Divorce Happens

Welcome to Divorce Happens, the podcast where we inspire, educate, and support you through divorce and beyond so that you can start fresh on the next phase of your journey. Produced by Fresh Starts Registry, the only divorce registry platform for everything you need to begin again, including home items, hype team, and everything in between. Remember, divorce happens...and then, we start fresh. We're here to support you before, during, and after divorce. Hosted by Olivia Dreizen Howell, the co-founder and CEO of Fresh Starts Registry.

  1. 1d ago

    What to Say to a Friend Going Through Divorce (When You Don't Know What to Say) with Olivia Howell

    Someone you love is going through a divorce, and you want to show up for them — you just have no idea how. This episode of Divorce Happens is for you: the friends, the sisters, the coworkers, and the neighbors who found out and froze, terrified of saying the wrong thing. Olivia Howell flips the usual script and talks not to the person in the divorce, but to the people who love them — and she opens with a relief so many supporters need to hear: the fact that you're even asking how to help already puts you ahead. The people who do the most damage aren't the ones who fumble their words; they're the ones who say nothing at all, who disappear because they're uncomfortable. If you're here trying to figure out how to support a friend going through divorce, you're already doing something right. The heart of this episode is a single freeing truth: you do not need the perfect words. When someone we love is in pain, we want to say the thing that fixes it — but divorce grief isn't fixable with words, and your friend doesn't need a solution. They need to feel less alone, and that's something you can give without having a single right answer. Olivia shares the simplest, most underused, most powerful sentence there is: “I don't know what to say, but I'm not going anywhere.” For someone whose deepest fear right now is being abandoned — by their partner, their social circle, the whole life they built — knowing you are not one of the people leaving is worth more than any advice. She's equally clear about what not to say: skip “I never liked them anyway” (it complicates their pain instead of validating it), skip “everything happens for a reason” and “you'll be so much better off” (true or not, it rushes them past grief they haven't finished feeling), and please don't make it about you — this is their moment to be held, not yours to fill. From there, Olivia gets refreshingly practical about what real support looks like. It looks like specificity — not “let me know if you need anything,” which dumps the burden back on someone running on empty, but “I'm bringing dinner Thursday, does six work?” It looks like consistency over time: everyone shows up the first week, but the loneliness is often loudest at the 30-day mark, the 90-day mark, and on what would have been their anniversary — so check in when the noise dies down. It looks like following their lead, asking whether they want to talk about it tonight or just eat takeout and watch something, and honoring whichever they need. And sometimes it's as simple as telling them: you are doing an incredible job, your kids are lucky to have you, and I see how hard you're working. Because being truly seen by even one person can make a brutal day survivable. The takeaway is one anyone can act on today: you don't have to have the right words — you just have to show up, again and again. That is what friendship looks like in the hard seasons, and it is enough. 🔗 Check out Fresh Starts Registry: The first & only divorce registry + support platform ➡ https://www.freshstartsregistry.com/ 📱 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/freshstartsregistry/ 📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FreshStartsRegistry 🎙 Podcast IG: https://www.instagram.com/divorcehappenspod/ 📬 Magazine: https://divorceguidemagazine.com/

    7 min
  2. 1d ago

    Divorce Grief Doesn't Follow the Rules — And That Doesn't Mean Something's Wrong With You with Olivia Howell

