If you depend on your spouse to pay the bills, your goal is to get stable and secure for a few weeks or months while you figure out what to do next. Here are some suggestions. While you wait to see if the ideas below work out, struggle hard to find a way you can take care of yourself, at least in a very modest way in which you can be safe and secure for a while. Maybe you can get help from friends or family or your faith community. As a very last resort, consider public assistance. If your spouse does not actually have money to spare, you're stuck with the self-help steps above, but if you think there's enough to share, move on to the next steps. Send your spouse this article. Wait a few days, then send a polite message to your spouse, either in a letter or through a diplomatic friend or clergyman -- someone who definitely will not add to the tension -- that you know it's hard for both of you, but you need some help with the bills and if you can’t work out a temporary arrangement for at least a few months, you will be forced to get an attorney and go to court for a support order. You really don’t want to do this because it will be hugely upsetting and expensive -- an unnecessary waste that will be bad for everyone. It would be so much better for both of you to make a temporary arrangement. If nothing works with your spouse and you can’t get short-term help from friends or family, you have three choices: If your spouse has wages or assets you can attach for support, get an attorney and go to court for a support order. Read my online article, Who can I call? Got kids? Every state has an office in charge of obtaining and enforcing child support orders. Ask at the courthouse where they are and how to contact them. If your spouse doesn’t work or changes employers frequently or otherwise isn’t worth taking to court for support, you’ll have to try to get public assistance until you can support yourself on your own. Focus on stability first, then work toward a peaceful resolution of your divorce. Debts. If debts are weighing heavily, read my article, Dealing With Debts, on my website.
Parting thoughts. Don’t go to an attorney until you first get organized and prepared, figure out what you want from the attorney, and particularly what attorney to go to. Don’t talk to your Ex about divorce or parenting until you learn how to reduce upset and lay the groundwork for successful negotiation. And, please, be very careful who you listen to. Do not take advice from anyone who is not truly expert on exactly your topic. Friends and relatives can be great for moral support but do not get your advice there. If you take the time to learn and apply my advice, your divorce will go much better. Millions have successfully gone before you and if they can do it, then with a little time and effort, so can you.
© 2008 Ed Sherman and Nolo Press Occidental
Author Ed Sherman is a family law attorney, divorce expert, and founder of Nolo Press. He started the self-help law movement in 1971 when he published the first edition of How to Do Your Own Divorce and founded the paralegal industry in 1973. With more than a million books sold, Ed has saved the public billions of dollars in legal fees while making divorce go more smoothly and easily for millions of readers. His latest book, Make Any Divorce Better, does exactly what the title says.
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