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Divorce: some questions and answers

November 4, 2013 · by Pittsburgh Family Law Services, P.C.

Experienced Pennsylvania Family Lawyer in Pittsburgh
CALL 412-371-4500 FOR YOUR FREE CONSULTATION
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Happy dogWhat is no-fault divorce?
In Pennsylvania, a “ground” for divorce is always needed to legally dissolve a marriage.  Using a “no fault” ground for divorce just means that you don’t need to prove that there is a “good guy” and a “bad guy” to get your divorce decree.  There are two “no fault” grounds for divorce in Pennsylvania: “Mutual Consent,” which requires that each spouse sign consent forms after a 90-day waiting period before the divorce process can conclude; and “Irretrievable Breakdown,” which requires at least a one-year separation (reduced from two years effective 12/5/16, with certain exceptions).  You can use a no-fault ground even if you or your spouse did something wrong, and nothing about using a no-fault ground prevents a court from resolving disputes over support, property distribution or child custody.  No-fault divorces are never “automatic,” even though a no-fault divorce can be a relatively uncomplicated process when both spouses agree.

What is fault divorce?
As with no-fault divorce, “fault” grounds for divorce are set forth in the Pennsylvania Code.  Fault grounds include willful and malicious desertion without reasonable cause for a year or more, adultery, cruel and barbarous treatment which endangers the life or health of the other spouse, knowingly entering into a bigamous marriage, being sentenced to imprisonment for a term of two or more years upon conviction of having committed a crime, or offering such indignities to the other spouse so as to render that spouse’s condition intolerable and life burdensome.  The spouse looking for a “fault” divorce has the burden of proving that the other spouse did wrong, and must also show himself or herself to be “innocent and injured.”  Fault grounds for divorce are hardly ever used today, because no-fault divorce is generally less expensive and does not require the kind of extensive proof needed in a fault divorce proceeding.  Nearly all divorces granted today are no-fault divorces, even when a spouse has “fault” grounds available.  In my quarter-century as a Pittsburgh divorce lawyer, I have handled only three fault-ground divorces; and concerning the last of them, I learned that the judge’s staff was very excited about the case because the judge had never handled one at all!

What about annulment?
Annulment is only available in Pennsylvania for either “void” or “voidable” marriages.  A marriage is void under the law if the marrying parties could not legally marry, for example if they are brother and sister.  Examples of voidable marriages include “shotgun” weddings, or when one or both spouses were drunk at the time of the wedding.  Annulment under the law is not to be confused with religious annulment, and obtaining one can be substantially more expensive than getting a divorce.  Regretting a decision to marry, however short the marriage, does not by itself constitute grounds for annulment.

Will I have to appear in court?
The court system exists mainly to resolve disputes and to enforce agreements.  In most Pennsylvania counties, if both spouses are in agreement regarding all aspects of the divorce proceeding, there is no need to appear in court.  An annulment proceeding does require a court appearance.

What if we were married in another state or country?
It is not where you were married that matters, but where you and/or your spouse reside.  If either you or your spouse has been a bona fide resident of Pennsylvania for the six months immediately prior to the filing of the Complaint in Divorce, Pennsylvania’s requirements are satisfied and you can file here no matter where you were married.  You can still be considered a Pennsylvania resident if you are in the military services and have been stationed elsewhere, provided that you have maintained your status as a Pennsylvania resident.

How do I get a legal separation in Pennsylvania?
Some states require “legal separation” prior to divorce.  In Pennsylvania, however, legal separation does not exist; you do not need to “get” a separation to commence living separate and apart from your spouse.  Spouses can be considered separated when one of them notifies the other that the marriage is over, even if they continue to reside at the same address for a time.  The date of separation can be important when determining what is and is not marital property for purposes of distribution, or when deciding which no-fault ground for divorce to use.

