Divorce, Family Law Zach Anderson Divorce, Family Law Zach Anderson

Why Can’t I Think Clearly During My Nebraska Divorce?

Divorce can make even smart, capable people feel foggy, panicked, or numb — right when Nebraska law asks you to make decisions about custody, parenting plans, property, and your future. Here's why stress hijacks decision-making, what it means for mediation and settlement, and how to get steady enough to choose on purpose instead of reacting from exhaustion.

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How Do We Make Co-Parenting Work After Separating in Nebraska?

Separating as parents in Nebraska is not just a legal change. It is a family transition that requires structure, safety, and child-centered decision-making. This article explains how Nebraska parenting plans work, what legal custody and physical custody mean, how mediation may fit into the process, and why co-parenting is not always the right model when safety concerns are present. It also offers practical guidance for parents trying to protect their children from adult conflict while following court orders and building a workable two-household routine.

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Family Law, Divorce & Co-Parenting Zach Anderson Family Law, Divorce & Co-Parenting Zach Anderson

How Do You Co-Parent Well After a Nebraska Divorce?

When my own marriage ended, it took my ex-spouse and me more than three years of hard, humbling work to learn how to communicate and co-parent in a way that actually served our daughter. Today we are friends. As a Nebraska family law attorney who has sat on both sides of the table, I wrote this honest guide for parents in the middle of a divorce — what Nebraska law actually asks of you, why marriages really fall apart, and the small habits that move co-parents from courtroom adversaries to functional partners.

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What is the “ultimate goal” in a Nebraska high-conflict divorce, and why does it matter?

In a high-conflict divorce, it’s easy to spend months reacting to every hostile email, social media post, and manufactured “emergency.” The problem is that reaction-mode is expensive, exhausting, and it often creates the exact record you don’t want a Nebraska judge or Guardian ad Litem (GAL) to read. This post explains how to define your “ultimate goal” (your Summit) and use it as a practical filter for communication, legal strategy, mediation, and custody decisions under Nebraska’s Parenting Act and best-interests standard.

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