Divorce Starts Before the Paperwork

I remember the day that my ex-husband and I decided we were going to separate.

We were sitting at the kitchen table. The same table where we had celebrated birthdays. Paid bills. Helped with homework. Planned holidays.

But this time, we were planning the end of our marriage.

A few hours later, we sat the kids down and told them what was happening. I can still see their faces. Confused. Quiet. Trying to be brave because we were trying to be brave.

I had been a stay-at-home mom for 15 years.

Fifteen years of field trips, laundry, and packing lunches. Fifteen years of building my identity around being “Mom” and “wife.” And in one conversation, I wasn’t a wife and mom anymore.

I was about to become a single mom.

And the clock started ticking the moment we made that decision.

What most people don’t talk about is this: the hardest part of divorce often starts long before the papers are signed.

The moment you know it’s over, your brain goes into survival mode.

What about the kids?

Where are we going to live?
How am I going to afford this?
What about health insurance?
What about everything?

My ex-husband was in the military, which meant we were living on base housing. When we separated, that wasn’t an option anymore. I had to find a place for myself and the kids to live.

Fast.

I remember scrolling rental listings late at night after everyone was asleep. Doing math in my head that didn’t add up. Wondering how I was supposed to qualify for anything when I didn’t have an income yet.

And here was the reality I was facing – In the state we lived in, he wasn’t required to pay child support until the divorce was final.

Our divorce took 18 months.

Eighteen months of figuring it out on my own.

When you’ve been home for 15 years, you don’t just walk back into the workforce like nothing changed. You rebuild your confidence. You update a résumé that hasn’t been touched in years. You try to translate years of raising kids into something employers understand.

And you do it while your heart is breaking.

While your emotions are all over the place.

While your kids are asking hard questions.

You’re grieving the relationship.
You’re trying to stay strong for your kids.
You’re trying to make smart financial decisions while your whole world is in chaos.

Financial stress during divorce isn’t just about numbers. It’s about fear. It’s about the pressure of knowing people are depending on you.

It’s standing in the grocery store wondering if you should put something back.

It’s lying awake at night calculating rent plus utilities plus gas plus groceries over and over like somehow the total will change.

It’s trying to build a brand-new life while you’re still emotionally processing the old one ending.

No one hands you a manual for that.

That season forced me to learn how money actually worked in my life. Not the abstract version. The real version. The day-to-day decisions. The planning. The choices that determine whether you stay stuck or move forward.

I didn’t just learn how to survive financially. I learned how to take control of my financial life.

Because I know what it feels like to sit at the kitchen table staring at numbers that don’t make sense yet. I know what it feels like to carry the weight of trying to protect your kids while rebuilding your own life at the same time.

And I also know that with the right plan and support, things can become far more stable than they feel right now.

That experience is a big part of why I do the work I do today as a financial coach.

And here’s what I learned in that season, both as a woman walking through it and now as a financial coach helping others do the same:

  1. Clarity calms chaos.
    Even when the numbers are scary, knowing them is better than guessing. I wrote everything down. Every bill. Every expense. Every possible source of income. It didn’t fix it overnight, but it gave me something solid to stand on.
  2. Pride is expensive.
    I had to ask for help. I had to accept temporary work. I had to make decisions that weren’t glamorous but were necessary. Survival seasons are not the time for ego.
  3. Temporary doesn’t mean forever.
    That tiny rental? Temporary.
    That first job that wasn’t my dream? Temporary.
    That overwhelming fear? Temporary.

When you’re in it, it feels permanent. It isn’t.

  • You are more capable than you think.
    I didn’t feel strong. I felt terrified. Strength, I learned, is often just doing the next thing while shaking.

Divorce is emotional. It’s relational. It’s spiritual.

And it is deeply financial.

We don’t prepare women for that part. We tell them to “be strong.” We tell them “It will work out.” We rarely sit them down and say, “Let’s talk about cash flow, housing, income, legal timelines, and how to survive the 18-month gap.”

But that gap is where so much of the real battle happens.

Before the judge signs anything.
Before the paperwork is finalized.
Before the world sees you as officially divorced.

That in-between season is raw.

If you are going through a divorce, separation, or a major life transition and trying to figure out your finances in the middle of it, you don’t have to navigate that alone.

This is exactly the kind of season I help people through.

Together, we can look at where you are financially, create a clear plan for the next steps, and help you rebuild stability one decision at a time.

If that’s something you need right now, I’d love to work with you.

Reach out to schedule a free insight session to see if financial coaching is right for you.

What Affordability Really Means After Divorce

There’s a moment after divorce or a major life reset when things finally settle down and everything gets quiet.

The paperwork is signed.
The adrenaline fades.
And you’re standing in your kitchen at 9:30 p.m., eating cereal for dinner, wondering how this became your life.

That’s usually when the question shows up:

Can I buy a home or keep the one I’m in on my own?

Not to prove anything.
Not to “win” the divorce.
Not to impress anyone who doesn’t pay your bills.

Just to build something steady again.

If that’s where you are, let me say this gently: buying a home after divorce is different. Not impossible. Just different. And God’s not surprised you’re here.

I know this season well. I’ve lived it. And I’ve watched God meet people right in the middle of it, sometimes with provision, sometimes with redirection, and occasionally with a sense of humor that feels almost rude at first.

Buying on one income changes everything.

There’s no “we’ll figure it out later.”
No second paycheck as a safety net in the background.
No shared “oops” fund when the water heater decides to retire early.

It can feel scary… and oddly freeing.

You stop asking:
“What can we qualify for?”

