How To Win Child Custody - YouTube

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I'm glad you're here. I'm sorry that you're going through what you're going
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through. Child custody issues, probably the hardest thing you could ever face.
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How do you get custody in a custody dispute?
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Child custody one of the most vexing, troubling, emotionally taxing issues that
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you could ever face. As I have worked with families who are dealing with this
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troubling issue over the years, I've learned a few things that I want to pass
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along to you because there are ways to totally ruin your custody case and there
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are ways that you can support it and they might not be the things that you're
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naturally inclined to do. Coming from my experience of approximately 13 years as
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a child custody evaluator for the courts, now think about this, I'm the guy who got
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asked by the judge to go in and sort all of this out and see if I can figure out
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how to split up these kids, we don't want to split them up, you can't use Solomon's
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sword and start chopping kids in half, this is a troubling issue for the
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children because their world is completely different from the parents.
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Let me share with you what I mean by that perspective. If we look at the
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child's perspective and incidentally as a child custody evaluator, my interest
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was to look after the best interest of the child, that was my whole motivation,
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I want it to be good for you as parents too
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because when your life is good, your children's lives are good too
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but when parents disagree about what needs to happen about the kids and they
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get into this angry war between each other, that puts the children in a very
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difficult position. Here's what I mean. When mom and dad are together, we can
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represent the child's world with this circle, it's all nicely circumspect and
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it's just tight, it's that's the whole world that they know right there. When
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mom and dad separate, we draw another circle over here. Now we've got two
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worlds, it's kind of like a cell that's starting to split right but if we label
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these two sites for example, mom's world and dad's world, they're two very
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different worlds and if you've gone through a divorce, you know exactly what
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I'm talking about because that other world is just different. I use the word
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different, that's probably a really kind way to put it because they get described
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in very evil nasty terms too. So we've got mom's world and dad's world, where are
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the kids? Right here, right here in the middle of
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those two worlds and think about that for just a moment, what if you were
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between two warring nations and you're right here in the middle and they're
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both, you know, shooting shots at each other and we got all kinds of violence
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going on. I know I'm overstating that for your case but maybe I'm not too and here's
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the child right here in the middle, that's not safe and children don't feel
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safe when they're in the middle of this war that's going on. I put together a
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quick summary paper.. The five factors that determine the outcome of divorce
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for children, this is a compilation of factors that were identified originally
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by Dr. Elizabeth Ellis, she wrote a book called divorce wars. I don't necessarily
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think you need to go out and read that book, it's very, it's a heavy book, it's
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thick and academic but I have condensed from that five factors that she
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identified that determine the outcome of divorce for children, there's a link in
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the description below if you'd like to get a PDF of those five factors. Take a
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look at it, here's the one that I want to call to your attention.
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Number one, without even a close second is conflict and that's exactly why right
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there. Conflict, specifically conflict about the
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children between the parents, this is a huge concern when we have a custody
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dispute because what's the conflict over the kids who's in between the parents.
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That is the number one factor that affects the
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outcome of the divorce for the children. There's other factors too like economic
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factors and the emotional stability of the primary caretaker, all of those kinds
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of things come into play but conflict between the parents is number one. What
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does that mean for you? First of all, we've got to reduce the conflict as much
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as we can or maybe a better way to say that instead of reducing the conflict is
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to appropriately handle the conflict and find ways to solve problems that don't
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involve putting the children in the middle of a war zone. Now coming from the
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perspective of a custody evaluator. When I got into these conflicted nasty
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divorce situations where there's a lot of conflict,
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my concern went up significantly for that child and I started to look for
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evidence that one parent or the other, hopefully both, but that one parent or
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the other could somehow appropriately manage that conflict on behalf of their
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children. Now this is a little counterintuitive because you go into a
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custody evaluators office and what do you want to do? You want to point out all
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of the things that are nasty and wrong and evil about that other parent. As an
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evaluator, I just want you to know how that sounds to me, it sounds like, "Oh I
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better watch out for not the parent you're describing, the one that's doing
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the describing because that raises the level of conflict." Hear where I'm coming from?