Can I date before I am divorced?
Once you and your spouse have made your final separation, neither of you has any expectation of the other’s fidelity that a Pennsylvania divorce court will recognize.  Marital misconduct after the date of final separation (that does not involve violence) will not be considered by the court when making determinations of alimony or property distribution.  Assuming that you exercise appropriate discretion around your children and have properly prepared for the effect a new relationship will have on them, child custody should not be affected.  Actual cohabitation with a boyfriend or girlfriend (as opposed to mere dating) can cut off a right to spousal support or alimony, since cohabitation has the effect of forming a new household.

Can I claim alimony, property or debt contribution from my ex-spouse after I am divorced?
Divorce in Pennsylvania is intended to bring economic closure to the divorcing spouses, as well as personal closure.  Unless you have protected your claims against your spouse with a written agreement, or you have filed a formal claim for economic relief with the family court prior to the award of a divorce decree (such as alimony or marital property distribution and allocation of marital debt), your rights to do so are probably lost forever.  Please note that any claims relating to your children, whether for child support or child custody, are not affected by divorce; since these involve independent rights of your children, they cannot be lost.

Does my spouse have the right to live with me or enter my home?
The mere fact that you remain legally married gives your spouse no special rights to be near you, in your home, or to harass you.  If you are living in a different residence from the one the two of you shared, and your spouse is not an owner or fellow renter, you can have your spouse removed by the police just like any other trespasser (or you can simply refuse to open the door).  However, if you are not yet separated (even if your home is in your name alone), or your spouse is an owner or named renter of your residence, your spouse can probably come and go as he or she pleases.  Even changing the locks might not help, since it is not illegal to break into one’s own property.  Police generally will decline to remove a spouse from his or her marital home, no matter who owns the home.  It is sadly common to have a “pressure cooker” situation in which neither party will budge from the house.  Usually, changing the situation takes some sort of compromise, a willingness for someone to back down and leave, a lawsuit for “exclusive possession,” or the award of a Protection from Abuse Order.

Can my spouse throw me out?
If the two of you are still living together in your shared residence, the odds are that neither of you can throw the other one out, even if the residence is in the name of only one of you (either rented or owned).  Police will generally not get involved in deciding who gets to live there and who has to leave, unless there is a violent situation.  Although a family court has the power to award “exclusive possession” of your home in some circumstances, that process (if opposed) can take months.  If you are looking to stay in the marital residence and your spouse wants you out, it is a very good idea to avoid expressions of frustration or anger which could be misinterpreted as a violent threat or a physical attack.  Keep your voice down, keep your distance, keep your hands down (avoid gesticulating), and say nothing that could be interpreted as a physical threat.  It is all too easy for something to occur between you that your spouse can either misinterpret or inflate out of proportion for the purpose of getting a Protection from Abuse Order.  Even if you feel that you are being provoked to use violence, avoid doing so at all costs.  There is never an excuse for initiating violence of any description as far as the Court is concerned, and such a thing is likely to come back to haunt you.  Pushing, grabbing and the use of physical intimidation can be just as bad as punching.  If you are worried that your spouse might try to get a Protection from Abuse Order against you, justified or otherwise, it is a good idea to make sure that you have a place you could go in a pinch, with at least some changes of clothing and personal items stored outside the house for easy access.  If you, yourself are the victim of domestic violence or have been put in fear of imminent injury (by threats or gestures), you may be eligible for a Protection from Abuse Order.

If I leave, can my spouse “get me” for abandonment?
“Abandonment” for a period of a year or more is one of the “fault” grounds for divorce.  However, you are not abandoning anyone if you have a good reason to leave, if you are asked to leave by your spouse, or if you agree with your spouse that you should leave.  For your departure to qualify as abandonment, your spouse must be “innocent and injured,” and that is usually not the case.  In any event, abandonment or other fault grounds for divorce have absolutely nothing to do with property and debt distribution rights, have only a limited role to play (if any) in alimony considerations, and generally do not affect child custody or support rights.  If you are considering leaving without your children, it is a good idea either to have reached an agreement regarding custody and parenting of your children (your divorce and family lawyer can draft one for you), or to have initiated a custody process in court and asked for an interim custody arrangement; otherwise, you depend on your spouse’s goodwill to allow you to play your role as a parent.  If you want your children to live with you primarily, you should know that leaving your children with your spouse can establish a status quo which can be very difficult to change later.  If you take your children without your spouse’s consent, your spouse can file for custody and ask the children to be returned.  It is always best to reach agreements with your spouse regarding custody and parenting of children prior to leaving, if possible.

