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Preparing Parenting Plans-Part 1: Why Overnights and Holidays Matter Less Than You Think

When parents prepare for divorce mediation, they often come in with the weight of financial decisions on their shoulders—who gets the house, how much child support will be paid, and how the overnights will be split. These are important questions, but there’s a critical piece of the puzzle that many parents overlook in their rush to secure financial and logistical details: the long-term emotional and developmental well-being of their children.

As a Certified Professional Divorce Mediator, I’ve seen it time and time again. Parents pour their energy into negotiating overnight schedules and decision-making rights without fully understanding that their children’s priorities may be drastically different from their own. In this blog, I’ll share why it’s so important to shift your focus in mediation, what’s really important to children, and how you can prepare to make your mediation sessions more effective.

Why Parents Focus on the Wrong Things

Imagine you’re standing on the edge of a massive hole in the ground. Your house teeters on one side, just moments away from falling in. On the other side, your children cling to the edge, their grip weakening. You can only save one—your house or your children.

Without question, most people would choose to save their children. But in divorce mediation, many parents inadvertently run to save their metaphorical “house”—their financial security—while their children’s emotional well-being is left clinging to the edge.

In reality, almost no preparation goes into discussing how the divorce will impact the kids or how co-parents will work together to meet their children’s long-term needs. Instead, parents focus on overnights and decision-making control, topics that might seem important but often fail to account for the bigger picture.

The Real Priorities for Children

One of the biggest misconceptions is that children care about overnights or which parent gets them for Christmas. Spoiler alert: they don’t. What children care about most is having conflict-free, loving relationships with both parents. They want stability, safety, and a sense that both parents are fully engaged in their lives. The exact number of overnights or who spends more holidays with them won’t shape their future nearly as much as the emotional environment you create.

In fact, I recently recorded a podcast episode where I spoke with four adult children of divorced parents, ranging in age from 21 to 31. When I asked them what their parents prioritized during mediation that turned out to be completely unimportant to them, all four immediately said, “Holidays.” While parents often fight hard for specific days, kids just want quality time, no matter what the calendar says.

The Importance of Reducing Conflict

If there’s one piece of advice I could give every parent heading into divorce mediation, it’s this: the most important thing you can do for your children is eliminate conflict. Whether you call it a parenting plan or a custody agreement, the legal document you draft should prioritize reducing conflict above all else. Studies show that the biggest factor in how well children adjust after divorce isn’t whether they have equal time with both parents, but whether they are exposed to ongoing conflict.

This doesn’t mean you should hide or suppress conflict, or worse, involve your children in it by trying to justify your actions. Instead, take real steps to resolve disputes amicably. A cooperative or collaborative approach to parenting will give your children the best chance to grow up feeling secure and loved, even in a divided home.

Setting Realistic Expectations

The key to a successful parenting plan isn’t just legal language—it’s setting realistic expectations. One of the most common sources of conflict is when parents don’t have clear, shared expectations about what child support covers, how decisions will be made, or even how to handle small day-to-day tasks. This can lead to years of unnecessary arguments.

For example, I’ve mediated for parents who spent years fighting over what child support was meant to cover. One parent believed it covered everything—groceries, school supplies, and clothing—while the other believed those were additional expenses. Had they taken the time to set clear expectations early on, they could have avoided years of frustration.

Embrace Your New Role as Co-Parents

Divorce changes everything, and one of the most important shifts is how you’ll approach your role as a parent. During marriage, many couples benefit from a division of labor—one parent may be more focused on earning money while the other takes on more of the caregiving responsibilities. After divorce, that division of labor changes. Both parents will need to step up and handle all aspects of parenting, from finances to day-to-day child-rearing.

It’s important to recognize that you’re now in a “three-legged race” with your co-parent. You may want to race ahead and take on more of the parenting responsibilities, but if you do that without working together, the person you’re leaving behind is your child. Co-parenting requires you to walk together, even if you don’t always see eye to eye. The goal is to cross the finish line with your child intact, even if it means taking smaller steps to get there.

Mindset is Everything

A successful parenting plan mediation requires the right mindset. This means coming to the table with a clear understanding of what’s truly important—not just to you, but to your children. It also means recognizing that your co-parent may have strengths in areas where you don’t, and being willing to let go of control when necessary for the good of your child.

Parenting isn’t about tallying overnights or making sure you get your fair share of holidays. It’s about providing your children with a stable, conflict-free environment where they can thrive.

Preparing for Mediation

To get the most out of your mediation sessions, it’s important to prepare. Start by asking yourself some key questions:

  • What’s really important to my children?
  • How can I minimize conflict with my co-parent?
  • What expectations do we need to set around decision-making, child support, and daily routines?
  • Am I ready to let go of control where necessary to benefit my child?

By focusing on these questions and shifting your mindset, you’ll be in a much better position to create a parenting plan that serves your children’s long-term well-being.

Final Thoughts

Divorce is never easy, but the way you approach mediation can have a profound impact on your children’s future. By prioritizing their emotional needs over logistical concerns and working together with your co-parent to reduce conflict, you can create a plan that not only meets legal requirements but also gives your children the best chance for a happy, stable life.

If you’re preparing for mediation or just beginning the divorce process, remember: it’s not about winning overnights or holidays. It’s about ensuring your children grow up in a supportive, conflict-free environment. And that starts with you.

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