Managing Emotions in Divorce
by Lyerly Spongberg of Step Up With Lyerly, Divorce Coach
Emotional Management Is Not Optional—It’s Your Divorce Superpower
Staying Clear, Calm, and Centered When Everything Feels Like a Trigger
Divorce doesn’t just break up a marriage—it breaks open your nervous system. Even on a “good” day, one email from your ex, one legal update, one unexpected reaction from your child can send you straight into panic or rage.
But here’s the truth: emotional management isn’t about being unbothered. It’s about building the internal strength to respond instead of react—to stay rooted in your clarity, even when everything around you feels unstable.
Divorce Is Emotional—But You Don’t Have to Be Emotionally Hijacked
Emotional Intelligence (EQ) is one of the most critical tools in your divorce toolkit. It’s not about suppressing your emotions—it’s about understanding them, managing them, and using them strategically.
EQ gives you:
Self-awareness – knowing what you feel and why
Self-regulation – managing your reactions under stress
Social awareness – reading the energy in a conversation or meditation
Relationship management – communicating with clarity, not chaos
The more you practice these skills, the more you can defuse emotional landmines before they explode.
Understand Your Divorce Triggers—So They Don’t Control the Narrative
Enter the SCARF model, developed by neuroscientist David Rock. It identifies five areas where we typically feel threatened in high-stakes situations: Status, Certainty, Autonomy, Relatedness, and Fairness.
Your status feels attacked when your ex questions your parenting.
Your certainty evaporates when you don’t know where you’ll live next year.
Your autonomy disappears when court orders override your preferences.
Your relatedness takes a hit when you lose mutual friends.
Your sense of fairness is rocked by every imbalance in the process.
Knowing which SCARF domains trigger you gives you power. It lets you pause, ground, and make conscious choices—not emotional ones. If you know your divorce triggers—and everyone has them—you start to notice the real story underneath the reaction. Like: “This isn’t just about them showing up unannounced. This is about me needing boundaries that actually get respected.”
Talk Like You Mean Peace—Not War
Divorce communication can be a battlefield—but it doesn’t have to be. Nonviolent Communication (NVC), created by Marshall Rosenberg, offers a way to communicate clearly and calmly, even in high-conflict divorce situations.
NVC invites you to:
Observe the situation without judgment
Name your feeling
Identify your unmet need
Make a respectful request
Example: Instead of “You’re always late for pickups,” you say, “When the schedule isn’t followed, I feel anxious because I need consistency for the kids. Could we stick to the agreed times moving forward?”
This isn’t about being nice—it’s about being effective.
Regulate First, Respond Later
Let’s not pretend divorce is easy—especially when you’re dealing with control issues, high-conflict personalities, or narcissistic traits. But the more you can regulate your nervous system—through movement, mindfulness, coaching, or conscious boundaries—the less reactive you become.
When you regulate first, you’re no longer reacting to your ex—you’re responding to your own vision for peace and power.
Final Word: This Is Hard—But You Are Stronger
Divorce will test you. It will trigger you. And sometimes it will knock you flat. But emotional regulation isn’t about being unshakable. It’s about rising every time with more clarity and capacity.
This is a chapter. Not the whole book.
And if you’re ready to write the next chapter with more emotional intelligence, more grounded communication, and more clarity about who you’re becoming—I’m here when you’re ready.
Let’s do this work. Together.
To learn more about me, ADR Divorce Coaching, Mediation Coaching or to schedule a complimentary consult call, please visit stepupwithlyerly.com today.
This blogpost was originally posted here!
Learn more about and how to work with Lyerly Spongberg here!
Please note that the blogpost above does not represent the thoughts or opinions of Fresh Start Registry and solely represents the original author’s perspective.