『1: Do Not Sign This Parenting Plan - The Clauses That Ruin Your Life Later』のカバーアート

1: Do Not Sign This Parenting Plan - The Clauses That Ruin Your Life Later

1: Do Not Sign This Parenting Plan - The Clauses That Ruin Your Life Later

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概要

What if the document meant to protect your kids is actually the thing that traps you for the next 18 years? Tragic.

I started this podcast because I kept watching parents rush to sign “standard” parenting plans, then wonder why they are stuck for years throwing money at lawyers trying to unf*ck them. In this pilot episode of The Ugly Truth of Divorce, I break down the five clauses that sound reasonable but quietly give your high-conflict ex all the leverage. The vague wording. The loopholes. The crap no one warns you about until you are already knee-deep in it.

If you're exhausted and just want it over with—I get it, really. But slowing down right now will save you years of chaos, money, and regret ( and avoid the worst case scenario—your ex running your life.)

Don't sign anything until you hear this. Listen now.

Want to go deeper?

The Parenting Plan Masterclass walks you through every clause, every trap, and exactly how to write enforceable language that protects you—so you're not stuck fixing garbage for the next 18 years.

Get the Masterclass here.

Know better. Do better.

Here’s What You Can Actually Take Away:
  • "Standard" is a trap. Generic parenting plans are outdated, vague, and designed for cooperative co-parents who don't exist in high-conflict divorces. They sound fair but give one party all the leverage.
  • The pressure to sign fast is intentional. When attorneys say "I need your answer by Friday" after a year-long divorce, or "don't worry, we'll fix it later," they're creating urgency that benefits them—not you. Modifications cost thousands and take months.
  • Vague language creates control, not cooperation. Phrases like "mutually agree," "open communication," and "in good faith" sound reasonable but have no measurable requirements. Courts can't enforce what isn't specific.
  • The damage shows up later—not when you sign. You'll think your plan is fine for weeks or months, until you try to enforce it. Then you realize nothing is enforceable, and you're stuck choosing between spending money you don't have or letting your ex control everything.
  • Read your plan wearing your ex's glasses. Don't just read it from your hopeful, cooperative perspective. Read every sentence imagining the worst possible interpretation from someone who doesn't like you, doesn't want to cooperate, and is looking for loopholes.
The Truth Bombs
  • “A standard parenting plan will fail you — especially in high-conflict divorce.”
  • “The damage doesn’t show up the day you sign. It shows up when you try to enforce it.”
  • “Vague language doesn’t create cooperation. It creates control.”
  • “If your parenting plan isn’t measurable, it isn’t enforceable.”
  • “This isn’t about being nice. It’s about protecting your future with your kids.”
  • "They make you feel bad because you question things. They make you feel bad because you want detail. Don't they realize this is OUR future, not theirs? And we just gave them tens of thousands of dollars to make sure our future is protected."
  • "You have to take those glasses off and read it as your ex—who most likely is high conflict, or will be at some point in time. Mark my words. It always gets uglier before it gets better."
  • "Before you sign, take off your glasses, put their glasses on, and read it as them. Especially if they don't like you."

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