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So the best thing you can do to help your own case, in my opinion, as a custody
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evaluator is to reduce the conflict and to show that you are in position to
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appropriately handle conflict and problems without putting the children in
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the middle of that. Okay now there's a lot of practical things that you can do
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along those lines but connect with that for just a minute.
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So what can you do, with that in mind, with that knowledge in mind that the
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conflict is the biggest issue for the children, what can you do?
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Here's the crux of the whole thing, you guys. You create, in your own world, if your dad and
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you're right here, you create the most sane stable loving environment possibly
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can right here within the boundaries of your own world. The evaluator's going to
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see that, okay. Now that also includes creating an environment here, and I'm
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talking to dad's just because they're on this side of the board, mom, if it's you,
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same thing, okay. You create the most sane stable loving environment that you
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possibly can, that includes permission for that child to fully love the other
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parent and to be a part of their world. Remember, the kids world includes mom's
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world and dad's world, I've tucked them right here in the middle but really, they
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belong in both worlds and they have to transition in between both of them
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regularly. If you, as a loving benevolent parent, can clear your own heart and mind
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of animosity and bitterness and anger and hate so that you can choose love.
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In another video that you can link to right up here, we talked about the love choice.
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The quick version is that, every interaction you have is going to follow
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either on the love side or the hate side. When people get into a conflicted
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custody dispute or a nasty divorce, they tend to choose hate which makes it worse
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and increases the conflict. It feels counterintuitive to choose love.
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That's what I'm asking you to do, to find it in your own heart and mind to choose a
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loving response even with, and especially when,
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that other spouse is being nasty. It's especially important then because if
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everybody's choosing hate, we got all kinds of problems. Just a quick example,
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I had an opportunity to hear Immacul茅e Ilibagiza give a talk, she is so amazing,
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she wrote a book called Left To Tell and basically, she's a survivor of the
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Holocaust that happened in Rwanda, the genocide that was happening between the
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Hutus and the Tutsis, she was taken in by a Hutu pastor who took compassion on her,
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he hid her in his bathroom basically for 90 days, his little three
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foot by four foot bathroom and she was in there with seven other women for
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almost three months, okay. That in itself is quite a story. She could hear the
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killing going on just outside the window of this little bathroom that she was in.
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Her whole family was exterminated in the process. If anyone has a reason to choose
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hate, I think she would. Her message is one of love and forgiveness as she
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realized in those circumstances that she had to make that same choice.
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I can choose love or I can choose hate and everything around her was pulling
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her to the hate side. Because she chose love, she was able to put herself in
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position to free herself from the bitterness and
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anger and animosity that would have poisoned her life forever and instead
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now she is an ambassador of love and forgiveness. What an inspiring story.
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As you go through this conflicted custody situation or this nasty divorce, you've
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got the same choice. You're going to choose love or you're going to choose
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hate. I guarantee the hate choice will make it worse for you, for your kids, for
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everyone who loves you and cares about you. The only way I know to
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prove your situation, including your chances in a custody case is to choose
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love and to do that in such a genuine way that the evaluator will see that and
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realize that everything is pulling you in that hate direction, don't go there,
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it hurts kids, not to mention what it does to your life. Hopefully that's
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helpful to you, I want to throw in a really quick little bonus because one of
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our subscribers in the other video that I did on this particular topic asked,
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"How do I prepare best for a home study?" This is part of a custody
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evaluation where the evaluator comes into the home and does an assessment,
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make sure everything's adequate and appropriate. The standard is not real
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high, you guys, you don't have to clean up the whole house. I go into places and
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they have potpourri simmering on the stove and freshly baked bread and I'm
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like, "This is not real." We can tell, okay? Be genuine, be real, be authentic, don't
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try to create something artificially for that evaluator, they want to see and feel
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what the sense and the spirit and the core of this home is, so the best thing
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you can do, like I said earlier, is to choose love, put yourself in a position
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where you have the most sane level, stable, loving environment that you
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possibly can in your own home and that's the quick version of how you're going to
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pass that home study, it comes back to the same principles. I've shared with you
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something today that very few people who are going through a custody evaluation
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understand. I'm glad that you do, you can be part of an amazing change.
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Thanks for being here.