Handoff days can carry tension. Over time I realized the goal isn't perfection, it's keeping things calm and predictable for the kids.
The kids come back on Wednesday and they're different for an hour. Quiet. Withdrawn. A little clingy. Or they're wound up and testing everything. It's like they need to decompress before they're yours again. Every Wednesday. Like clockwork.
Transition days aren’t normal days.
They’re pressure points.
Kids are switching environments, rules, rhythms, and expectations, often faster than their nervous systems can keep up.
Your job isn’t to fix that.
It’s to soften the landing.
On transition days:
emotions can lag behind behavior
excitement and sadness can exist together
kids may seem off, quiet, irritable, or extra loud
None of this means something’s wrong.
It means they’re adjusting.
Transition days aren’t the time for:
big talks
heavy plans
strict corrections
packed schedules
Think:
simple food
familiar routines
low expectations
Calm beats structure on these days.
When your kids arrive:
greet them warmly, not intensely
let them settle before asking questions
keep your tone steady
avoid immediately unpacking bags or stories
Presence first.
Details later.
On transition days, avoid:
interrogating about the other home
comparing rules or experiences
correcting behavior too quickly
taking moods personally
Give their system time to catch up.
The first hour sets the tone.
Use it to:
reconnect quietly
do something familiar
re-establish rhythm
signal safety
You’re not entertaining.
You’re grounding.
If things get messy:
stay regulated
keep responses short
name what you see without judgment
offer space or comfort, not solutions
Your calm teaches them how to land.
Handled well, transition days:
reduce conflict
make routines stick faster
help kids feel secure in both homes
protect your relationship long-term
This isn’t about doing more.
It’s about doing less, on purpose.