And start asking:
“What can I afford and still sleep at night?”

That question is wisdom.

After divorce, many people go one of two ways:

They either tell themselves,
“I guess I don’t get to want much anymore.”

Or they swing hard in the other direction, like,
“I’ve been through enough. I deserve this house.”

Both reactions make sense. Neither one makes great financial decisions.

Budgeting on one income isn’t God telling you to live small forever. It’s Him inviting you into stability.

It’s knowing:

  • What your income supports without constant stress
  • How much margin you need to feel safe
  • What makes your nervous system calm, not clenched

Here’s where people get tripped up.

They focus on:
“Can I make the payment?”

But forget:

  • Repairs don’t care that you’re newly single
  • Utility bills don’t accept emotional coupons
  • Maintenance doesn’t show mercy just because you’re tired

Owning a home should not require prayer every time the fridge makes a noise.

Your home should support your life, not consume it.

God is a provider. But, He’s not asking you to ignore math.

Emotional buying is very real after divorce

Let’s be honest.

After loss, people shop with feelings.

They buy the house that quietly says:
“I’m okay.”
“I made it.”
“I didn’t lose everything.”

Or the house that whispers:
“I shouldn’t want much.”
“I’ll stay small.”
“I don’t trust good things anymore.”

Neither extreme is sinful. Both are human. But finding stable middle ground is best.

Your house doesn’t need to heal your heart. God does that work. Your house just needs to be a safe place to land.

One of the most freeing thoughts rebuilding buyers can have is this:

“My home doesn’t have to be perfect. It just has to work.”

Work for your income.
Work for your peace.
Work for the life God is rebuilding, not the one you’re grieving.

Sometimes that means:

  • Less square footage
  • A longer timeline
  • A simpler layout
  • A different plan than the one you had before

And sometimes it means letting yourself want something nice again without guilt. God is not offended by your desire for beauty or comfort.

Why I Specialize in This Season

I work with divorced, newly single, and rebuilding homebuyers because I understand the layers.

The financial reset.
The emotional exhaustion.
The quiet prayers that sound like, “Please don’t let me mess this up.”

Buying a home after divorce isn’t just a transaction. It’s a moment of direction.

And when done thoughtfully, with wisdom, numbers, prayer, and a little grace for yourself, it can be one of the most stabilizing decisions you make.

Not because it fixes everything.
But because it gives you a place to breathe while God continues to rebuild the rest.

And yes, you might still eat cereal for dinner sometimes.

That’s okay too.

When Seasons Change Along With Your Marriage

Pumpkin spice isn’t the only thing showing up in early fall. Believe it or not, divorce filings also spike this time of year. Yep, just when you thought the biggest expense you’d face in September was back-to-school shopping, the reality is a lot of couples are sitting down with lawyers instead of PTO calendars.

But why fall? Well, think about it. Couples often try to hold it together through the summer for maybe one last family vacation, one more “let’s see if this works” effort while the kids are out of school. And then, when August heat turns into September routines, many people decide it’s time for a fresh start before the holiday season rolls around.

Here’s the tough part: divorce isn’t just emotionally draining, it’s financially draining, too. Money is already one of the biggest stressors in a marriage, and splitting households doesn’t exactly make things easier. If you’re not careful, you can end up with just as much financial heartbreak as marital heartbreak.

So let’s talk about how divorce impacts your money and what you can do to lessen the blow:

1. Two Houses, One Income (or Less)

You go from sharing expenses to doubling them. Mortgage or rent, utilities, insurance—suddenly you’re covering it solo. If you haven’t already, it’s time to put together a realistic budget for your household, not the one that used to be.

2. The “Stuff” Split

Dividing assets sounds fair on paper, but things get tricky fast. Retirement accounts, investments, even furniture, those things don’t just divide cleanly. Before agreeing to anything, understand the tax and long-term implications. A $50,000 retirement account isn’t the same as $50,000 in cash.

3. Debt Doesn’t Magically Disappear

Credit card bills, car loans, and even that home equity line; divorce doesn’t erase them. Be proactive about how debt is divided and whose name it stays under. Otherwise, your credit could take a hit for someone else’s spending.

4. Kids and Cash

If children are involved, child support and possibly alimony come into play. Don’t just think short-term; factor these payments (or the lack of them) into your long-term financial plan.

What You Can Do to Lessen the Impact

  • Get clear on your numbers. Write down your income, expenses, debts, and assets. Knowledge is power.
  • Work with professionals. A lawyer handles the legal side, but a financial coach helps you look at the big picture—budgeting, saving, retirement, even rebuilding your money mindset.
  • Adjust your lifestyle quickly. It’s tempting to keep living like you did as a couple, but the sooner you shift, the stronger you’ll feel financially.
  • Guard your heart and your wallet. Emotional decisions lead to expensive mistakes whether that’s fighting over the couch or giving up assets just to “get it over with.”

And let’s not forget the spiritual side matters, too. God isn’t surprised by your situation, and He isn’t leaving you to figure it out alone. In Proverbs 24:3 it says, “By wisdom a house is built, and through understanding it is established.” Even if your marriage is ending, you can rebuild your financial house with wisdom and understanding.

Divorce is tough, but God still has a plan and thankfully, so can your budget (even if it involves more coffee and less Netflix)

The Bottom Line

Fall may be “divorce season,” but it doesn’t have to be financial disaster season. With the right plan, the right mindset, and a little faith, you can come out stronger both emotionally and financially. And when you’re ready, I’m here to walk you through the money side of things so you can focus on building a new, solid foundation.