    Divorce grief might be the most misunderstood, most minimized, and most complicated grief there is — and the thing almost no one warns you about is that it doesn't follow the rules. In this solo episode of Divorce Happens, Olivia Howell takes on the quiet, disorienting experience of grieving a divorce: why it refuses to behave the way we expect grief to behave, and why that can make you feel like something is wrong with you when absolutely nothing is. We're all handed some version of the stages of grief — denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance — and we absorb the idea that grief has a shape, a direction, a tidy end. Divorce grief doesn't move like that. And as Olivia gently insists, the sooner we stop expecting it to, the more compassion we can offer ourselves when it doesn't. What makes divorce grief so different starts with a wrenching truth: you are grieving someone who is still alive. There's no funeral. There's no casserole on the doorstep. There's no moment where the world stops to acknowledge that you've lost something enormous — in fact, the person you're grieving might be texting you about the electric bill or showing up at Saturday's soccer game. That's disenfranchised grief: real, profound, life-altering loss that goes socially unrecognized, and it has its own particular ache. Layered on top is that you're not grieving one thing but many at once — the person, the relationship, the future you imagined, your identity as a spouse, your home, your finances, your in-laws, your friendships. Each is its own loss, and they arrive in waves: sometimes one at a time, sometimes all at once, sometimes out of nowhere. Which leads to the part that ambushes people most — divorce grief is not linear. You can feel fine for two weeks, then hear a song in a grocery store and be undone. You can reach what feels like acceptance and get hit with rage six months later. You can grieve the end of a marriage you desperately wanted out of, miss someone you know was wrong for you, and feel relieved and devastated in the same hour. All of it is normal. All of it is grief doing what grief actually does. The mindset shift at the heart of this episode is freeing: instead of something you move through in stages, picture grief as something that moves through you — in waves, on its own timeline, without asking permission. Your job isn't to manage it perfectly or to reach acceptance on schedule; it's to let it move, to not dam it up so tightly it has nowhere to go. Practically, that looks like letting yourself cry in the car, refusing to perform okayness for people who can't hold your grief, and finding at least one person or one space where you don't have to edit yourself. It also means being patient on the days you thought you were over something and discover you're not — that's not regression or failure, just the layered nature of this particular loss. If you're walking through divorce recovery, healing after divorce, or simply trying to make sense of why you still hurt, hold on to this: you don't have to be over it yet. You don't have to be anywhere other than exactly where you are. Grief is not a problem to be solved — it's love with nowhere to go, and it deserves your tenderness. 🔗 Check out Fresh Starts Registry: The first & only divorce registry + support platform ➡ https://www.freshstartsregistry.com/ 📱 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/freshstartsregistry/ 📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FreshStartsRegistry 🎙 Podcast IG: https://www.instagram.com/divorcehappenspod/ 📬 Magazine: https://divorceguidemagazine.com/

    6 min
  3. Before You File for Divorce, Do These 5 Things — A Divorce Expert's Guide to Starting on Solid Ground with Ron Platt, founder of the National Association for Single & Divorced Families

    2d ago

    Before You File for Divorce, Do These 5 Things — A Divorce Expert's Guide to Starting on Solid Ground with Ron Platt, founder of the National Association for Single & Divorced Families

    No one hands you a roadmap when your marriage ends. You're expected to make some of the biggest legal, financial, and emotional decisions of your life at the exact moment you have the least capacity to make them — and most of us walk in completely unprepared. That's the gap Ron Platt set out to close. In this practical, reassuring episode of Divorce Happens, we hear from Ron Platt, co-founder and CEO of NASDF — the National Association for Single and Divorced Families — for five fresh, foundational tips to help you prepare for divorce and walk out the other side standing on steadier ground. With more than 35 years across insurance, real estate, and social advocacy, and lived experience as a foster parent who later adopted his son, Ron built NASDF to be the resource he wished every divorcing family had: an umbrella of vetted support, services, and community for people before, during, and long after the paperwork is signed. 🔗 Check out Fresh Starts Registry: The first & only divorce registry + support platform ➡ https://www.freshstartsregistry.com/ 📱 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/freshstartsregistry/ 📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FreshStartsRegistry 🎙 Podcast IG: https://www.instagram.com/divorcehappenspod/ 📬 Magazine: https://divorceguidemagazine.com/

    4 min
  4. 2d ago

    Crying in the Car, Then Making Dinner: The Quiet Place Before Divorce No One Warns You About with Olivia Howell

