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The Bright Side: Surviving Your Parents' Divorce

The Bright Side: Surviving Your Parents' Divorce
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The Bright Side: Surviving Your Parents' Divorce

 
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Hi! This book is for you, not your parents. This whole process you're going through is tough. Believe me, I know. I've been there. Divorce ran in my family even before I was born. My parents were divorced when I was six, and I've had multiple stepparents, new families, and half-brothers. Divorce is a mixed bag, and it's easy to get overwhelmed with the huge changes that are taking place in your life. With so many disruptions, it's hard to focus on everything that's going wrong and everything you think you've lost. But this book isn't about that. When I went through my experiences with divorce, I was lucky enough to have my family and friends all help me with good advice. They helped me see the bright side of all these new experiences, and they helped me keep a level head and a positive perspective. In this book, I've put together the most important stuff I figured out to try to make this whole thing a little easier for you to deal with.

I wrote this to be a practical book that deals with the everyday situations of divorce, and The Bright Side is full of useful information, like tips on traveling through airports alone, managing your schedule between two houses, or how to tell your parents that you won't take sides. Most important is The Divorced Kids' Bill of Rights, seven inalienable rights that kids have and need to know. So take a look--it's not that long. I hope it helps you out and makes your life a little easier.


 


--Max Sindell

 
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Average Customer Rating: based on 5 reviews

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Average Customer Review:4.5 ( 5 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5 of 5 found the following review helpful:


4Interesting and vital POV for young people!  Jul 25, 2007 By C. Kidd
"The Bright Side" is a fresh take on the how-to genre. This is a book geared at children whose parents are going through divorce, but instead of giving them strict advice to follow (kids don't want rules, anyhow!), Max Sindell offers a different perspective. While admitting that being a child of divorce can be challenging, his examples prove that those challenges can be exciting (traveling, having a new schedule, welcoming new family) and ultimately the challenges can make the child become more independent young adult. His Bill of Rights is a fun, special piece, helping kids to remember that they don't have to deal with divorce alone or as a mediator. As their parents are benefiting from the situation, Sindell assures his readers that they, too, should gain some new experience and perspectives. Sindell is neither patronizing nor condescending -- he balances personal success stories with a calm assurance that divorce will certainly have rough patches. Overall, this is a great suggestion for any child dealing with divorce as it's helpful and adventurous without being long-winded!

3 of 3 found the following review helpful:


5A guide written especially for teens and young adults  Jan 04, 2008 By Midwest Book Review
The Bright Side: Surviving Your Parents' Divorce is a guide written especially for teens and young adults, by an author who knows what surviving a parent's divorce is like from personal experience. Author Max Sindell, whose parents split up when he was six, begins with a child's bill of rights - including the absolute most important right, the right to be safe and feel safe. The other rights a child of divorcing parents has include the right to awareness in what's going on, the right to counseling, the right to be heard, the right to be one's own person, the right to be neutral, and the right to private communication. Chapters go on to teach the reader what to expect during and after a divorce, from dealing with mom and/or dad dating again to meeting a new stepfamily to traveling alone, coping with less money in the family (divorce and lawyers are expensive!) and much more. "Always remember your right to feel safe and secure. I can't say it enough times. If your parent ever has someone in his or her life who violates your feelings of safety and security, tell that person or tell your parent. If your parent doesn't take care of it, tell your other parent, tell a counselor, tell everybody, because that's the most important thing." Enthusiastically recommended, especially as a giftbook for any young person whose parents are divorcing.

3 of 3 found the following review helpful:


5Where was Max Sindell twenty years ago?  Oct 17, 2007 By Matthew BJ Delaney
Where was Max Sindell twenty years ago? As a child of a divorce I could have used Max Sindell's great new book, The Bright Side, to help smooth over some of the emotional rough patches which I encountered while growing up. Even now, in my adult years, Sindell's book still resonates with me, not only as a kid's instruction manual for dealing with the confusion and pain of divorce, but also I think as an effective means to help divorced parents understand the conflicts their own children might be feeling. The Bright Side is very clever little book, filled with interesting anecdotes from the author's own life, great bits of advice and is quite well written, easily understood and enjoyed by both parents and kids. Highly recommended.

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:


4Great for pre-teen/ teens living with parents divorcing  Nov 17, 2007 By Kovia
This is a great guide for teens/ or kids going thru their parents divorce. It gives them a special Kids Bill of Rights that explains such things as..they have the right to feel safe and loved no matter what...and they have the right NOT to be used as a pawn or a spy by one or the other parent.

Best of all its written in a way that keeps the child engaged! Keeps them reading because as it says..this is a book for THEM not their parents. I do recommend this as a great tool to help a child thru this difficult time!

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:


5A Terrific Book for Children of Divorce  Sep 17, 2007 By Sidney Goodwill
As a parent and a grandparent, I find this to be a very useful book for all kids going through divorce of their parents. It is excellently presented, and useful. I plan to give this book to any child who would benefit from the author's personal experience.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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