- Wendy Spencer Divorce Mediator - http://spencerdivorcemediator.com -

Sharing the House After Divorce - A New Trend?

Posted By wendy On July 17, 2009 @ 12:48 pm In General Divorce Issues, Money and Divorce, Uncategorized | No Comments

The last blog I wrote discussed the fact that many people may be too poor to get divorced.  A new twist was described recently in the Wall Street Journal article, dated Monday, July 13, 2009, and titled “What God Has Joined Together, Recession Makes Hard to Put Asunder.”   The author, Jennifer Levitz, interviewed several couples that have gotten divorced, but still live in the same house.  The reason for this situation is twofold:  one of the couple is unemployed and/or they are unable to sell the family house.  According the couples interviewed, they seem to manage their lives OK, even if it is awkward at times.  Certainly it is not a desirable situation, but they have chosen to reside in the same house at least until their financial situation improves.  I saw this situation occur with clients in my practice.  They are still living in the same house, and trying hard to make a difficult situation work, with varying degrees of success.

Ms. Levitz also discusses the fact that couples are delaying the decision to divorce, even though their relationships are not working for several reasons – some are uncomfortable at being single during this recession, or they are waiting until economic times improve.  I found that a similar prevailing sentiment developed after the September 11, 2001 attack and persisted throughout 2002.  After that, the economic situation improved, and people began filing for divorce once they were more financially comfortable.  Eventually couples found a way to dissolve their marriages if they wanted to do so.

Some ideas for people stuck in this situation:

1.      Work on your relationship.  Spend some of the time actively trying to improve your relationship with your current or ex-spouse.   Get professional marriage counseling help if you feel you need it.

2.      Jointly develop some rules or guidelines – about sharing household tasks, respecting privacy, dating, and parenting, for example.  A professional mediator may be able to help you work through these issues and to jointly develop a plan for living together until you can physically live apart. 

3.      Schedule some separate time.  Try not to spend a lot of time together if the togetherness makes your relationship worse.  Find activities to perform in the house that you will do separately, or schedule outside activities with friends and family if possible.

4.      Work on your finances.  Prepare a budget and stick to it.  Cut expenses where you can – be creative!  Review your assets and your liabilities and reduce your debt where possible.  Do a “what-if” budget assessing your expenses for if and when you divorce.  You will need to know this information anyway to make good decisions about dividing marital assets when you do decide to divorce. Contact a financial professional experienced in divorce matters if you need help.

Do you have any other thoughts on how to handle this situation?  If so, please let me know!


Article printed from Wendy Spencer Divorce Mediator: http://spencerdivorcemediator.com

URL to article: http://spencerdivorcemediator.com/?p=43

Click here to print.