    You already know. You just aren't ready to say it out loud yet. If you're living in that quiet, heavy, terrifying place — the one where the knowledge sits in your chest and doesn't go away — this solo episode of Divorce Happens was made for you. Olivia Howell names one of the most common and least talked-about experiences in the entire divorce process: the in-between space before anything is official, before anyone else knows, before you've even fully admitted it to yourself. It's Googling at midnight and clearing your history. It's crying in the car and then walking inside to make dinner like nothing happened. It's knowing and not-knowing at the same time, because fully knowing would mean having to do something — and you're not there yet. Olivia says the thing so many people carry in silence out loud: that space is real, and it deserves to be taken seriously. From there, the episode does the gentle, necessary work of separating two things we tend to confuse — knowing your marriage is over, and being ready to leave. So many people walking through divorce say they knew long before they spoke, sometimes for months, sometimes for years, and they carry deep shame about that gap, as if staying after they knew makes them weak, dishonest, or complicit in their own unhappiness. Olivia pushes back on that hard. Knowing is not the same as being ready, and being ready takes time for reasons that are completely legitimate: waiting until the kids are older, until the finances are steadier, until enough therapy has helped you trust what you feel. The reframe at the heart of this episode is that the waiting is not wasted. In that in-between place your nervous system is preparing and your mind is quietly building the architecture of a different life. The gap between knowing and saying isn't a failure — for most people, it's a necessary part of the process. The episode also names something tender but important: there's a version of “not ready” that is a season, and a version that becomes a cage — and only you know which one you're in. If the weight is starting to crush you, if you're disappearing inside your own life, that's worth paying attention to, not because you have to act today, but because you deserve support in that place, not just solitude. The actionable takeaway is freeing: telling one trusted person, a therapist, or a divorce coach doesn't commit you to anything. It simply means you're not carrying it completely alone anymore — and there is real relief in that, even before anything changes. If you're contemplating divorce, deciding whether to leave, or just beginning to imagine starting over after divorce, this is your reminder that you are not behind, not broken, and not failing your family. You are moving at the pace that feels survivable to you. And when you're ready — tomorrow or two years from now — the words will come. 🔗 Check out Fresh Starts Registry: The first & only divorce registry + support platform ➡ https://www.freshstartsregistry.com/ 📱 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/freshstartsregistry/ 📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FreshStartsRegistry 🎙 Podcast IG: https://www.instagram.com/divorcehappenspod/ 📬 Magazine: https://divorceguidemagazine.com/

    7 min
  5. Rebuilding Your Identity (and Your Finances) After Divorce With Bridget Borel, CFP®, CDFA®

    5d ago

    Rebuilding Your Identity (and Your Finances) After Divorce With Bridget Borel, CFP®, CDFA®

    There’s a strange, in-between place that almost no one warns you about when your marriage ends. You’re no longer who you were — but you’re not yet who you’re becoming. As one therapist put it to this week’s guest during her own divorce, you’re “somewhere in between.” In this episode of Divorce Happens, Olivia Howell sits down with Fresh Starts expert Bridget Borel, CFP®, CDFA® — a Certified Financial Planner, Certified Divorce Financial Analyst, and founder of Clairwell Financial Planning — to talk about the identity shift at the heart of divorce, and how to rebuild not just your bank account, but your sense of self. Bridget brings a rare double lens to the conversation: she has lived this transition personally and now guides clients through it professionally, which means she speaks about the rattling, disorienting middle of divorce with both clinical clarity and genuine warmth. What makes this conversation land is Bridget’s refusal to sugarcoat paired with her stubborn hope. She tells new clients the truth — it’s going to hurt, and it’s going to take longer than you think it should — and then she holds the other half just as firmly: it won’t last forever, you will get through this, and you don’t have to do it alone. She describes the “arc of the divorce experience,” watching clients move from the raw, emotional early days to suddenly booking an adventure trip or launching a business once the dust settles. The takeaway for listeners is both a mindset and a method: you are allowed to become a new person, and you can get there in baby steps — one new skill, one small financial win, one healthier conversation at a time. Whether you’re considering divorce, in the thick of it, or rebuilding on the other side, this is a grounding, hopeful listen about financial confidence, rediscovering your identity, and truly starting over after divorce. 🔗 Check out Fresh Starts Registry: The first & only divorce registry + support platform ➡ https://www.freshstartsregistry.com/ 📱 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/freshstartsregistry/ 📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FreshStartsRegistry 🎙 Podcast IG: https://www.instagram.com/divorcehappenspod/ 📬 Magazine: https://divorceguidemagazine.com/

    12 min
  6. How to Use AI to Prepare for Divorce: Smarter Prep, Lower Costs & Walking In Ready with Ryan Carson

