After divorce a lot of people suddenly have opinions about your life. Friends, family, people who heard half the story, people who just want the drama. I had to learn that not everyone gets access to my time, energy, or headspace anymore. This guide came from deciding who stays in the circle, and who doesn't.
You found out a friend has been talking to your ex. Not maliciously, just casually, keeping in touch. But now you're piecing together that some of what you've said in confidence has made its way back. You didn't see it coming. You thought that was your person.
After divorce, the social map shifts. Not everyone moves with you. Some people stay connected to both sides, some drift toward the drama, some disappear entirely. You have to decide who actually belongs close right now, and stop letting proximity decide for you.
Someone who was "your" friend is now texting your ex. Someone else is asking questions and reporting back. A cousin keeps bringing your ex up at family dinners. You’re realizing not everyone in your life is actually in your corner.
Guarding it is how you protect your energy, your home, and your kids from unnecessary chaos.
Guarding your circle isn’t about shutting people out.
It’s about choosing who gets to be close enough to affect your day.
Guarding your circle means being intentional about proximity.
You don’t need to explain yourself.
You don’t need approval.
You don’t need to let people in out of guilt, pressure, or old habits.
This is about knowing who makes your life calmer and who makes it louder.
It’s also about recognizing when someone is trying to pull you back into old patterns.
If the cost of someone’s presence is your peace, they don’t belong close right now.
Your circle is the space where you rest, reset, and show up as a father.
It’s sacred. So keep it small and steady.
Guard Your Circle when:
people want access to you out of convenience, not care
someone drains you and you feel it instantly
you’re being pulled into gossip, conflict, or drama
someone keeps asking for emotional labor you don’t have
your ex’s world tries to bleed into yours
you feel obligated to stay connected to people who don’t show up for you
a friend or family member stirs things up instead of calming things down
you realize not everyone is rooting for your rebuilding
keep conversations short with people who drain you
limit access to your home, your time, and your emotional space
don’t explain your boundaries, enforce them
say “not today” and mean it
only give energy to people who bring calm, not chaos
treat your peace like something valuable (because it is)
remind yourself that fewer people isn’t a failure, it’s stability
Talk it through. Some of this needs to stay private.
Ask Still Dad →