I don’t know how to find my spouse.  Can I still get divorced?
Under certain circumstances, yes. Ordinarily, after divorce papers are filed with the court, they must be served on your spouse by having him or her sign for them, by sending them certified mail, or by having someone deliver them personally.  No divorce decree can be granted without proper service.  If you have made a genuinely diligent effort to find your spouse (which can include searching the Internet, hiring an investigator, checking for mail forwarding instructions at the Post Office, contacting your spouse’s relatives or friends, and searching based on your spouse’s Social Security Number) and you have been separated more than two years, you can ask the court to grant permission for “alternative service.” A court can permit you to serve the divorce papers in an alternate way, perhaps on your spouse’s relative or by placing advertisements in newspapers.  Once that is done, you can get a divorce decree based upon the Irretrievable Breakdown ground.

If you need legal assistance with your divorce or family law matter in Southwestern Pennsylvania, call our Pittsburgh family law office to set up a personal consultation with an experienced divorce lawyer.  Please do not comment anonymously, and do not post anything that you consider confidential.  We try to be responsive to commentary and questions, but know that posting here will not create an attorney/client relationship and that we will not offer legal advice via the Internet.

Dealing with separation

November 4, 2013 · by Pittsburgh Family Law Services, P.C.

Experienced Separation Lawyer in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
CALL 412-371-4500 FOR YOUR FREE CONSULTATION
READ MORE ARTICLES ABOUT FAMILY LAW IN PENNSYLVANIA.

Share on FacebookREAD THE REVIEWS on Google, Facebook and Avvo.

“Healing is a matter of time, but it is sometimes also a matter of opportunity.”  — Hippocrates

Lawyer for child custody, Pittsburgh, Tara L. HutchinsonWhether you are still in the same house together, negotiating a possible settlement, avoiding friction for the sake of your children, or simply trying to keep your blood pressure down while your case works its way forward through the court, your own perspective and conduct can make a big difference to your strategic situation and your quality of life.  The suggestions below might be useful to help you to avoid making a bad situation worse, or – better still – to turn your experience into a source of personal strength and growth.  You will get through this, one way or another; what you do, and how you deal with your spouse, will go a long way toward determining how you get through it.

A divorce lawyer faces divorce.
I used to tell clients that I was something of a paradox: a happily married divorce lawyer.  Like the doctor who never imagines becoming ill, I thought I was different, that my own marriage was better-grounded than those of the people who came to me for my professional help.  Surprise!  I knew that my wife and I had grown apart over the years, but I always held tight to the idea that we could somehow grow together again.  She felt differently, and told me one day that she wanted to move forward in her life without me.  I wanted to work on repairing our relationship, and she agreed to take time to examine her own feelings and to explore whether things could be made better between us.  Hope swelled and crashed, swelled and crashed some more, and finally the axe fell: she wanted to move out.

I believe in good marriage, and I believe in working to make marriage good; but when those become impossible, I decided to try for “good divorce.”  Having to follow the advice I give to others taught me just how hard that can be.  I am now stronger and happier for having managed it, though, and what I learned from the experience is what I offer to you here.

This is happening.
Denial will get you nowhere that you want to go.  You might be facing cruelty or – worse in its own way – apathy.  The person you have loved and trusted most in the world has become a stranger to you.  Accept the truth that whether you deserve it or not, whether it should be happening or not, this is your new reality.

The rules are different.
It is important to accept that the casual interaction and intimacy of a functioning marriage is done.  Some of the habits may linger for a time on both sides like echoes, but you can safely assume that this is only temporary.  Even if you didn’t want this, even if your view of your spouse has not changed, even if you remain very much in love, you cannot control the reality that your spouse’s view has changed.  That does not automatically lead to hatred and war – hopefully not! – but it does mean that you can no longer afford to take anything for granted.  It only takes one person wanting “out” to end a marriage, and whether it is for good reason, bad reason or no reason at all, the reality of it is what you now face.  If your spouse is the one initiating the separation, being locked into thoughts of your own ruined expectations, sense of betrayal and unfulfilled needs can only make things worse.  If you are the one initiating the separation, be honest with yourself about what your spouse must now face, and accept the negative consequences of your choice as well as the positive ones.  If there are children involved, it is important to recognize that your relationship is changing and not ending, and that your reactions and choices will have a significant role in deciding what kind of relationship it will become.

