. Start early
It follows that planning and starting early is usually a positive too, you can pace things more calmly. You don’t find yourself suddenly desperate that it all has to be sorted by the weekend. (That “I have just had it up to here” moment). It also means that you are less likely to be bounced into the “well I am leaving you” discussion at the worst of times in the heat of an argument. These things are going to be tough and thinking about how to do it in the best way, in the calm, will pay dividends.
6. Get support
All of that is going to point towards you getting individual support. So many people say “I don’t need that fluffy stuff …” or “we are not getting back together”. But that is not what this is about. It is about understanding where your ex is and what they are going through. It is about helping you to think of this from their side to be able to move things on in the best way possible. It is tough. It is practical. It is also short term and goal-oriented.
Find the right support and you will be challenged to do this well, but also supported to do so. That’s why I recommend that you get professional support – not just support from your mates or family:
This is the other response to my recommendation of professional expertise is “well I am talking to my friends.” The problem with relying solely on friends and family is that:
- They care too much and as such, are likely to operate like an echo chamber for you: they want to be supportive and are likely to tell you what they think you want to hear – which is not always what you need to hear
- They may bring their own unresolved personal issues to the conversation and that is not helpful
- They don’t have the training to help you process everything in a constructive way
- Their advice is likely to be on the hoof, quick answers without the depth of consideration that is really needed
- You may find yourself managing your choices to keep them satisfied.
Without meaning to cast aspersions on your inner circle, you are also sharing confidences with them which may well be shared with others.
I could go on but in essence, therapists are likely to be the most valuable in monetary terms. Find the right one and use them.
7. Think and write
So you know you are going to need to get some advice and guidance (how else are you going to have the anchor of knowing your rights and obligations – how else would you recognise a good deal?). Lawyers charge by time and will read a well-organised briefing way quicker than they can ask questions and you answer them. Many firms will have an information gatherer on their website. If you want to get the most from your time with a lawyer and keep costs time, you would prepare:
- A balance sheet of where you are now:
- who is in the family and who are the relatives and important other people in your lives
- all the dates and details that are going to be needed such as when the relationship started, was formalised and ended
- and yes those financial numbers all pinned down so far as known.
- In addition there will be descriptions of what is going on – what everyone is like; how are your children doing, pictures etc.
- An account of how you got here this is likely to take in your families of origin, education, careers, first homes, challenges and so on
- And then the quick fire document for a first call: The super brief summary and a clear vision of what you want and what you think are the hurdles to getting there.
Indeed sometimes I think that this last piece of knowing what you are needing is the single most important piece of work that will be in your briefing for the next step.
8. Find the right professional
This can feel like a minefield. There are directories ranking legal professionals, but they may not be your best starting point. What you are likely to want is that skilled professional whom you trust because they get you and their values resonate with yours, simple as that.
When you are researching there will be lots of focus on who does what process and your head can spin with the terms likely to be coming at you: negotiation/ collaborative/ co-operative/ one lawyer/ together/ amicable/ litigation/ mediation/ child inclusion/ hybrid/ integrative, but that shouldn’t be your worry: Your job is to be clear about your needs (those hurdles you identified at stage 7), not the process (which is what the professional brings to accommodate them). It is the professional’s job to show that they have heard you and to explain their recommendation. If you are convinced, you have the start of your plan. If you are not then say so – if you are not heard, you may not be in the right room so think about moving on now.
It is why you might do well to choose a professional who is serious about all the different ways of doing things – it will ensure you are presented with all the options. Many lawyers will only have one qualification, permitting them to negotiate your case with the court as a fall back and the court is the last place most people want to end up. If your lawyer doesn’t know, isn’t familiar with and doesn’t use collaborative, mediation or arbitration then just have in mind that these ways that might suit you better will probably not be on the menu for discussion.
9. Be brave …ish
Sitting down to talk with your ex may be absolutely the last thing you want to do, and of course you shouldn’t compromise safety, but for most people, a professionally assisted conversation with a neutral person (likely to be in mediation – but potentially “one lawyer”) is likely to be the fast route to finding the best solution. Your ex is likely to have a view of what they think the outcome should be and they are going to hang onto it until you can show that you have heard them. It is much harder to do this if your discussion is via letters and emails being fired between lawyers from their respective trenches a seeming “safe” distance away from each other.
The right mediator will help you both to manage a safe and productive conversation even in difficult situations. There would be an assessment and intake process (called “a MIAM”, standing for Mediation Information and Assessment Meeting) when you can gather an understanding of what mediation would be like and talk through whether it is for you. In fact, you are required in most situations to have this meeting even if you wanted ultimately to go to court and I would encourage you to enter this meeting with an open mind as there is a lot of flexibility in mediation and other processes which may mean they are better for you.
10. Think kids
So obvious you may say it didn’t need saying. Where you have children, they are likely to be the lens through which all of this is viewed, you will consider your children:
- when you take steps to start
- in how you manage the relationship with your ex (because you are usually going to be co-parenting long term so you will not want to lay waste to how you talk to each other)
- in the choices you make (for example the geography of your homes and family-friendly career-choices)
- in the timing of any new relationship
- in how you work out care and decision making: your children are part of each of you, they need safe arrangements to have a relationship with each of you if possible – and ideally each of you supporting the other to be the best parent you can be.
There is a lot to consider and it is all too easy to delay. But whether this relationship is your future or not is for you to decide and in your heart you will know the answer to that (especially if you have been through tip 3).
If this relationship is not working and can’t be made to work, it is unlikely to be the best example of “adult relationships” for your kids, but beyond this, please don’t become that person I see so regularly who says “now I know about it all, I should have done this a decade ago, it would have been better for everyone.”
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About James Pirrie
James Pirrie is a Director of Family Law in Partnership, a highly regarded law firm based in London, which specialises in de-escalating conflict in family law. He is an Arbitrator, Family Solicitor and Mediator accredited in child-inclusive mediation.
James is driven to improve long term outcomes for families who are experiencing separation or divorce. He is credited with introducing collaborative law to the UK and with changing how children’s needs are addressed during family breakdown through the Parenting after Parting initiative.