    5d ago

    How to Use AI to Prepare for Divorce: Smarter Prep, Lower Costs & Walking In Ready with Ryan Carson

    The divorce process is one of the most life-changing things a person can go through — and somehow it’s still one of the most chaotic, confusing, and expensive. That’s exactly the problem that pulled tech founder Ryan Carson off the sidelines. A serial entrepreneur with 25 years in the tech world and three companies behind him, Ryan watched two of his three sisters — the people he calls his best friends — walk into brutal, costly divorces with almost no guidance except an attorney and a stack of baffling forms. Having grown up a child of divorce himself, he found it shocking how old-fashioned and disorganized the whole process still was. So he did what builders do: he started reading every divorce book in the library and asked a simple question — could technology and AI make this more humane and far more affordable without taking the humans out of it? The answer became Untangle, the AI divorce assistant, and the wisdom he’s gathered building it is the heart of this episode. What makes this conversation genuinely useful is how practical Ryan gets. He’s candid that Untangle pivoted — it started as a low-cost guide for people representing themselves and now powers the discovery process for law firms through its AI agent, “Grace” — but he hasn’t stopped caring about the person sitting at the kitchen table at midnight, terrified and overwhelmed. His advice for anyone navigating divorce is refreshingly concrete: treat AI as a new tool in your divorce toolbox. “This is like the internet in 1999,” he tells Olivia — something everyone is going to learn to use. Pick an assistant you’re comfortable with, pay the modest monthly fee for the smarter models, and start using it to prepare: ask what financial documents you should be gathering, get plain-English definitions for the confusing legal and Latin terms in your paperwork, and surface the questions you didn’t even know to ask. The crucial caveat he repeats is one every listener should hear: you can’t trust AI out of the box for the correct forms or numbers — it’s a guide that helps you walk into your attorney or divorce coach better prepared, not a replacement for professional advice. Underneath the tech talk, this episode is really a love letter from a brother. When Olivia asks for his words of encouragement, Ryan doesn’t reach for a product pitch — he thinks about his sisters. He watched them go through the hardest seasons of their lives, and he’s watched them come out the other side happier, healthier, more successful, and, in his words, even more alive. “They made it,” he says, “and you will get there.” That’s the mindset shift this episode offers: you don’t have to walk into divorce unarmed or alone, and the version of your life waiting on the other side can be brighter than the one you’re leaving. The takeaways are simple and immediately usable — lean on AI to prepare and ask better questions, gather your financial picture before you need it, and remember that knowledge and the right tools turn an overwhelming process into something survivable. For listeners in Connecticut (and the attorneys who serve them), Untangle is at untangle.us. For everyone else, the encouragement travels just fine: turn the lemon into lemonade, one tool at a time. 🔗 Check out Fresh Starts Registry: The first & only divorce registry + support platform ➡ https://www.freshstartsregistry.com/ 📱 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/freshstartsregistry/ 📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FreshStartsRegistry 🎙 Podcast IG: https://www.instagram.com/divorcehappenspod/ 📬 Magazine: https://divorceguidemagazine.com/

    13 min
  7. Divorce as a Portal to Joy: Rebuilding Life, Sisterhood & Home After Divorce with author  Betsy Cornwell

    5d ago

    Divorce as a Portal to Joy: Rebuilding Life, Sisterhood & Home After Divorce with author Betsy Cornwell

