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Owned by Catherine

LA
Life after dv

2 members โ€ข Free

For survivors of dv especially those with children guiding, supporting & advice as well as advocating information direct support & finding your voice

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67 members โ€ข Free

2 contributions to Life after dv
Post separation abuse & the Family court
Life after domestic violence is a season of small, stubborn flames: moments of breath, steps forward, and the quiet resilience that carries you through the long rooms of the family court system. Navigating family court after separation can feel like treading water while the waves of post-separation abuse keep crashing. Yet healing isnโ€™t a single grand gestureโ€”itโ€™s choosing safety, reclaiming your voice, and building boundaries that protect you and your children. Here are some guiding truths: You deserve safety first. The system exists to protect, not to blame. Your experiences are real, and your courage to seek stability matters. Documentation is a shield, not a trap. Keep records of threats, incidents, and communication. Itโ€™s not about proving you were perfect; itโ€™s about proving patterns that justify protection. Small, consistent steps are powerful. Secure a safe housing plan, establish reliable support networks, and set clear, non-escalatory channels for contact with your children. Boundaries are actionable, not accusatory. Limit contact methods to court-approved schedules and monitored communications when needed. Your voice matters. Speak your truth with a focus on safety, stability, and the best interests of your children. You donโ€™t owe anyone your silence for their comfort. Self-compassion fuels resilience. Grief, fear, and anger are valid. Treat yourself with the same kindness youโ€™d offer a friend in your situation. If youโ€™re in the middle of this now, consider these practical anchors: Safety planning: identify a place you can go in an emergency, trusted people you can contact, and a plan for your children. Legal support: seek lawyers or legal aid who specialize in DV and family court; ask about protective orders, custody arrangements that prioritize safety, and timelines. Emotional support: therapists, support groups, or survivor networks can provide validation and strategies for navigating post-separation abuse within the system. Documentation routines: keep a dated log of incidents, communications, and witnesses; save screenshots and voicemails; organize medical or police documents.
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Catherine Rowland
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5points to level up
@catherine-rowland-9466
After going through it 2 separate times myself and seeing all the lack of in the process I founded life after Dv to advocate and educate ๐Ÿ’œ

Active 69d ago
Joined Oct 29, 2025
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