Wendy Paris Launches SPLITOPIA to Help Cope With Divorce

By: Mar. 22, 2016
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

LOS ANGELES, March 22, 2016 /PRNewswire/ Can there be a good divorce? Yes, says Wendy Paris, author of Splitopia: Dispatches from Today's Good Divorce and How to Part Well (Simon & Schuster/Atria). An important, ground-breaking book aligned with Gwyneth Paltrow's "conscious uncoupling," Splitopia shows why it's possible for couples from all walks of life to not just survive divorce, but thrive.

When Wendy Paris announced that she and her husband were separating, friends forecast devastation. But as Paris discovered, changes in laws and customs, advances in psychology, technology and child development, and a new understanding of the importance of the father have dramatically improved divorce.

Splitopiachallenges outdated, negative assumptions about divorce with honesty, research, and humor. It profiles people in positive, post-marriage relationships and follows Paris's own divorce, as well as that of her parents.

A belief that divorce must be a disaster for all can create just that outcomeand lead to escalating fighting, scarred children and court battles.

A good divorce:

  1. Protects kids from the ongoing conflict of a bad split. Research shows that high conflict between parents is the most damaging factor for kids, whether parents are divorcedor married.
  2. Uses a cooperative legal approach like mediation, collaborative divorce, or a DIY style, methods that save tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars and help former couples work together.
  3. Protects adults from ongoing, unnecessary suffering and enables them to be attentive parents.
  4. Paves the way for a healthy new love. Fighting from a messy divorce can destroy a second relationship.

Divorce brings inevitable challenges, but also very avoidable pain. Splitopia offers a road map for getting through, called Seven Principles of Parting:

  1. Commit to self-compassion
  2. Take ownership of the future and the past
  3. Don't confuse filing with closure
  4. Build a tool kit for the transition
  5. Combat Anger with Empathy
  6. Resist the Urge to Compare
  7. Create Positive Moments

About two million people divorce in the United States each year. Every state now authorizes joint custody, meaning parents must cooperate throughout their children's childhood. Splitopia calls for a more flexible view of how we wed and how we part, and offers support for creating loving families, whatever the legal relationship status.

Divorce is no one's first choice, but as with other difficult, unwanted experiences, it can lead to growth, connection, and fulfillment life.

Wendy Paris is a journalist and essayist whose has written for The New York Times, Psychology Today, The New York Observer, Washington Post, Houston Chronicle, QZ.com, salon.com and other publications. She is an engaging, inspiring public speaker, co-author of Words for the Wedding, and author of Happily Ever After: The Fairy Tale Formula for Lasting Love (HarperCollins, 2002). She has Master's Degree in Creative Writing, non-fiction, from Columbia University and was a 2014 Fellow with New America foundation in Washington, D.C. She has one son, and lives in Santa Monica, California, three blocks away from her former husband, with whom she shares a warm co-parenting relationship.

More information at wendyparis.com

Contact:
Wendy Paris
917-622-0912

Video - http://youtu.be/yJd_-90eJVs
Photo - http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20160322/346708
Photo - http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20160322/346709

SOURCE Wendy Paris


Vote Sponsor


Videos