Change can be a scary thing. Even something as small as picking something different off the menu at your local can be nerve-wracking.
But if there's one thing I've learned, it's that scary doesn't have to mean something bad. With every new dish you try, there's always that possibility that it might become your favourite thing to eat.
Let's be real, though. Trying out a new meal isn't exactly the same thing as a change in marital status (talk about monumental).
Despite the anxiety attached to this new stage of life, after my own divorce, I realised that in the process of losing someone — or something — you once thought was for forever, you find something more valuable.
Here's what I learned after going through my own divorce.
1. Child custody and child support agreements are separate from each other.
When I left my ex-husband just over a year ago, in the middle of lockdown, I was terrified of what my future would look like with two little kids in tow.
Although I was fortunate enough to move back to my parents’ while I found my feet, the pandemic restrictions meant that I had both kids off daycare and I was off work. In that moment, I didn’t know if I was ever going to be able to rebuild myself.
I knew that while the waters were still relatively calm, I had to get my child custody affairs in order.
I learned quickly that child custody and child support agreements are separate from one another, and most importantly did NOT go hand in hand with a divorce. Who knew? I genuinely thought getting a divorce would automatically put all these affairs in order.