Guide · Emotional Wellbeing

Surviving the Process —

looking after yourself

Practical and honest guidance for one of the hardest things you'll go through.

Separation and divorce are consistently ranked among the most stressful life events a person can experience. The emotional toll (grief, anxiety, anger, loneliness, fear) is real and significant. And yet most of the support available focuses almost entirely on the legal and financial process, leaving the human side of it largely unaddressed.

This guide is about looking after yourself while you go through it, practically and emotionally.

Acknowledge how hard this is

The first thing to say is: this is genuinely hard. It is not a sign of weakness to find separation overwhelming. Even people who know their marriage is over, who have made the decision themselves, still experience profound grief. You are grieving the life you had, the future you planned and sometimes the person you thought you knew.

Give yourself permission to find it difficult. Don't measure yourself against other people's apparent resilience or set a timeline for when you should feel better.

The practical and emotional are connected

One of the most overlooked aspects of separation is how much the practical chaos makes the emotional experience worse, and vice versa. When you feel overwhelmed and anxious, even simple tasks feel impossible. When the practical side feels out of control, with unanswered letters, missed deadlines, forms you don't understand, the emotional weight becomes heavier.

Getting practical support isn't separate from looking after yourself. It is part of it. When the admin is under control, when you understand what's happening and what comes next, you have more capacity to cope emotionally.

Look after the basics

It sounds simple, but the basics matter enormously when you are under prolonged stress:

  • Sleep, prioritise it, even if your sleep is disrupted
  • Food, eat regularly, even when you don't feel like it
  • Exercise, even short walks make a difference to mood and anxiety
  • Limit alcohol, it is tempting but worsens anxiety and disrupts sleep
  • Get outside, natural light and fresh air have a genuine impact on mental health

Who to talk to

Isolation is one of the most common and painful aspects of separation. People often feel they can't burden friends and family, or that those around them have taken sides, or simply that no one truly understands what they're going through.

Think about who in your life can offer different kinds of support:

  • Someone to listen without judgement
  • Someone practical who can help with childcare, lifts, meals
  • Someone who can be honest with you when you need it
  • A professional (therapist, counsellor or GP) if things feel unmanageable

You don't need to process everything with the same person. Different people offer different kinds of support.

Protect your children

Children are acutely aware of their parents' emotional state. You don't need to pretend everything is fine, children see through that, but you do need to manage what you expose them to. Adult conflict, legal conversations, financial worries and expressions of anger about the other parent should happen away from them.

Reassure your children that both parents love them, that the separation is not their fault, and that their life will be stable and cared for. These reassurances need to be given repeatedly and consistently.

Manage the information flow

Separation generates an enormous amount of correspondence, paperwork and communication, solicitors' letters, court documents, emails from your ex, financial statements. It can feel relentless. Some practical steps that help:

  • Create a dedicated folder, physical or digital, for all separation-related documents
  • Set aside specific times to deal with correspondence rather than letting it bleed into all hours
  • Don't make decisions under pressure, give yourself time to think before responding
  • Ask for help reading or understanding documents if you need it

When to ask for professional help

There is no shame in needing professional support. If you are experiencing persistent low mood, anxiety that is affecting your ability to function, intrusive thoughts or anything that feels beyond what you can manage, speak to your GP. Therapy, counselling or medication may all be appropriate depending on your circumstances.

The separation process can last months or years. It is a marathon, not a sprint, and pacing yourself matters.

Frequently asked questions

Is it normal to feel grief when it was my decision to separate?
Completely normal. Grief doesn't require regret. You can know you've made the right decision and still grieve the relationship, the family unit, the future you had planned. Both things can be true at the same time.
How do I stop the separation affecting my work?
It is very hard to keep the two entirely separate. Be honest with a trusted manager or HR if you are struggling, most employers have some flexibility for people going through significant personal circumstances. Try to create clear boundaries between work time and time spent dealing with separation matters.
What support is available for people going through divorce?
Options include your GP, NHS talking therapies (IAPT), private counsellors or therapists, online support communities, Citizens Advice, and services like The Separation Companion for practical and emotional support through the process.
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