What to do on weekends without your kids after divorce

The first weekend without them, you probably cleaned a bathroom you didn't need to clean, made coffee for one without thinking, and then sat in a silence so loud it had a texture. Nobody tells you that having your whole apartment to yourself can feel less like freedom and more like a sentence. The quiet you used to beg for during bath time and homework fights turns out to be the hardest room to sit in. So here's the question nobody in your life knows how to ask without it getting awkward: when did loving your kids so completely start to mean you forgot how to exist without them nearby? These affirmations aren't about pretending the weekend feels fine when it doesn't. They're about finding something solid to hold onto while you figure out who you are in the hours that used to belong entirely to someone else. Some of them will land immediately. Some will feel like a lie the first twelve times. Use them anyway.

Why these words matter

Here's what's actually happening when you spend a weekend without your kids feeling like a bad parent for watching three hours of television in peace: your brain is doing something it was never designed for. It was wired for their presence. Their noise, their needs, their specific weight on the couch next to you. Absence registers as alarm. And underneath the guilt and the missing them, there's often something harder, the fear that the time you're not there is time that counts against you somehow. That the scoreboard is running. Researchers at UCSF spent a decade reviewing what actually determines how children come through divorce. What they found, published in the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, reframes the whole thing: it isn't the custody arrangement that shapes children's long-term adjustment. It's the quality of parenting. Not quantity of hours, not who got primary custody, not whether the schedule is perfectly equal. Quality. Warmth. Consistency. The kind of parent you are when you are there. Which means the weekend you spend recovering, resting, grieving, or eventually, eventually, actually enjoying yourself? That's not abandonment. That's how you show up better when it's your turn again. The affirmations on this page are calibrated to that reality: you are not defined by the days you don't have them.

Affirmations to practice

  1. I am a good parent affirmation
  2. I can only control myself not my ex
  3. I am doing my best for my kids and that is enough
  4. I am the best parent for my child
  5. I am doing enough as a parent
  6. I am strong enough to raise my kids alone
  7. I am more than the label single mom
  8. I am exactly who my kids need
  9. I am grateful my co-parent is present in our child's life
  10. I can forgive and still set boundaries
  11. I choose peace over conflict co-parenting
  12. I release what I cannot control divorce
  13. I accept that my co-parent is not perfect
  14. I am worthy of respect co-parenting
  15. I am the safe parent affirmation
  16. I will always be their parent
  17. I trust my ex to take care of our kids
  18. I have the strength to get through this parenting
  19. I am healing one step at a time single parent
  20. my heart aches for my kids divorce

How to actually use these

Start with the one that makes you feel the most defensive. That's usually the one doing the most work. Read it out loud in the car on the way to drop them off, or the morning after you do. Put the one about doing enough somewhere you'll see it when the house is quiet and your brain starts drafting arguments about what you should be doing differently. Don't try to feel all of them at once, pick one for the weekend and let it run on a loop. If it starts to feel hollow, swap it out. If it makes you cry, that's not failure. That's the thing underneath finally getting some air.

Frequently asked

What are some actual things to do on weekends without kids after divorce?
Start small and specific, not 'rediscover yourself' but 'go to the Saturday farmers market alone for the first time.' Physical movement helps: a walk, a class, anything that gives the day a shape. The goal in the early months isn't joy, it's just structure. Joy tends to show up later, quietly, when you stop forcing it.
Is it okay to feel relieved when they're at their other parent's house?
Yes. Fully, completely yes. Relief and love are not in competition. You spent years operating at a level of sustained vigilance that most people don't understand, relief is a biological response, not a character flaw. The guilt that follows the relief is worth examining, but the relief itself is just your nervous system finally exhaling.
Do affirmations actually help when you're missing your kids?
They work differently than distraction does, they're not trying to override the feeling, they're trying to give you something true to stand on while you're in it. Research consistently shows that what you repeat to yourself about your own parenting competence shapes your behavior, which shapes outcomes. The words you use about yourself when no one's listening matter more than most people realize.
Does it get easier to be without the kids on holidays and birthdays?
It does, but not always in a straight line. The first birthday you spend without them is its own specific kind of hard that the second one is slightly less hard, and the third one you might find yourself making a plan instead of just surviving the day. What helps most people is creating a small ritual of their own, something that makes the day mean something instead of just marking what's missing.
How do you stay civil with your ex at kids' sports games and events when things are still tense?
Decide in advance what civil looks like for you, a nod, a brief hello, sitting on the same side of the bleachers or not. Having a pre-decided script removes the in-the-moment decision-making when your nervous system is already activated. The goal isn't warmth. It's neutrality, consistently delivered, because your kid is watching both of you far more carefully than either of you is watching the game.