Parental Relationships After Divorce: From ‘Perfect Pals’ to ‘Fiery Foes’

Although divorce/relationship
breakdown happens at a number of levels – psychological, legal, economic – it
is children that are usually the first concern. Who will take custody? How will
the parents manage their relationship after they have separated? Continuing the
series on the psychology of relationships, this post examines five broad ways
psychological research has found people negotiate their newfound status as
‘separated parents’.
Ahrons (1983) finds that
co-parenting post-divorce can go one of five ways, the first three of which are
considered relatively functional:
1. Dissolved Duos (or “Is
Daddy dead?”) Dad disappears (and it is
normally Daddy) and the children lose the relationship with their father. This
is the only category resulting in a true single-parent family.
2. Perfect Pals (or “Mummy and
Daddy are divorced? Are you sure?”)
The ‘Perfect Pals’ continue to
carry out their parenting duties together, still claim each other as their best
friends and often do not remarry. Other people (not least psychologists) find
their relationship mysterious.
3. Cooperative Colleagues (or
“Mummy and Daddy work together.”)
Less mysterious than the
‘Perfect Pals’, ‘Cooperative Colleagues’ work together but wouldn’t describe
each other as their best friend. This is code for: have remarried/got a new
partner. This type of parenting style has often been reached only after a long,
concerted effort.
These are the
post-divorce/separation co-parenting styles considered less functional by
Ahrons (1983):
4. Angry Associates (or “Mummy
and Daddy shout at each other. A lot.”) Divorce didn’t stop the
fighting. There’s plenty of anger and resentment to go around here. The
children often lose out although ‘Angry Associates’ occasionally manage to be
friendly.
5. Fiery Foes (or “Mummy and
Daddy are spending my college fund on lawyers.”) All out warfare between
parents. There’s little escape from the rage for anyone in the family. Children
often become pawns in the fight and parents frequently end up in court fighting
over custody.
Unable to move on?
These categories, broad as
they are, raise some interesting points that often remain concealed.
The idea is still floating
around that hanging onto a relationship post-divorce/separation spells trouble.
As a result people are often suspicious of the ‘Perfect Pals’, thinking they
have been unable to ‘move on’ with their lives. But this isn’t necessarily
true. The ‘Perfect Pals’ along with the ‘Cooperative Colleagues’ are doing
what’s best for the children, trying to cope with a less than ideal situation.
In whose interests?
With all the talk of the
children’s welfare, parents get forgotten. While research is adamant that the
both ‘Perfect Pals’ and ‘Cooperative Colleagues’ are doing the best for their
children, it’s less clear what’s good for the parents themselves (Ahrons &
Rodgers, 1989).
The best category to be in,
from the child’s perspective, is the ‘Cooperative Colleagues’ or ‘Perfect Pals’
who continue to have respect for each other, carry out their parental duties
and can still remember the good times of their relationship. Unfortunately the
mere existence of the other categories proves things don’t always go so
smoothly.
The ‘binuclear family’
What four of these categories
show is that the so-called ‘single-parent’ is something of a misnomer. Only the
‘Dissolved Duo’ really falls into this category, while all the rest, for better
or worse, clearly do not.
Commentators on the family
have been much too quick to talk of the father (or mother) being either present
or absent (Ahrons & Rodgers, 1989). Often the truth lies somewhere in
between. What more normally emerges from separation or divorce is the
‘binuclear family’, a new family system orbiting around two centres: some
stable, others less so.
About
the author
Psychologist, Jeremy Dean, PhD
is the founder and author of PsyBlog. He holds a doctorate in psychology from
University College London and two other advanced degrees in psychology.
He has been writing about
scientific research on PsyBlog since 2004. He is also the author of the book
“Making Habits, Breaking Habits” (Da Capo, 2003) and several ebooks.
SOURCE: PSYBLOG
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