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Is Your Divorce High Conflict? How to Tell the Difference

WRITTEN BY:
Merel Family Law
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Many people enter divorce or separation expecting it to be difficult—but not destructive. Conflict is normal when a relationship ends. High conflict is something different entirely.

Understanding whether your divorce or separation is high conflict matters because it directly affects your emotional well-being, your children’s stability, and the strategies needed to protect yourself legally and psychologically. A Deerfield, IL high conflict divorce lawyer can help you navigate complex disputes, manage escalating conflict, and develop a strategy that prioritizes both your legal rights and your family’s long-term well-being.

As a high-conflict divorce coach and certified domestic violence professional working within a family law firm, I often work with individuals who sense that “something isn’t right,” but struggle to put language to what they’re experiencing. This article is meant to help clarify that distinction.

Conflict vs. High Conflict: What’s the Difference?

Typical conflict in divorce may include:

  • Disagreements about finances, parenting schedules, or property
  • Emotional reactions such as anger, grief, or frustration
  • Periods of tension that gradually improve with time or structure

In these situations, both parties are generally capable of compromise, boundaries are eventually respected, and the goal—while painful—is resolution.

High-conflict divorce, on the other hand, is characterized by ongoing patterns of control, hostility, and escalation. The conflict does not resolve with time, boundaries, or court involvement—it often intensifies.

The defining feature is not how emotional things feel, but how one party uses the conflict.

Key Signs of a High-Conflict Divorce or Separation

Below are some of the most common indicators that a divorce has crossed into high-conflict territory.

Using Children as Pawns

One of the clearest and most damaging signs of high conflict is the involvement of children in adult disputes.

This may look like:

  • Sharing adult information or legal details with children
  • Pressuring children to take sides or report on the other parent
  • Undermining the other parent’s authority or relationship
  • Withholding parenting time or using access to children as leverage
  • Making false allegations to gain advantage in custody disputes

Children placed in the middle of conflict often experience anxiety, loyalty binds, and long-term emotional harm. In high-conflict cases, the children’s needs become secondary to one parent’s desire to win, punish, or control.

Legal Abuse (Using the System as a Weapon)

High-conflict individuals often turn the legal system into an extension of the relationship.

Legal abuse may include:

  • Excessive or unnecessary motions and filings
  • Repeatedly dragging out proceedings to exhaust the other party financially or emotionally
  • Ignoring court orders or pushing boundaries until forced to comply
  • Making frivolous accusations that require constant defense
  • Using attorneys, custody evaluators, or the court itself to intimidate or harass

The goal is rarely resolution. Instead, the process becomes a tool for continued dominance and control.

Narcissistic or High-Conflict Personality Traits

While not every high-conflict divorce involves a diagnosed personality disorder, many involve patterns commonly associated with narcissistic or high-conflict traits.

These may include:

  • An inability to take responsibility or acknowledge wrongdoing
  • Extreme sensitivity to perceived criticism
  • A need to “win” at all costs
  • Black-and-white thinking (all good / all bad)
  • Charming public presentation paired with private hostility
  • Viewing compromise as weakness

These traits make cooperative co-parenting and traditional negotiation strategies ineffective—and often counterproductive.

Other Red Flags of High Conflict

Additional signs may include:

  • Constant crisis creation
  • Boundary violations despite clear limits
  • Escalation after agreements are reached
  • Refusal to communicate directly while simultaneously provoking conflict
  • A pattern of blame-shifting and rewriting history

If you find that peace is always just out of reach—no matter what you do—that is often a clue.

Why Identifying High Conflict Early Matters

Mislabeling a high-conflict divorce as “just a tough divorce” can be costly.

When high conflict is present:

  • Traditional mediation may fail
  • Excessive communication can increase harm
  • Appeasement often fuels further demands
  • Children may need additional protections

High-conflict cases require different strategies: structured communication, clear documentation, firm boundaries, and professionals who understand coercive and manipulative dynamics.

Moving Forward with Clarity

If your divorce feels chaotic, exhausting, or impossible to stabilize, it may not be because you are doing something wrong. High-conflict dynamics are driven by patterns—not by effort, reason, or goodwill. For guidance tailored to your situation, consider reaching out to Merel Family Law to discuss your options and develop a strategy for moving forward.

Recognizing high conflict is not about labeling your ex; it is about understanding the landscape you are navigating so you can respond strategically rather than reactively.

With the right support, it is possible to reduce chaos, protect your children, and reclaim a sense of control—even in the most difficult cases.

If you are navigating a high-conflict divorce or separation, working with professionals experienced in both domestic violence dynamics and family law can help you move forward with greater safety, confidence, and clarity.

Written By Merel Family Law