What about reconciliation?
Sometimes, the prospect of separation is the wake-up call that can redirect a marriage toward strength and restored intimacy.  But… don’t depend on this.  Although even the best of marriages have “speed bumps,” sometimes things just aren’t right and your spouse already has moved on, emotionally.  By the time things have become difficult enough for one spouse to consider seriously the prospect of separation or divorce, a lot of water has flowed over the dam.  Any prospect of restoring your marriage must be based on mutual willingness and effort, and an open-hearted acknowledgment of the problems put the two of you where you are.  If you seek to restore your marriage, you would do well to revisit first principles: that successful marital relationships are best when based not on fear, loneliness or guilt, but on earned trust, mutual respect and commitment to shared goals.  You would also do well to accept the prospect of failure, and to give some thought to how you will proceed if things do not go as you might hope.  Things will never be the same again, but that doesn’t mean that they can’t be better, with or without your spouse.

Your fault, my fault… our fault.
William Shakespeare wrote, “what’s past is prologue.”  How you got into the quicksand matters less than how you will get out of it, and pointing a finger will solve nothing.  Don’t expect to successfully convince your spouse that you are right and he or she is wrong, especially if it is true.  Sometimes people wake up to what they are doing and mend their ways or apologize, but more often they tell themselves stories they can hide inside, about why what they did was not merely right, but necessary and righteous; the more extreme their conduct, the more defensive they become and the angrier they get when forced to face the truth.  Even if your spouse does feel guilty over the end of your marriage, don’t presume too heavily on that; guilt often turns into resentment, and then into anger if you push too hard.

Work your way toward healing.
Anger and loneliness are mind-altering drugs, and being “under the influence” can lead you into some very destructive situations.  The more you are able to heal and strengthen yourself, the easier it will be to deal with your spouse.  There are ways to find much of the emotional support you need to help you move forward, that we ordinarily expect from a romantic relationship.  Participating in a community organization is one such alternate path; whether it is through a house of worship, a hobby group, a theater company, a fraternal organization, or such like; no matter what form it takes, it gives you the opportunity to become part of something larger than yourself, a community brought together by common constructive purpose.  Consider reconnecting with old friends and aspects of your life that you might have left by the wayside during your marriage.  Physical activities, especially group activities such as sports and cooperative exercise programs, can be beneficial.  Give some thought to how your food choices might reflect or reinforce your different moods.  Consider personal psychological counseling or participating in a support group, which can give you the benefit of other people’s experiences as they struggled through difficult times very similar to yours.  Take a moment to think about the people you know who have been through divorce, and give some thought to their approach to life, and to the kind of lives they lead.  Whatever you choose, whatever you do, the important thing is to act affirmatively to reclaim your own life in a meaningful way, so that the dissolution of your marital relationship ultimately becomes a source of strength.  That may seem out of reach right now, but keep reminding yourself that although healing can take time, you will get through this.

Watch how you speak and act.
It is never enough to speak the truth, if the truth is not heard.  There are too many situations in which distrustful spouses are prepared to see only the worst, no matter how hard you try or how good are your intentions or how correct you might be.  Give some thought to how your spouse looks at the situation, and at you, and how your spouse is likely to hear what you say, and see what you do.  Your emphatic gesture can become a cocked fist in your spouse’s eyes; your expression of anger and frustration can become a threat.  Tread lightly; you can be as firm as you need to be to protect yourself and your children, and still remain courteous and respectful.  If your spouse is willing to speak reasonably, be sure that you are not the one who gives in to anger and starts the fight.  Act at all times like you will have to answer for everything you say and do before a judge who doesn’t know you and your spouse from Adam and Eve, and who sees things based on how they appear (or can be spun), rather than how they were intended.

