The Divorce Questions That Actually Change Outcomes
Authored by: Sharie Reyes Albers
When people start thinking about divorce, the questions come fast and they’re heavy.
Am I doing the right thing?
Can this be saved?
What’s going to happen to my kids?
How ugly is this going to get?
How much is this going to cost me?
I hear these questions every day. They’re honest. They’re human. They make sense when your life is suddenly unstable. But here’s the hard truth I’ve learned from 13 years of practicing family law: those questions are not the ones that determine how a divorce actually goes.
They matter, but they don’t move you forward. And if you stay stuck asking them, you can end up making emotional decisions that cost you far more than you ever expected.
The questions that shape outcomes are different. They’re quieter. More uncomfortable. And far more powerful.
There are three of them.
Question One: What Do You Want?
This sounds simple. It rarely is.
When someone is in the middle of a divorce, they’re overwhelmed. Emotionally flooded. Their nervous system is on high alert. Most people can tell me exactly what they don’t want, but freeze when I ask what they do want.
Not revenge. Not fairness in the abstract. Real outcomes.
What do you want your life to look like when this is over?
What kind of custody schedule actually works for your kids and your job?
What level of financial stability do you need to feel secure a few years from now?
Until you answer that, every decision becomes reactive. Every email feels urgent. Every disagreement feels like a crisis. I’ve watched people derail reasonable cases simply because they never defined the end goal and ended up fighting everything out of fear.
Answering this doesn’t make divorce easier. But it does make it more intentional.
Question Two: How Are You Going to Get It?
This is where divorce stops being emotional and starts being expensive.
Wanting something doesn’t mean you have a plan to achieve it. And in divorce, good intentions don’t protect you from bad strategy.
I see this most often with people who want an amicable divorce. That’s a fair goal. But if the other spouse is high-conflict, controlling, or unwilling to compromise, the approach has to change. Ignoring reality doesn’t make it kinder. It just makes it costlier.
Divorce plans also rarely survive intact. Jobs change. Businesses fluctuate. Health issues arise. I’ve seen solid financial strategies fall apart overnight when circumstances shift.
The clients who do best aren’t rigid. They’re flexible. They adjust the plan without letting emotion drive the case.
I often remind clients that the goal isn’t to win every battle. The goal is to protect your future. For parents especially, that usually means preserving resources for life after divorce, not exhausting them during it.
Question Three: Who Do You Need to Become to Make That Happen?
This is the question almost no one asks. And it may be the most important one.
Divorce will change you whether you want it to or not. The question is how.
Some people let it make them reactive, bitter, or impulsive. Others use it as a turning point.
I’ve seen outcomes change not because the law changed, but because the person did. Clients who became more organized. More consistent. Less reactive. Parents who learned to document instead of explode. Spouses who stopped engaging in every provocation and let silence do work arguments never could.
Especially in custody cases, credibility matters. Patterns matter. Showing up reliably over time matters far more than how angry or hurt you feel in the moment.
The law doesn’t care how emotional your story is. It cares how prepared you are.
Final Thought
Divorce is never painless. There’s no perfect way through it.
But asking better questions can change how you experience it and how it ends. When you focus on what you want, how you’ll get there, and who you need to become along the way, you shift from surviving divorce to navigating it with intention.
Sometimes the most powerful move isn’t finding the right answer.
It’s choosing better questions.
Author Byline: Sharie Reyes Albers is a partner and family law attorney at Virginia Family Law Center. She represents clients in divorce, custody, support, and equitable distribution matters and is known for her strategy-driven approach to high-conflict family law cases.