Prayers for a positive outcome in your custody case
Part of the Sharing The Kids collection.
Why these words matter
Custody cases have a particular cruelty: they force you to perform your love for your children at the exact moment you have the fewest internal resources left to draw from. You're depleted, and you're being evaluated. It's a brutal combination. And the internal monologue that runs underneath all of it, am I good enough, am I doing enough, will they be okay, doesn't pause for weekends.
This is exactly why what you say to yourself right now matters so much. Not in a soft, inspirational-calendar way. In a genuinely functional, your-nervous-system-needs-this way.
Researchers at UCSF spent a decade reviewing how divorce actually affects children's long-term adjustment, and what they found might reframe everything you're white-knuckling your way through. According to Kelly's landmark review published in the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, the quality of parenting, not the custody arrangement itself, is the decisive factor for how kids come through this. Not who wins. Not the exact number of overnights. The warmth, consistency, and emotional steadiness of a parent who shows up.
You are that parent. The one who is awake at midnight, scared and still trying. Affirmations that keep anchoring you to that truth aren't wishful thinking, they're how you stay regulated enough to be the parent your kids need right now, through all of this, regardless of how the paperwork ends up.
Affirmations to practice
- I am a good parent affirmation
- I can only control myself not my ex
- I am doing my best for my kids and that is enough
- I am the best parent for my child
- I am doing enough as a parent
- I am strong enough to raise my kids alone
- I am more than the label single mom
- I am exactly who my kids need
- I am grateful my co-parent is present in our child's life
- I can forgive and still set boundaries
- I choose peace over conflict co-parenting
- I release what I cannot control divorce
- I accept that my co-parent is not perfect
- I am worthy of respect co-parenting
- I am the safe parent affirmation
- I will always be their parent
- I trust my ex to take care of our kids
- I have the strength to get through this parenting
- I am healing one step at a time single parent
- my heart aches for my kids divorce
How to actually use these
Don't try to use all of them. Pick the one or two that make your chest tighten slightly, not because they feel false, but because they feel almost true and you're not quite ready to believe them yet. Those are yours right now. Say them in the car before drop-off. Write the one that hits hardest on a sticky note and put it somewhere you'll actually see it, not somewhere aspirational, somewhere real, like the bathroom mirror or the inside of your car visor. Expect them to feel hollow the first few times. That's normal. You're not trying to feel instantly better. You're trying to build a small counter-narrative to the fear. Read them when the anxiety spikes. Read them again when you've calmed down. Repetition is the point.
Frequently asked
- How do I use affirmations when I'm in active custody proceedings and everything feels urgent?
- Keep it extremely simple. This is not the time for a ten-step ritual. Pick one sentence that feels relevant to today and say it before you open your email, before you call your attorney, before you do anything that spikes your cortisol. The goal isn't transformation, it's a five-second interruption to the panic loop, repeated enough times that it starts to stick.
- What if repeating 'I am a good parent' just feels like a lie right now?
- That feeling is the anxiety talking, not the evidence. Try softening the affirmation slightly if it feels too far from where you are, 'I am trying to be a good parent' or 'I have always shown up for my kids' might land more honestly right now. The goal isn't to gaslight yourself into positivity. It's to find a true statement you can actually hold onto.
- Is there actual evidence that affirmations do anything during high-stress situations like a custody case?
- Yes, self-affirmation research consistently shows that affirming core values reduces the physiological and psychological impact of threat, which is essentially what a custody dispute is: a sustained threat to something you love. When you're regulated, you parent better. When you parent better, according to multiple studies on post-divorce child outcomes, your kids do better. It's a real chain of causation, not a feeling.
- I was a stay-at-home mom and I'm terrified the court won't take me seriously. How do I stay grounded?
- The fear that your sacrifice will be held against you is real and it is also one of the most disorienting parts of this process. What research consistently shows is that courts and child psychologists focus on parenting quality, warmth, consistency, stability, not income or employment status. What you built during those years matters. Affirmations that center your concrete relationship with your children, not abstract worth, tend to be the most grounding when this specific fear surfaces.
- How are affirmations different from just praying for a good outcome?
- They're not in opposition, a lot of people do both. Prayer tends to be outward-directed: asking for something outside yourself to shift. Affirmations are inward-directed: reinforcing what is already true about you so you can show up fully regardless of what you can't control. Using both means you're covering the parts of this situation you can influence and making peace with the parts you can't.