Apparently, the next edition of BlogHer's Backtalk series will be addressing the idea of blogging about divorce.
I, myself blogged all the way through my own divorce, my dating life after divorce (Which resulted in some of my very best friends. One of my post-divorce exes is even C's godfather!) , and I have obviously blogged a lot about the joy of my remarriage and our blended family. I started my personal blog before my divorce, so it was natural that I would keep writing as life handed me these new twists and turns. But more and more as time has passed, I've moved away from being specific at all about the issues that have come with the end of my marriage, or the relationship I have with my eldest children's dad. Why? Because my children are now older, and I like having them read my blog, and they don't need to see the specifics of this stuff out there for public consumption. I've pulled back considerably with each passing year in what I share on my blog about this particular topic. I have learned -sometimes the hard way - that specific blog venting never helps with the challenges (understatement) that come with co-parenting after divorce. I assure you that I could spill a bloggity soap opera on a nearly daily basis about this stuff, but that would feel really wrong to me.
So nowadays (and for several years now, actually), I keep 99.99% of the details of the co-parenting part of my life completely private, except for discussions with the people closest to me. And in hindsight, I regret some of what I did write during that first, painful period. I sometimes screwed up, I freely admit. But I have learned from my mistakes in this regard. As a writer, I wanted to get words on the page about the transformative experience I was going through. That's what writers do. It's almost a compulsion. And I also believe that each person has a right to tell her own story in her own way. But I've realized that for me, I should have waited until the emotion was less raw. I should have waited to process. And that would be my advice to anyone else considering what to write or not write on her blog about the end of a relationship with someone with whom you share children. Today, my life isn't about the fact that I once had a divorce. It's about the family I have now -which includes Jon and four children - so that's what I like to blog about.
'>As I've mentioned before, I continue to be shocked by the proliferation of what I refer to as "the very angry stepmother blogs" that are springing up all over the parenting blogosphere. These women - the second wives of men who have children - are really, really pissed off at their husbands' first wives - and often, at the children. And they like talking about it. A lot. In fact, it seems like all they want to talk about on their blogs. Surely these women have more going on in their lives than feeling mad and resentful toward their stepkids' mothers? A lot of these blogs are allegedly "anonymous," meaning the women use pseudonyms for themselves and other people, but I still think that directing that kind of specific public vitriol toward the mother of your stepchildren - or even your stepchildren (by the way, have I ever mentioned how much I hate the "step" label? There has to be a better way to name these family relationships...) - is just bad karma. Bad energy. And I think the odds that family members will eventually find these Very Angry Blogs, and be hurt by them, are just too great. Save that kind of specific and negative venting for one-on-one discussions with friends and therapists. Or join a support group. Don't become a blogging harpie.
But anyway, I do look forward to hearing and watching the discussion unfold over at BackTalk.
Note from Katie: Please be gentle with me in your comments. This is a very, very sensitive topic for me, and I feel nervous about having said even this much about it. And I did say right up front that I MADE MISTAKES. So, anyway, please just be nice :-)
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