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Summer Storm

Why Summer Break Is a High-Conflict Storm and How to Navigate It Without Losing Your Mind

May 15, 20253 min read

Every year, summer break shows up like clockwork. But if you're co-parenting with someone high-conflict? That "break" can feel like anything but a vacation.

Instead of BBQs and beach days, you’re juggling last-minute texts, passive-aggressive schedule changes, and emotional landmines that explode the second you try to plan ahead.

So why is summer so triggering in high-conflict co-parenting dynamics?

Let’s break it down and more importantly, talk about how to stay one step ahead.


1. Summer = Lack of Structure (And Conflict Loves Chaos)

During the school year, there's a built-in structure that creates predictability: school drop-offs, extracurriculars, weekday routines. But in the summer? That structure evaporates.

And when things become fluid, it opens the door for manipulation. Sudden vacation requests. “Forgotten” holidays. One parent overbooking the kids without consulting the other.

High-conflict co-parents often thrive in these grey areas because they rely on the lack of clarity to push boundaries and control outcomes.

What Can You Do?

Start early. Get clear. Get it in writing. Even if you don’t expect cooperation, put your proposed schedule out there and document everything.

Early Morning


2. Summer Is Emotional (And Emotions Get Weaponized)

Vacations. Family reunions. Holidays. These aren’t just logistics, they’re high-stakes emotional moments. That’s especially true if you’re still healing or if your co-parent has a pattern of using the kids to punish or control you.

Summer often becomes a storm for “proving” who the fun parent is, or for guilt-tripping you for wanting time with your own kids.

What Can You Do?

Detach emotion from decision-making. Lead with facts. Communicate like everything you say could end up in court; because it might. Your job isn’t to win the emotional war; it’s to parent strategically.


3. Boundaries Get Tested Harder in Summer

Maybe you’ve worked hard all year to create calm, clear boundaries. But summer is when those boundaries really get tested.

Why?

Because you’re likely to hear things like:

  • “But the kids want to come with me on that trip.”

  • “I already booked the flights, I assumed it would be fine.”

  • “You’re being unreasonable about a little schedule change.”

The pressure to give in (for the kids, for peace, for convenience) is real.

Summer Fun

Wat Can You Do?

Remember: clarity isn’t cruelty. Saying no to chaos is saying yes to your peace—and your child’s stability.


4. Summer Is When Strategic Co-Parents Take the Lead

If you’re tired of feeling reactive, defensive, or emotionally hijacked every summer, it’s time to shift.

You don’t need more drama. You need a plan.

Start with three simple moves:

  1. Plan proactively. Don’t wait for them to make the first move.

  2. Use neutral, documented communication. Texts, emails, and parenting apps are your allies.

  3. Get support. You don’t have to navigate this solo. If your co-parent is unpredictable or manipulative, a strategy session with someone who gets it can save your sanity.


REMEMBER,

Summer doesn’t have to be survival mode.
You can enjoy this season with your kids.
You can stay calm in the middle of their chaos.
And you can lead the conversation, even when the other parent wants to fight.

If you're ready to go from reactive to strategic, now’s the time to act, not when your ex starts tossing curveballs.

Need help building your plan? That’s what I do.

Book a Clarity Call at www.divorceconflictsolutions.com

AND Let’s set your boundaries now, so you're not rebuilding them mid-July.

Lisa James

CEO of Divorce Conflict Solutions

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