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3 min read

Renewing contact with children

Home  >  Advice  >  Divorce and separation  >  Co-parenting for separated parents  >  Renewing contact with children

Renewing contact with children

3 min read

If you haven’t seen your children for a long time, there’s no way of knowing how they’ll react on seeing you again. They may feel resentful or they may jump at the chance. There may be all sorts of reasons why you lost touch and there also may be some issues that you need to address about your feelings, priorities or lifestyle to help restore contact. Get back in touch and talk things through with your ex and the children first. The sooner you do so, the sooner you can start to rebuild contact. 

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Building bridges

Once you have made the decision to renew contact it may not be an easy pathto build a relationship with your children.Children can feel torn between wanting to get to know you better, whilst remaining loyal to the parent who has raised them. On the other hand, you need to prepare yourself for your child not wanting contact with you at first. If you want to change the situation, don’t let things drift anymore. You can talk to one of our Family Support Workers via our helpline, live chat or email to help you build bridges and confidence with your children and your ex. You may have to approach your ex partner first to discuss the situation and what is the best way forward. If relatiionships are frayed perhaps there are family members that can help by acting as mediators. It is important to be prepared for difficult and challenging questions and it is important to be honest with your responses. In a situation like this, tiny steps are important to help build bridges and it may take some time, patience and consistency.

Making arrangements

Consider finding a halfway spot you can meet at for the handover to cut down on travel costs for both of you. It’s a good idea to give your children a calendar, marked with the dates when you’ll be seeing each other. Send texts and make video callsso they can have lots of reminders that you love them and are thinking of them inbetween contact. Be careful to stick to the arrangements you made and make every effort not to cancel or change them as this is really disappointing for the children. It’s not just parents and children who hurt when contact arrangements fall down. It is important to work with the other parent and a co-parenting plan may help you both to make positive arrangments that you are both happy with. Our advice on creating a co-parenting plan is a useful resource. We also have a free online parenting course on co-parenting that can help you further develop those necessary skills to help you work with the other parent to put your children’s best interests first.

Involving other family members

The stability offered by grandparents and other relatives, such as aunts and uncles, can be such a help to children when their family changes, but it can make the situation even more difficult if they hear hostility or criticism when what they need is unreserved love and support. Grandparents and other relatives may find it difficult to stand back and not get involved with family arguments over separation, but it’s essential that they do. Nothing is more devastating than losing contact with your grandchildren completely. If you are a grandparent in this situation, consider contacting your son- or daughter-in-law to say that you are sorry for any past arguments and would just like to see your grandchildren.

Further Resources

If you would like further support and advice, you can contact our free confidential helpline on 0808 800 2222 (Monday to Friday, 9am–9pm; Saturday and Sunday, 10am–3pm).

You can also use our online chat to talk to a trained family support worker, or visit our forums to chat with other parents and carers.

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