184. What to Do Before You File for Divorce: A Pre-Divorce Checklist to Get Organized and Avoid Costly Mistakes Podcast Por  arte de portada

184. What to Do Before You File for Divorce: A Pre-Divorce Checklist to Get Organized and Avoid Costly Mistakes

184. What to Do Before You File for Divorce: A Pre-Divorce Checklist to Get Organized and Avoid Costly Mistakes

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If you haven’t filed for divorce yet but you’re spiraling, crying, rage-texting, and panic Googling how to leave your spouse...this episode is your pre-divorce game plan.

Andrea walks you through the “invisible work” that protects you before you file: creating a private email, organizing finances, understanding monthly expenses, regulating emotions, interviewing attorneys strategically, protecting kids from adult stress, and avoiding common mistakes that can cost you money (and peace).

This is not about being sneaky—it’s about being smart.

Key Topics Covered
  1. What to do before you file for divorce
  2. How to create a private email and start organizing information safely
  3. The pre-divorce financial lists you need (accounts, debts, passwords, credit score)
  4. Why tracking monthly expenses now saves you later (hello, financial affidavits)
  5. How to stay emotionally neutral and avoid the “high-high / low-low” spiral
  6. How to interview attorneys and choose the right “business partner”
  7. What NOT to do before filing (spending changes, threats, escalating conflict)
  8. How to protect your kids (routines, boundaries, therapy support)
  9. Bonus: writing down your “why” and what you want on the other side

Practical Pre-Divorce Action Steps (Checklist)

Do these before you file:

  1. Create a new private email address (separate from anything your spouse can access).
  2. Start a Google Doc/Sheet to track:
  3. All known accounts (banking, retirement, investments, credit cards, loans)
  4. Unknowns you need to identify (accounts you suspect exist, balances you don’t know)
  5. Passwords/access issues
  6. Pull your credit score and document it.
  7. List all monthly expenses (mortgage/rent, utilities, insurance, subscriptions, kids’ expenses, activities, childcare).
  8. Interview at least 3 attorneys before hiring—choose strategy, not vibes.
  9. Keep household routines stable (especially if you have kids).
  10. Don’t threaten, don’t escalate, and don’t make sudden spending changes.
  11. Get a hobby/outlet (something healthy + consistent).
  12. Consider lining up a therapist for your kids if you expect the process to hit them hard.
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