This is your Member Reference Number (MRN). You’ll need to provide this when you make an appointment with an EAP counselor or contact your EAP by phone.

Anthem provides automatic translation into multiple languages, courtesy of Google Translate. This tool is provided for your convenience only. The English language version is considered the most accurate, and in the event of a discrepancy between the translations, the English version will prevail. This translation tool is not controlled by Anthem, and the Anthem Privacy Statement will not apply. Please read Google's privacy statement. If you want Google to translate the Anthem website, select a language.

A Race to Settle May Leave You Short

Now that the ink has dried on your settlement agreement, can you rest assured that once the children are grown and independent you can afford your lifestyle and your kids will be the best they can be? If you are guessing at the answer, you or your children may be at risk.

Most people's attention to a separation or divorce settlement agreement focuses on the here and now: keeping or losing the house, sharing the care of the children at the current age, divvying up the assets, and determining support obligations. Hence, the long-term interests for financial survival and children's optimal functioning come their adulthood and your lifelong relationship to them may be at risk.

The challenge in developing a robust settlement agreement that meets present and future interests is in balancing the immediate need for emancipation from the couple relationship and forging a new relationship that recognizes and respects ongoing connections. The ongoing connections will be the result of continuing financial obligations and/or the care of children as they grow and change with age.

A primary focus on emancipation may produce an outcome that is misaligned with long-term interests. Mutual long-term interests of financial security and lifelong relationships with adult children require just as much attention in the settlement process.

The dual focus, respecting the need for emancipation while respecting ongoing connections, can achieve a better balance between short- and long-term interests. The dual focus requires the couple to contemplate the quality of life and relationships they would like for themselves and ultimately with their adult children.

The thought of ongoing connections can be distressing for some couples, particularly with increasing needs for immediate emancipation. Separating couples may need considerable help to manage ongoing connections and in particular, the points of intersection for their ongoing connections.

To help and best address long-term financial interests, a certified financial divorce specialist can generate projections with regard to spousal and child support that take into account earnings and holdings into the future. Thus, separating couples have more robust information to determine the financial aspect of their separation agreement with concern for both peoples' present and future interests.

The family-life specialist helps separating parents achieve parenting plans that consider both present as well as the developmental needs of children for enabling their optimal growth and lifelong relationships. Further, they can help parents overcome issues related to anger or grief for the demise of the relationship and help parents address barriers to reasonable parenting. This specialist can also help one or both persons make psychological adjustments to facilitate changes necessitated by financial realities and the developmental needs of children. The goal is to help the children, as beneficiaries of their parents' care, receive the best care possible for their lifelong development and your lifelong relationship to them.

Collaborative-practice lawyers recognize the profound contribution financial and family life specialists make to your divorce or separation agreement. By including all these professionals from the outset of the settlement process, you stand to devise a more robust and durable agreement.

Before hastening through the settlement process, don't sell yourself or your children short in the long run. Seek a settlement that provides for both short- and long-term interests. Include all the necessary specialists.

About the Author

Gary Direnfeld, RSW (Registered Social Worker), MSW (Master of Social Work), is a social worker in private practice. Courts in Ontario, Canada, consider Gary an expert on child development, parent-child relations, marital and family therapy, custody and access recommendations, and social work.

Direnfeld, G. (n.d.). A race to settle may leave you short. Retrieved October 14, 2020, from http://www.yoursocialworker.com

More about this Topics

  • Separated Parents in Dispute

  • Child and Spousal Support

  • What Is Child Custody?

  • Choosing an Adoption Attorney

  • Credible Data in Custody and Access Disputes

Other Topics

    • Authorization for Foreign Travel With a Minor
    • Temporary Guardianship Authorization for Care of a Minor
    • Declaration of Legal Name Change
    • Request to Begin Special Education Process
    • Separation vs. Divorce
    • Child Support and Taxes
    • Hiring Workers in Your Home: Legal Requirements
    • When do my 12 weeks of FMLA leave "renew?
    • Prenuptial Agreement Benefits and Drawbacks
    • Right of First Refusal
    • American Bar Association