Beware of the “cheerleaders.”
Your family and friends – and maybe a new romantic partner – want to support you in your difficult time, and often will be happy to pile on the insults about your spouse to show you that they are firmly in your corner.  Many people you talk to will turn into lawyers and start telling you horror stories of what might happen if you do not put pedal to the metal and set all your guns to blazing.  Bless them for backing you, but don’t let their unquestioning support blind you to the consequences of fighting for its own sake, out of spite or a desire for revenge.  Don’t let them “go maverick” and confront your spouse.  Your spouse might very well have the same sort of cheering squad, but ultimately this is about the two of you and your children; never surrender your own judgment of what should happen, in favor of becoming an avatar for those who are spoiling to see the two of you fight.  Avoid escalation.

Thicken your skin a little bit.
A passing stranger could heap you with abuse, only to see you shrug it off with a smirk and a casually extended middle finger.  Your spouse, though, can give you that look – and I may not know what “that look” is, but I’ll bet that you do! – and there you are, ready to chew coal and spit diamonds.  If your spouse is spoiling for a fight, letting your buttons get pushed is like putting bullets in a gun that is already aimed at you.  It is better to back off and take some verbal abuse as you withdraw, than to get “sucked in” when a fight is in the making by someone who wants to gain power at your expense.  Don’t let yourself get set up into crossing a line.  Letting your negative emotions do the talking for you, however tempting, can get you into tremendous trouble, as well as reinforcing your spouse’s negative opinion of you.  You can’t control your spouse’s conduct, but you must control your own, particularly if there are children involved and the question of who is better capable of exercising responsibility and personal restraint is at issue. Don’t drift toward healing.  Roll up your sleeves, put your oars in the water, and pull.

Related articles:
How to survive your separation from your spouse
How can we afford to separate?
I got served with divorce or custody papers in PA.  What do I do?
Fourteen lines of parting

If you need legal assistance with your divorce or family law matter in Southwestern Pennsylvania, call our office to set up a personal consultation with an Allegheny County divorce attorney and to learn more about Pennsylvania divorce law and how it affects you. Please do not comment anonymously, and do not post anything that you consider confidential.  We try to be responsive to commentary and questions, but know that posting here will not create an attorney/client relationship and that we will not offer legal advice via the Internet.

How to survive separation from your spouse

November 4, 2013 · by Pittsburgh Family Law Services, P.C.

Experienced Pittsburgh Separation Attorney
CALL 412-371-4500 FOR YOUR FREE CONSULTATION
READ MORE ARTICLES ABOUT FAMILY LAW IN PENNSYLVANIA.

READ THE REVIEWS on Google, Facebook and Avvo.

The day he moved out was terrible –
That evening she went through hell.
His absence wasn’t a problem
But the corkscrew had gone as well.
                               — Wendy Cope

“I’m going through separation in Pennsylvania… what do I do?”

Divorce attorney Pittsburgh Michael B. GreensteinSeparation can be a time of confusion, anguish, distrust and resentment, and the very best of intentions are sometimes not enough to prevent both you and your spouse from being pulled into fighting that neither of you ever wanted.  You never imagined that things would come to this, and you’ve heard plenty of horror stories about what happens when marriages end.  Whatever the circumstances of your marriage or what brought you to this moment, here are some suggestions that might help you keep yourself together while you prepare for divorce or whatever comes next.

Accept the reality: you and your spouse are separating.
You can’t afford denial right now. If you want to work things out with your spouse, and if marital reconciliation is possible, that is a blessing indeed… but meanwhile you cannot afford to turn your face from the realities of your situation. Who might be right and who might be wrong matters much less right now, than where you go from here and how you get there. Let me assure you from personal as well as professional experience: it may not feel like it right now, but you will get through this. Meanwhile, be sure that you take care of yourself, and let your friends be there for you. You might be amazed by just how much emotional support your friends can offer you during this painful transition.

