Reposted from my blog at
www.thegrownupchild.ca:
House Hopping
Adolescent years are a challenge. For everyone involved. Young
individuals searching, yearning for their independence though not yet
prepared to manage the cost/benefit scales of life. Crazed parents
hurt by their child’s sudden rebuttals and scared by both their loss of
control and their child’s inability to make consistent good choices.
These years are typically speckled with yelling matches, sulking, door
slamming, grounding and aren’t often remembered as the glory days. I’m
sure we can all remember wishing we could just run away, with only the
thought of living on the street and having no money keeping us home.
But children of divorce uniquely have another option. They have
somewhere safe to run. Somewhere that is also considered home. Their
other parent’s home. And almost every single child of divorce that I
know, including myself has done the house hop. For the child, it’s a
logical solution. Most likely it has been important to both parents
for them to feel the other parent’s home was their home too. So if
their current residence isn’t satisfactory, why not try the other?
It’s certainly not as tumultuous as moving in with grandma or an aunt.
Much better than living in a gutter somewhere. Yes, it is perfectly
acceptable to live with a biological parent. Either one of them.
And so the question gets posed. Can I come live with you? But the
answer can be tricky. A catch twenty two. For the other parent
doesn’t want to say ‘no’. What would that say to their child? A
rejection. It would say ‘no, I don’t want you. You don’t live with me
and there’s a reason for that.’. But what does ‘yes’ say? It says
‘sure, don’t try to work out your relationship issues. Escape is a
perfectly acceptable solution to conflict. So come live here
instead.’. How can a parent win? How can the child?
Co-parenting. Pure and simple. Because teenagers are rash. Parents
living with teenagers become overwhelmed. And that leaves only one
role available to relieve the situation. The moderator. Decisions
made out of anger or resentment are never wise and decisions made by
teenagers are rarely well thought out. Someone needs to be the voice
of reason. Someone not directly involved in the battle but who’s
opinion is also valued. And the other biological parent is in the
perfect position to take on the role. But as I’ve mentioned before, co-parenting isn’t easy.
And the role of moderator is difficult even by co-parenting
standards. Made more difficult if relations with their ex spouse are
tenuous or if they have an underlying self interest in custody. And the
level of difficulty only increases if they have never had the
experience of parenting, really parenting a teenager themselves. But
moderating is vital to teaching the child how to positively deal with
problems in relationships. Their sense of conflict resolution may
already be based on a model of severance or withdrawal due their own
view of their parent's divorce. And it should be vital to any parent
not to reinforce that. It’s a pattern they don't want established.
Once the crisis has been moderated between the child and parent, then
both parents can discuss the custody agreement with each other. If
both are in agreement, changes can be made. For although there is
debate among professionals on this topic, I believe that custody issues
should never rest on the shoulders of children.
I am still haunted by my own experience with doing the hop.
Thirteen hundred miles and a complete breakdown in co-parenting
escalated the situation to a level it never needed to go. But as I
look around at my ACOD
friends, it is rarely such a dramatic event. Just another strange
reality in their line up of strange realities. I hopped twice. Once
from my mom’s to my dad’s, then from my dad’s to my mom’s. I’ve seen
some hop from just once. Others over and over; back and forth. I
still carry the guilt of my hop with me. The typical child of
divorce. Responsible for everything. Wondering if it was my job to
be the moderator instead of the teenager.
House hopping will happen. As long as the decision isn’t made as a
means of escape, I don’t really see the harm. Parents should
understand that it’s not personal. Look past the pain and realize that
it is simply a teenager finding one more way to exercise their
independence. It may not be something that your peers with nuclear
families have to endure, but your child doesn’t live in a nuclear
family. So take solace in the knowledge that your child loves you.
Will always love you. Even if they are a little house hopper. I mean
really, why shouldn’t a child of divorce get to experience living with
both of their parents? The other kids get to. They just don’t have to
move to do it.