Divorce Recovery Blog

DRS offers an array of tools and resources designed to help the divorcing individual get through the divorce process. Gone are the days when people hired a divorce attorney and were idle bystanders while the train wreck took place in slow motion. Today the internet provides more opportunities for involvement in the process and lowers the cost. Parenting plans can be created by the parties with little or no legal help. Do-It-Yourself child custody, child support and separation agreements can also be created that comply with state law and provide a greater degree of flexibility than ever before.

Use the navigation links on the navigation bar above or the links in either column to move about the site. The links remain the same on most pages. Want to view your state’s divorce laws? Click on State Divorce Laws and you will be taken back to the web site. If you arrived here and haven’t seen our main web site, you can go to Divorce Recovery Suite at any time, where you will find answers to all your divorce questions.

Divorce is an emotional process that happens to have legal and financial consequences.

A divorcing couple can review their state laws on-line, create a parenting plan, download the various divorce papers and forms needed to file for divorce and determine if they are eligible for an annulment, execute a legal separation, buy books, CDs and tapes that aid in the healing process, access databases of local lawyers and retrieve their background information and interact with them prior to in-person meetings, access child support calculators and get both qualified and unqualified advice at the click of a mouse.

The annulment process is usually a mystery to most first-time visitors. Access details on what grounds for annulment your state recognizes and the conditions that must be met.

Legal Separations can mean different things to residents of the various states. One state will have a formal process that looks like the divorce process where another state will not.

For those divorcing parents, what you know and how much you know about child custody and co-parenting will influence your life for years to come. Overlook one issue or detail and you end up with problems you didn’t need to have. If its going to be a war between you and the spouse, you might want an arsenal of custody strategies at your disposal.

Child support is often the focal point of divorcing parents. While some aspects of support are set in stone, who pays who, how much and when can be influenced by how well informed you are  on the nuances.

All of these topics are discussed in detail on pages that appear on the main page of this site.

Paying attention to how your credit gets affected, how your finances get impacted and how settlement decisions can influence your taxes by the divorce process can pay huge dividends toward your future.

In the end, how you prepare for your divorce will determine how much or how little hassle you have in coming years. Once the ink dries on the divorce decree, its a trying process to get details of it modified. As the carpenter does, measure twice and cut once. How much you have to lose should guide you to how much you need to know. :)

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{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }

17 February 2012 at 12:42 pm

Since 1993 both my parents had their marriage annulled here in the Philippines and since then had lived their separate lives and had no communication or whatsoever, recently my father died unexpectedly and left behind some assets and properties to include bank deposits, I would like to be enlightened regarding a circumstance surrounding the issue. If the marriage had be declared null and void, and that my mother, had used her maiden name because of the Court order declaring the nullity of the marriage, does it qualifies her to be a beneficiary to all what my father had left? Does she have the rights to decide on the disposal of the same despite the fact that her marriage with my father was declared null and void by the proper Court? How about the living heirs of the deceased, what are their rights most specifically the first born (eldest among the siblings)? Please kindly enlighten me regarding this because I don’t want to make such actions without knowing the circumstances regarding the matter . . .

15 February 2012 at 8:30 am

If you don’t have a referral for a local divorce lawyer, you can use a free locator service providing such. Visit http://www.divorcerecoverysuite.com/find-divorce-lawyers.html

15 February 2012 at 1:02 am

I was married back in late 90′s, separated a month after being married. She has her life and I have mine. We have no children, assets or financial ties. I would like to file for a divorce, she is aware of this and is fine with it. It will be a non-contested divorce. I would like to hire an attorney to respresent me to file the correct papers and get the process done asap.