There is no shortage of difficult and even painful conversations we may need to have with our kids throughout their childhood. But telling them their parents are divorcing, changing forever the very structure of their family and their lives, has to be one of the hardest. Depending on their age, the messaging in those conversations will evolve, and the behaviors they may display that indicate they’re in distress will look different.
But Dr. Joanna Stern, a senior clinical psychologist at the Child Mind Institute, says that although the way you talk to kids about a divorce will change and get more nuanced as they get older, all kids need to feel or hear reassurance that they are going to be cared for and supported during and after the process.
“What they really want to communicate to kids of all ages is, ‘We’ve got you,’” Sterns says. “‘Your needs are going to be taken care of regardless of what is happening with us and with the divorce.’”
And just as important, Stern says, is to remember what not to say—namely, don’t bad-mouth the other parent, even in subtle ways and even with the youngest of kids.
So let’s start there—with babies and toddlers.