Discuss your goals and needs with your spouse.
While this is not always possible, the more problems you can solve over the kitchen table, the cheaper and easier your divorce will probably be.  Fights often start where the trust and the communication end, simply because there is too much at stake to let things “slide.”  The court is always there as a safety net to resolve the disputes that the two of you cannot, but reaching your own agreements can save you tremendous amounts of money and anguish.  Especially if you have children together, accept the emotional risk of sitting down together and try to look beyond the problems that brought you to this point.  If you can manage to put aside the reality of who might be at fault for the end of your marriage, you have better hope of working together to clear the way forward for each of you.  If you can’t discuss important issues without falling into argument, consider alternative forms of dispute resolution such as mediation; sometimes, adding a skilled “referee” to your discussions – be it a professional mediator, a member of the clergy, or a mutually-trusted friend – can bring order and structure to your discussions in a way that the two of you alone might not be able to achieve.

Avoid making things worse.
Especially while the two of you remain under the same roof, guard against letting negative emotions make your decisions for you, no matter how justified they might be and no matter how much your spouse might be provoking you.  No matter how strong the temptation, you cannot afford spite; and the odds are that it will come back to haunt you sooner than you think.  Getting through your difficult situation with everything you need to be able to regain personal and financial stability is far more important than “setting the record straight” about who caused the trouble in the first place.  You will help yourself stay out of trouble if you make sure that you act instead of reacting, (except for violent situations, which is another matter entirely).  Give some thought to how your own words and actions might worsen your already-bad situation, and learn to recognize the warning signs of an escalating conflict.  If necessary, learn to back off and give yourself space to cool down, especially when you feel that you are being provoked.  If it is important to your spouse that he or she be “right” all the time, nothing you can do or say is ever going to change that.  If your spouse is being confrontational and you let that set you off, you are now playing your spouse’s game… and rule number one of that game is that you lose. Watch your words and gestures, and make sure that nothing you say or do can be interpreted as being violent or physically threatening.  In the end, what actually happens is less important than what a judge decides happened, so try to recognize the times when the cleverest thing you can say or do is nothing at all.

Be careful about what you record or put into writing.
Anything you put down on paper, on a recorder or into email can become evidence.  The same goes for social media, and never imagine that anything you post online is private, even if your privacy settings say otherwise.  Stay sensible and civil, and resist the temptation to write down insults and self-justifications. Keep your written communications polite, simple, and to the point. Write nothing you would not willingly answer for to in front of a judge who doesn’t know you and your spouse from Adam and Eve, but who is ready to see you as the source of the problem if you get careless.

Work for sunshine, but always carry an umbrella.
The seat belt, the spare tire, and the umbrella in the glove compartment are there because they are good to have handy when something goes wrong while you are trying to get ahead. Even a worst-case scenario doesn’t have to be a disaster, though, if you take the time and effort to do some advance planning.  Part of your lawyer’s job is to consider what can go wrong, so that you can decide for yourself what protections you want to arrange.  That leads to…

Meet with a Pennsylvania divorce lawyer.
The sooner you learn what you are in for when you separate, what your options are and how a divorce court might handle your situation, the more choices you have and the better your chances of protecting yourself.  Now is a very good time to start getting advice from someone who is very familiar with what you are dealing with, and who can help you avoid trouble before it happens.  Lawyers are not automatically “warmongers,” and can often suggest approaches that will help you avoid the need to fight.  People hire lawyers for the same reason that they hire plumbers and roofers: because each of them works every day at something you never wanted to have to deal with in the first place.  Yes, lawyers are expensive, but so is false economy.  When you are called upon to make short-term decisions that carry long-term consequences, an ounce of prevention really can be worth a pound of cure.

Gather and secure financial records.
Now is the time to gather records of all kinds: property, debt (including credit cards), income (yours and your spouse’s), taxes, insurance, investments, retirement savings plans and pensions, bank statements, etc.  Stop throwing away old pay stubs, bank statements, bills, etc.  If it has to do with money and the marriage – no matter which of you owns the asset or owes the debt – gather it, organize it and secure it, with particular attention to balances and values as of the date of your marriage (if applicable), and of your final separation. Maintain these records, or copies of them, in a protected location.  It is better to have too many records, than too little.

