In the summer, my daughter will go on multiple vacations. Once or twice with her father and once with me. She’ll also attend summer camp. It’s a bit much, yes. But such is the life of a co-parented kid. In order for her summer schedule to occur, we had to coordinate and compromise. At the beginning of our co-parenting through the summer, my ex and I didn’t budge. The court-mandated order dictated our daughter’s schedule. Make plans on your pre-determined dates. That was our response when the other requested additional time or a swap.
Coparenting Through The Summer
But time heals all wounds, and ours are almost mended. Not sure if I would classify our relationship as a friendship, but we are cordial co-parents. And we’re learning the meaning of the word flexible. We weren’t always able to communicate. A judge or my father passed many messages.
But now, we pick up the phone or send a text. Before that, we communicated through Family Wizard. Our judge ordered us to use Family Wizard, which is a child custody management tool equipped with a calendar, message board, expense log, and information bank since our interactions always ended in arguments.
When my daughter was in preschool, I suggested that her dad participates in the school district’s Take a Father to School Day. The event occurred one day before his scheduled pickup. In the past, I wouldn’t have made the call. But I realized it would put a smile on my daughter’s face.
Now our daughter is heading to middle school, which means that she has a phone and direct communication with her dad. Her father and I only interact regarding major things. Not day-to-day decisions. For those parents at the beginning of the journey from bitter to better, Deesha Phillywaw, co-author of Co-parenting 101, is giving advice on co-parenting through the summer.
Heather: Help! How do you handle coparenting through the summer? Any advice?
Deesha: Plan ahead. Way ahead. If you can, start planning for summer at the end of the previous summer while things are fresh in your mind. What worked well? What didn’t? Things you need to remember to sort out or discuss in advance? If your summer schedule is different from your schedule during the rest of the year, be explicit about dates and times, and give as much notice as possible around desired vacation dates.
You should also be realistic and reasonable about what you can and cannot control. Your co-parent may not ask your opinion about the camps he has chosen for your children during his summer parenting time. Or maybe you feel the kids should be in camp instead of staying with his cousin during the day. His time, his decision, as long as the kids are safe and well-cared for.
Any costs associated with camps and summertime should be agreed upon well in advance and explicitly addressed in your shared parenting plan.
Heather: What if there is an unexpected change of plans?
Deesha: Be flexible as much as you can if travel issues or special occasions necessitate a schedule change. Things happen, and you’d want your co-parent to be flexible if something unavoidable changes with your plans, so extend the same courtesy when possible. And remember that, ultimately, your child benefits if you’re able to be flexible to allow the other parent’s summer plans to happen smoothly.
Heather: Summer may mean a long time apart from your child. How can you prepare for that?
Deesha: How often and how (telephone, Skype, etc.) will you communicate with your child when she’s with the other parent? Consider the same for when your child is with you for an extended amount of time. Be sure to be on the same page with your co-parent about this, and be reasonable in terms of your expectations. And remember, you may feel the need to be in touch more often than your child does, so try not to take it personally if he doesn’t want to communicate as often as you do, especially if he’s vacationing with the other parent.
The time and distance apart may be hard on you as a parent. Build up your resources: schedule your own vacation, plan outings with friends, and do all the things you’re not able to do when your child is in your care. Stay out late, sleep in, don’t cook, and start a new project.
Remember that summer/vacation time isn’t a competition with your co-parent. If he’s able to take your kids to Disney World for a week, but it’s a stretch for you to take them to a local amusement park for a day, that’s okay. Make your own peace with that, and you’ll find it easier to respond calmly and matter-of-factly if your child says something about the disparity. Keep the focus on quality time spent having fun together.
Heather: Should you head to court to get an official coparenting through the summer schedule?
Deesha: If you and your co-parent can’t agree on a summer schedule and related expenses, work with a third-party mediator to try to sort it out. The court may require this as a first step. If that doesn’t work, then file a motion with the court. While I’ve been co-parenting for over a decade, and I don’t have a detailed provision in my shared parenting agreement about summer scheduling or expenses, I do think it’s wise to have one just in case conflict arises down the road. The court moves slowly, and summer could be over by the time you even get a hearing date assigned. And having a written agreement makes it less likely, though not impossible, for a co-parent to get a wild hair and start requesting changes willy-nilly and being unreasonable about expenses.
Heather: Who should pay for what? Summer expenses, such as camps, sporting events, and plane tickets, can be sky-high.
Deesha: It’s great if co-parents can agree to split 50-50 or split based on their respective incomes, but of course, that can get hairy, and often the court has to decide what’s reasonable and who pays for what. Co-parents also don’t always agree as to what summer should be like for a kid. One remembers being a kid playing in the neighborhood all day and never going to camp. The other feels children should have their time supervised and structured during the day and should be in camps.
Neither parent is right or wrong, and neither may get 100 percent of what they want. The first parent will probably have to fork over some cash to pay for camp, and the other may have to be satisfied with a local YMCA camp rather than a sleep-away program. The other option is that each parent only pays for the activities that take place during their respective parenting time.
I hesitate to say who should pay for what because situations are so different. In my situation, we don’t have a court order for this; we just handle it each summer, depending on the plans and circumstances. My co-parent tends to pay more for summer camps because he earns more than I do. But if there’s an activity I want our kids to do, and he’s not 100 percent into it, I’ll pay for it in full. Or if I can afford it, I’ll pay half of the camps we agree on because he pays more of their tuition during the school year. If either of us travels with the kids, we pay for those trips ourselves 100 percent.
Heather: How do you avoid competition and trying to one-up your ex?
Deesha: Easy: He makes way more money than I do, so I couldn’t compete even if I wanted to. But my advice to other co-parents would be to recognize what you’re doing and what you’re essentially saying about your child when you play that oneupmanship game. You’re saying that you can curry more favor with your child by outspending their other parent. And the only way that works is if your child is materialistic. Your child is going to be happy with quality time and attention from you and the other parent, regardless of how extravagant the vacation is or isn’t. So save your money if you’re doing this just to one-up the other parent.
And if you do your child the disservice of intentionally trying to outdo the other parent in this regard, what’s your end game? To diminish and cast a cloud on the time your child is with his other parent? That’s not going to make your child love you more and the other parent less. Even if your plans are bigger and better than your ex’s, you can still discuss things with your child in such a way that she can be joyful when she’s with you and with the other parent.
Heather: What if your plans change? Should you ask your ex to be flexible?
Deesha: You can ask, but you should not feel entitled to a yes. When making or changing summer plans, as with all of co-parenting, be child-centered in your approach, choose your battles, and remember that unless your child’s well-being is at risk in a way that can be documented, you cannot control what happens during the other parent’s parenting time.
Are you co-parenting through the summer? What tips do you have for setting up a schedule?
Heather
Not long ago, Heather Hopson lived in the Cayman Islands and hosted a television show. Today, she’s back home in Pittsburgh writing a different type of story as the founder of Motor Mouth Multimedia and Single Mom Defined. Utilizing more than a decade of television news reporting experience, Heather assembles teams to tell diverse stories, provide unique perspectives, and increase the visibility of important issues for local and national clients. In 2018, Heather, inspired by her daughter, produced Single Mom Defined, a photo essay and video series that provides a more accurate definition of single Black motherhood than the one society presents.
Heather obtained a BA in Journalism from Michigan State University, where she served as president of the Delta Zeta Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc.