How can you help me?
What is a Separation and Divorce Support Coach?
Whether you are considering separating, have separated, close to finalising your divorce, or are post divorce, we offer you the emotional support as well and the legal, financial, parenting and recovery guidance you need to genuinely empower you.
Whilst we do not discount the value of working with a lawyer in some circumstances, a lot of the expense can be done without having to incur their significant hourly rates. We save you a lot of money, stress, overwhelm, disorganisation and conflict by providing the right support when you need it.
Some of the most common ways our Separation Coaches and Counsellors assist our clients include:
✅provide the emotional support you need - whether you just want to vent, to grieve, to have someone to lean on, to help set your boundaries and identify your triggers...
✅understand your legal options (pros and cons for you and the reality of how they may work for your relationship)
and next steps
✅work through communciation strategies for the hard discussions with the kids, your former partner, extended family
✅how to reduce the impact of separation on the kids
✅how to effectively negotiate with your former partner
✅administrative support on what you need to do
✅gathering all your financials and supporting documentation
✅preparing draft financial arrangements
✅drafting parenting plans
✅security support and domestic and family violence guidance
✅help you to connect to any other specialists you may need help from - valuers, mortgage brokers, financial planners, forensic accountants, psychologists, mediator, lawyer
✅prepare you for mediation if required
✅career advisory assistance and life coaching
✅co-parenting support
✅single parenting support
✅financial advisory and financial recovery support
✅estate planning/updating wills/conveyancing/rewrite of trusts
✅wellness assistance, help you reconnect with life and others.
We are your one-on-one support person to help counsel and guide you with the many aspects of your separation, divorce and your new life beyond. We strive to ensure our clients achieve fair financial outcomes and parenting arrangements, that are ultimately in the best interest of the children. We are there for our clients well after the paper work is done and the emotional and parenting and financial support is needed.
As hard as it may be to envisage right now, we will help you emerge through this, with greater confidence direction and recovery.
Promise x
"We give our clients the support and strategies to get them through this tough time. This business was created because I was sick of watching people going through separation and divorce feeling so overwhelmed, charged so much by advisors, often still not getting a fair deal, seeing first hand the impact the high conflict had on everyone, especially their children and the sense of abandonment people felt after the paperwork was done..
I want our clients to emerge from the process educated and empowered to enable them to thrive in the next stage of their lives. We don't abandon our clients once the documents are all signed. We regularly offer a wide array of ongoing support to our clients, post divorce, to help each individual client continue to reach their future goals and recover."
- Susan, Separation and Divorce Coach
(Honours Law Degree with majors in psychology and coaching)
Pre- SepAration
If you are considering Separation, we can help you carefully plan and provide you with the support you need.
Understand what to expect during separation and the legal requirements
Discuss the options for separation to reach agreements in a cost effective way
Develop a separation plan to help you feel organised, educated and empowered through the process
Ensure you have a safe exit strategy and can remain safe
Learn how to communicate with your spouse and children about separating
Understand how to protect your assets and secure your finances before separating
Address any domestic violence or child safety concerns
Provide counselling and coaching support.
When Separation
Feeling confused? Do you need help understanding what to do next?
We've Got You!
Understand what it means legally to be separated and what to expect during separation
Understand your legal options to reach financial property and/or parenting arrangements and how to minimise your costs along the way
Create a separation plan
Assistance to gather critical documentation and evidence
Child and spousal support options
Legal document preparation
Prepare for mediation, if required
Assist with domestic violence concerns
Counselling and coaching and emotional support
Communication and co-parenting strategies and how to set boundaries
Securing your information and property
Specialist referrals as required including asset and business valuers, banks, mortgage brokers, lawyers.
Near Conclusion of Separation stages & Beyond
We don't just help you get your parenting, financials and divorce sorted. We are still there for the next chapter to provide ongoing support when you need it.
Finalise your parenting and/or financial/property agreements
Mediation support if required
Preparing the family emotionally for divorce
Preparing and filing the Divorce application
Updating wills and other key family legal and administrative documents
Asset valuation support (including property and business assets)
Life coaching and counselling
Improve co-parenting skills
Resume, career assistance and interview training
Financial education including financial planning, budgeting, loan refinancing, mortgage broking.
Questions about our
Services?
Most clients prefer to book directly with with our counsellors. No referral is required to access this counselling service.
During the first session, you can discuss the benefits of seeking a Mental Health Care Plan from your GP should you wish to pursue this path moving forward and you are booking with a registered psychologist. If you require a Mental Health Care Plan (MHCP) you will need to make a long appointment with your GP and they will make an assessment about whether you are eligible.
All of our registered psychologists are registered with Medicare and you will need a referral from a GP if you wish to claim Medicare rebates. Under the Better Access program you can receive a partial rebate for up to 10 individual sessions in a calendar year.
All our psychologists are registered with private health insurance providers in Australia. If you have private health insurance, you may be eligible to claim rebates for psychological sessions. The level of cover and any applicable waiting periods vary between providers and depends on your extras cover policy.
To find out if you are eligible and/or how much funding you are entitled to claim for psychological sessions, please contact your private health insurance.
Where applicable, some of our psychologists also see clients who are self-managed or plan-managed through NDIS at the current rate for NDIS.
Given the nature of our support services, last minute cancellations are costly, and it means that other clients may miss out on receiving the required support. For cancellations within 48 hours of the scheduled appointment there is a $65 part fee payment. For less than 24 hours cancellation notice or a non-show, the full session fee will need to be charged. These fees are refunded however if the session can be filled at the last minute.
We know our clients are time poor. For your convenience, all our counselling or coaching sessions are now available online via Zoom.
You can book your appointment online via this website.
Zoom allows us to connect with you via video and audio. It just requires you to click on a link to join. You can sign up to Zoom to create a FREE account and download the Zoom Client for Meetings. Zoom does require internet connections.
After you book you will be sent a reminder about the booking and emailed a link to connect at the booked time. You are also likely to be sent a client information form to complete prior to your initial consultation to enable our Counsellors and Coaches to be better prepared for your first meeting.
If you are unable to make any of the dates available, please email us to see if we can accommodate an alternate time for you: [email protected]
If you live in Brisbane or the Gold Coast, Queensland, we are available for face to face consultations. Please email us at [email protected] if you would like to arrange an in person appointment.
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Regardless of who has made the decision or how your relationship has been to date, telling your partner that you want a separation or divorce is likely to be one of the most difficult, painful and memorable conversations you are likely to ever have. It is often a conversation that both parties remember clearly for the rest of their lives, so take some small steps to get it right.
It is important to realise that the way in which you discuss this may set the tone for your future discussions and potentially increase OR decrease your chance of positively negotiating your future conversations regarding financials, family and the next phase of your lives.
TIPS
Planning the discussion
• Have you considered having counselling together or at least personally speaking with a counsellor, psychologist, separation coach to help you consider your emotions, options and plans. Family Counselling Support Network can assist. www.familycounsellingsupportnetwork.com. Speaking with your GP is often also highly recommended to ensure there are no medical reasons contributing to the way you are feeling.
• Make sure you are certain of your final decision before you break the news to your partner as it is very stressful and often emotionally difficult to come back from this type of disclosure if you change your mind.
• Consider what will be the best day, time and conditions to have this discussion so it is as amicable, respectful and calm as possible under the difficult circumstances. Ideally it should be done face to face (not via a text, a note, or via a third party) and when no one else is home, especially children. You may choose to go to a neutral place such as coffee in a park where you aren’t distracted or conscious of being the object of attention. Most importantly, make sure that your intention is not blurted out in the middle of heated discussions and avoid late at night or on a day which corresponds with important events such as celebrations or family holidays.
• Consider how will you remain safe throughout this discussion and afterwards? Do you need to consider having the discussion in conjunction with a counsellor? If you are leaving an abusive or violent partner, do you need a safe exit plan, a restraining order or emergency accommodation assistance? In an emergency call police 000.
• Have you considered your partner’s reaction, the likely questions that you will be asked and how you will respond to them? Are they likely to be surprised? Deeply emotional? Aggressive? Some people consider marriage a lifelong commitment and may be really surprised by your announcement. Often people are in denial and do not seem to absorb what is being said and perhaps the finality of your decision. Watch for the possible breadth of reactions, acknowledge their feelings and show empathy.
• Who is staying in the home and who is potentially leaving, and where the children and pets will immediately go, are likely to be the first issues raised. It is important to have thought through these issues so that solutions are more easily explored.
Planning the discussion
• When delivering your decision to separate or divorce, the key is to be kind, direct and not highly emotional. Examples of how you might raise it include, “I am unhappy and would like to live apart for six months. During that time, I am open to having more counselling to see if we can make it work.” Or “We have tried counselling but unfortunately I am still not happy and I would like to move towards a more permanent step to separate” or “I have been unhappy in our relationship for a long time and I would like to see if being apart improves things for us all.”
• Then deliver the terms, for example, “I would like you to live at your parents for a few weeks and I can remain here with the children until we work out the next steps”, or “I am going to visit my parents for the week to give you time and space to move out,” or perhaps if you are amicable and it is safe, you could suggest, “You are welcome to stay in the other bedroom until we sort out what we are going to do next.”
• Regardless of how the other person reacts, try not to get highly defensive, blaming and remember to acknowledge their emotions. Try to remain calm and supportive and continue to state your position - “I am sorry, I know this isn’t what you want to hear but we have tried our best, and I can’t do this anymore and I want to separate."
• Give your partner time and space to process what you have said. Don’t immediately proceed with details of what you are proposing in terms of parental and financial settlements, but it is a good time to suggest you want to work with them to ensure you sort things out as amicably as possible as you move forward.
• Try to calmly agree together on how and when to tell the children and other family members and friends, allowing a respectful period of time to digest the details.
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DISCLAIMER: The material contained on this website is for general educational and information purposes only and is not a substitute for professional legal, financial, medical or psychological advice or care. While every care has been taken in the information provided, no legal responsibility or liability is accepted, warranted or implied by the authors or Family Counselling Support Network and any liability is hereby expressly disclaimed. For specific advice please contact us at [email protected]. All information contained on the website remains the intellectual property of Family Counselling Support Network and is for your personal educational use only. The information must not be reproduced or distributed without the express permission of Family Counselling Support Network.
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