Secure your personal property.
What can’t you afford to do without?  This is particularly true for jewelry and other small, valuable items, and for items of purely sentimental value that can be easily hidden, held hostage or destroyed.  The contents of jewelry boxes often “disappear” when spouses separate, and what actually happened to them can quickly become lost in pointless “he said/she said.”

Secure your financial resources.
Might your spouse empty your bank accounts and run off with the money? Is there cash around the house?  Are you financially dependent on your spouse?  During separations and divorces, things sometimes can get harder before they get easier.  Securing as much financial stability for yourself as possible is a good idea.  If you might need to rely on friends and family members for your support for a while, consider talking with them to find out what is available to you, and how quickly.  If you are economically dependent on your spouse, prepare yourself for several “dry” months with only your own resources to help you get by, if you can.

Consider closing joint credit lines.
Joint credit lines, or credit lines of one spouse for which the other is an authorized user, are invitations to get each other further into debt.  Avoid that if possible, by shutting down joint credit lines and revoking authorization for your spouse to use your credit cards.  You might want to get a copy of your credit report to ensure that you did not miss anything, and to make sure that no new credit has been taken out in your name and without your knowledge.

If you are leaving, decide what property you need.
Cleaning out a home to the bare walls is harsh medicine if there is a reasonable alternative, but you should consider that whatever you might need that you do not take with you is something you may have to buy again.  Might your spouse be considering this, too?  Right now, either of you has the power to take property from where both of you have access, to where only one of you can go.  Courts prefer to avoid distributing “pots and pans,” so it is always safest to assume that if you leave something behind when you move out, you will never see it again.  Do not expect a court to assign more than “tag sale” value to the collective contents of the average home.

Talk about the children.
If children are involved, realize that your relationship with your spouse never ends; it only changes.  It is painfully easy for children to get caught up in the issues between their parents, and to the extent that you can protect them from the consequences of your separation, the better off they will be.  Children deserve parents who can respect and support their relationship with the other parent.  Children will adjust to a new parenting situation in time, and can be successfully raised by separated parents who have found a way to work together for their children’s benefit.  If the court becomes involved in your custody dispute your judge will do his or her best to resolve the situation in the best interest of your children, but no judge loves your children or truly knows what is good for them.  There simply is no good substitute for two parents working together in the best interest of their children.  Your family lawyer can suggest approaches that might help to minimize the prospect of fighting over the custody of your children.

Take care of yourself.
You cannot be strong for anyone else without first being strong for yourself.  Recognize that nobody goes through a situation like this unchanged… even if the changes can ultimately be for the better.  The more aware you can become of how your separation from your spouse is affecting you, the more likely that you can manage those changes as constructively as your difficult situation permits.  Make sure that during this painful moment in your life, when your spouse can seem further removed from you than a stranger and when you find yourself saying and doing things that you never imagined could come from you, you become your own best friend.  Advise yourself like you would advise a friend, and follow that advice.

You will get through this.

Related articles:
Dealing with separation
How can we afford to separate?
I got served with divorce or custody papers in PA.  What do I do?
Know what you owe!
How to find a good divorce lawyer in Pennsylvania

If you need legal assistance with your divorce or family law matter in Southwestern Pennsylvania, call our office to set up a personal consultation with a divorce lawyer in Pittsburgh and to learn more about divorce in PA.  Please do not comment anonymously, and do not post anything that you consider confidential.  We try to be responsive to commentary and questions, but know that posting here will not create an attorney/client relationship and that we will not offer legal advice via the Internet.

  • Attorney Tara L. Hutchinson is a family and divorce lawyer located in the east end of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and serves clients throughout Southwestern Pennsylvania and the Pittsburgh area including the neighborhoods of Squirrel Hill, Shadyside, Monroeville, McKeesport, Edgewood, Penn Hills, Bethel Park, Mount Lebanon, Canonsburg, New Kensington, Greensburg, Murrysville, Turtle Creek, Swissvale, Churchill, Oakmont, Fox Chapel, and Sewickley.

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