For my research, I chose to discuss the various ways children are affected by their parents' divorce. Divorce is difficult for everyone involved, but many people are not aware that these problems may have a significant impact on children not directly involved. In addition, many of the negative effects of the wedding will actually continue and may be long-term. Most parents are aware that divorce affects children, but in general adults do not know that their children may be affected during the rest of their lives.
An American child and adolescent psychiatry academy stated that children who divorced will continue to perform better when their parents continue to participate in child rearing. Despite the divorce, please make sure you celebrate all important family activities, especially your child's birthday. Keep teaching children as parents so that children can spend a healthy childhood as parents. They will tell them that your decision should not affect their lives, they will continue to maintain normal activities like going to school, learning, and playing with friends
A divorce that is a divorced child, a divorced mother of two children, and a long-term divorced lawyer / therapist is not what I claim to improve children's mental health. In other words, now I am very well reflected on the other side, I can point out that there are at least four ways to benefit children from divorce (the dictionary "promote happiness, or It is defined as "enhancing"). WARNING: As a 360-degree thinker, I will offer disadvantages for any benefit. In my experience, many of the divorced children are more independent than their colleagues. Regardless of whether it is self-protecting, self-exciting or self-aware, children who are divorced can not be married because the parent's attention is diverted for a relatively long time in child development It often shows independence.
The influence of divorce has great damage to the growth and development of children, and has greatly changed their way of life. According to research, "The impact depends on the age of the child at the time of divorce, the gender and character of the child, conflict between parents, and support from friends and family members" (Temke 109). Children over 2 years of age may experience emotional and psychological interference if parents divorce. Children at this stage are maturing enough psychologically enough to understand the nature of the relationship the parents experience, and when parents divorce, they often feel depressed and traumatic. Preschool children tend to get divorced because they feel guilty and depart from their families to divorce. They are frustrated because their children are so small that they can withstand emotional and psychological barriers and their performance declines in the classroom.