Your ex didn't become unhinged overnight. Your parenting plan just finally gave them the tools to show you.
If you have the words "open communication" sitting in your parenting plan with absolutely nothing else around them, you did not write a rule. You wrote a blank check. And your high-conflict ex has been signing their name to it every single day since you both walked out of that courtroom.
This is the episode nobody wants to have because it means admitting that the document you fought for, paid thousands of dollars for, and cried over might be the very thing working against you right now. The communication clause, or the total disaster that exists where one should be, is one of the most dangerous things I see in parenting plans. No response windows. No platform. No volume limits. No defined hours. Nothing. Just "open communication" sitting there like that means something. It does not mean something. It means everything is allowed. And everything is too much.
When your ex sends you 75 messages before noon they are not out of control. They are on schedule. Because nothing in your plan told them they couldn't. That is the part that should keep you up at night.
I get into what this actually looks like in real life when you are dealing with a high-conflict person. It looks like your phone exploding while you are trying to be present with your kids. It looks like a message thread that opens with a simple question and ends with a custody threat forty-five messages later. It looks like sitting across from a judge being called an unresponsive co-parent because you had the audacity to not answer during your own parenting time.
And I get personal because I lived this. I used to run to that phone like I would get struck by lightning if I didn't answer in time. I set a specific ringtone so I would always know it was him. And I still picked up every single time. I genuinely believed I was being a good co-parent. What I was actually doing was surviving. I was managing his emotions at the expense of my kids sitting right in front of me waiting for me to come back to them. And the worst part is I then watched my kids do the exact same thing when they got their own phones because I set that tone. I trained all of us.
That stops when your parenting plan has actual teeth in it. Not suggestions. Not vibes. Rules.
If your communication clause is vague, your protection is vague. And vague does not hold up in court, does not stop the spiral at 6am, and does not give you your life back. Let's talk about fixing it.
Here’s What You Can Actually Take Away:
- The "Open Communication" Trap: If your parenting plan doesn't define how, when, and how often communication happens, you've written your ex a permission slip to harass you.
- Two Messages Is Already the Limit: Anything past two unanswered messages is not urgency. It's a pattern, and patterns need to be in your documentation.
- Business Hours Are Professional, Not Petty: Treating co-parenting like a business transaction is not cold. It is smart, and your parenting plan should reflect structured response windows that protect your time with your kids.
- Vague Language Will Cost You: Words like "reasonable" and "open" are not measurable in court. If a judge or attorney can't define it specifically, it will never protect you specifically.
Your Parenting Time Is Sacred: Every message your ex sends while you have the kids is an attempt to pull your attention away from them. A strong communication clause shuts that down before it starts.
- "Open communication with no rules is not a co-parenting plan. It's a harassment plan with your signature on it."
- "I used to run to that phone like I'd get in trouble if I didn't. That was trauma. That was not co-parenting."
- "You don't get a sash for being the parent who answers the most. That award does not exist. Stop chasing it."
- "If it's not written in your parenting plan, it's not a rule. And if it's not a rule, your ex will use every inch of that gap."
- "Anything past two messages is harassment. I don't care what they're texting about. If I didn't answer the first two, I'm not answering the next twenty."
"They don't message you during your parenting time because they care about the kids. They message you because they can't stand that you're living your life without them."
A Team DklutrProduction
Fler avsnitt av The Ugly Truth of Divorce
Visa alla avsnitt av The Ugly Truth of DivorceThe Ugly Truth of Divorce med Samantha Boss finns tillgänglig på flera plattformar. Informationen på denna sida kommer från offentliga podd-flöden.
