Divorce Professionals | Divorce Articles | Divorce FAQs | Online Forum | Divorce Resources | Advertise

Divorce Polls  |  Blogs  |  Magazine Subscription  |  Free eNewsletter  |  Web Links  |  Contact
Find a Professional
Find a divorce lawyer, mediator, accountant, Certified Divorce Financial Analyst, therapist and more...
To advertise with us call our toll free number 877-493-1650 or Click Here

Share

This site sponsored by:
Finanical Solution for Women San Diego Mediation Center - Julia Garwood divorce detox, california california family lawyer
Politics and Divorce News
 < previous page

How to Avoid a Divorce When You and Your Spouse Have Differing Political Views

How to disagree without causing a relationship rift.

by Stacy D. Phillips

Many personal relationships suffer during political races when couples hang on ferociously to opposing political views. This year's run for the White House will be more contentious than ever. No couple has to ruin his or her relationship or cause a permanent rift just because they are polarized on candidate choices or political views on propositions. Take advantage of one or more of the following tips:

More information on keeping marriage together:
How to Stay Married
Make Your Valentine Last
Resolving to Keep Your Marriage Together
Making Your Marriage Work
Post-Divorce Marriage
  1. Agree to disagree -- and have that talk openly and soon.
  2. Set some ground rules -- that both of you can honor. For instance, should or should you not talk about politics? If so, what are the boundaries for discussion? Should you post yard signs or shouldn't you? See if you can come to terms with some guidelines. Having specifics in place will preserve both your sanity and your relationship.
  3. Host your own debate -- with a "non-partisan" friend or family member (even one of your children) as the moderator. Time this debate. When it is over, it is over. You can partake in one or more between now and November 4.
  4. Refrain -- from any discussion about politics. Many couples who are staunch about their political beliefs are wise to refuse to discuss political points of view (especially if alcohol is involved!). Refraining is something you both have to agree to though and when you make such an agreement, keep it.
  5. Employ a sense of humor -- at all times if you do get into heated discussions over your personal political preferences. Humor has a wonderful way of breaking tension and allowing your communication to hit the "refresh" button.
  6. Set time limits -- for any political discussions and make sure each of you has equal time. When the timer goes off resist the temptation to carry the discussion any further.
  7. Focus on what you have in common -- immediately after you run out of breath spewing your political viewpoints. This election will come and go, but hopefully it will not take your relationship with it. Realize that disagreeing over politics is not a relationship-breaker. Focus on those aspects of your relationship that indicate you belong together.
  8. Promise to make equal donations -- or agree not to make any donations at all to either political party. Couples tend to resent one donating more than the other. Be fair, upfront and honest, or risk having such silly deception impact your relationship adversely.

Stacy D. Phillips is a Certified Family Law Specialist and author of Divorce: It's All About Control -- How to Win the Emotional, Pychological and Legal Wars. Phillips represents many celebrities in film, television, music, sports, and politics. She can be contacted at (310) 277-7117. View her Divorce Magazine profile.


More political divorce news: http://www.divorcemag.com/articles/Politics-And-Divorce.

More articles      Find a lawyer      Divorce FAQs        Divorce newsletter

Celebrity Divorce
Ruben Studdard's Prenup Holds Up in Court
Alec Baldwin Getting Married Again
Heidi Klum Opens Up on Her Split from Seal

More Celebrity News

Follow us on twitter Follow us on facebook Follow us on LnkedIN Follow us on our blog

FREE Divorce Teleseminars
To Educate and Empower
Divorce People

Tuesday, May 15
at 8 pm to 8:30 EST
Out With the Tragedy: Turning Divorce into a meaningful experience
with Allison Pescosolido and Andra Brosh, founders of Divorce Detox
Learn More

Listen to podcasts of previous TeleSeminars.

 

Advertising for, Lawyers, Family lawyer, Family Law Attorney, Divorce lawyer, Divorce attorney, Accountants

Divorce Magazine's Advisory Board