    If you’re standing at the edge of a divorce right now, convinced the life waiting on the other side looks bleak and empty — this is the episode that turns the lights back on. Olivia Howell welcomes back author Betsy Cornwell, a New York Times bestselling novelist, memoirist, and divorced single mom who left an abusive marriage and rebuilt her entire life on the wild western coast of Ireland. Betsy has written six novels and the luminous new memoir Ring of Salt, which traces her journey from fleeing home with her infant son to crowdfunding and restoring a derelict knitting factory in Connemara into a sanctuary for herself and other single parents. But the line that stops you cold comes early in the conversation: “Divorce can be a portal to joy.” For a woman raised to believe divorce was a mortal sin, that sentence took years of unlearning — and now she offers it to anyone in the thick of the decision as both a lifeline and a promise that there is magic on the other side you simply cannot imagine from where you’re standing. The heart of this episode is a story of radical reinvention. After leaving her marriage, Betsy was briefly homeless, navigating a housing crisis as a low-income, self-employed immigrant single mother who had all but given up the dream of owning a home. It was a survivors’ support group that lit the way — and out of that fragile hope, she crowdfunded a historic knitting factory and turned it into both a home for her and her son and a fully funded arts-and-rest residency for fellow single parents. Her advice for anyone navigating divorce is refreshingly concrete: find your people. Seek out others walking the same road, and reach out to a domestic abuse center even — especially — if you’ve never been physically hurt but sense that something in your relationship is off. You will be listened to, believed, and supported. Whether you’re newly separated, deep in the loneliness of starting over, or quietly wondering if you’re allowed to want more, this conversation is living proof that life after divorce can hold more joy than the life you’re leaving behind. Find your coven. Face the sun together. 🔗 Check out Fresh Starts Registry: The first & only divorce registry + support platform ➡ https://www.freshstartsregistry.com/ 📱 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/freshstartsregistry/ 📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FreshStartsRegistry 🎙 Podcast IG: https://www.instagram.com/divorcehappenspod/ 📬 Magazine: https://divorceguidemagazine.com/

    12 min
  8. The Codependency Reframe That Will Change How You Think About Your Next Relationship — With Author Kelly Sundberg

    Jun 15

    The Codependency Reframe That Will Change How You Think About Your Next Relationship — With Author Kelly Sundberg

    There is a particular kind of gaslighting that is almost impossible to name while you’re inside it — the kind where someone spends years convincing you that you can’t survive without them, and you believe it so completely that leaving feels less like freedom and more like stepping off a ledge. That was Kelly Sundberg’s reality before her divorce. Her ex-husband had her convinced she was incompetent — that she couldn’t parent alone, that she couldn’t care for herself, that without him, she would fall apart. What happened instead was that she left, earned a PhD, raised her son to 80% custody with extraordinary closeness, wrote two celebrated books about surviving domestic violence and healing after trauma, got remarried to someone who met her as a whole person and loved her that way, and became one of the most important voices in the conversation about why women stay in abusive marriages. In this warm, luminous episode of Divorce Happens, host Olivia Howell sits down with Kelly for a conversation that is equal parts literary and deeply, disarmingly human. Kelly’s first book, Goodbye, Sweet Girl, told the story of her marriage and why she stayed as long as she did. Her second, The Answer Is in the Wound — published through Roxane Gay Books — is a hybrid essay collection and memoir about what comes after: surviving PTSD, reclaiming identity after coercive control, learning to be alone, single parenting, and slowly, improbably, learning to love again. She talks in this episode about what surprised her most after leaving: not how hard it was to be a single mother, but how much easier it was than being married to someone whose presence was itself a burden. She had been carrying his emotional weight, managing his moods, parenting him alongside their son — and she hadn’t even known it. The relief of her own home, her own decisions, her own mess, her own peace, was something she genuinely hadn’t anticipated. Her time as a single parent, she says, was her favorite season of motherhood. But the moment that might stop listeners in their tracks comes when Kelly talks about codependency — and offers one of the most quietly stunning reframes in recent Divorce Happens memory. She describes how those old codependent impulses surfaced when she started dating the man she would eventually marry. And then she says this: they had nowhere to go. Her partner, eight years younger and emotionally grounded, had no interest in being managed, fixed, or rescued. Her need to caretake had no foothold. And so it faded. For anyone who has ever feared that their patterns will follow them into their next relationship, Kelly’s story is both a warning and a profound piece of hope: the right person isn’t someone who accommodates your old wounds. They’re someone whose presence simply doesn’t feed them. This episode is a gift for anyone surviving domestic violence, healing after an abusive relationship, or trying to believe that a full, joyful, loving life is still waiting on the other side of the hardest thing they’ve ever done. 🔗 Check out Fresh Starts Registry: The first & only divorce registry + support platform ➡ https://www.freshstartsregistry.com/ 📱 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/freshstartsregistry/ 📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FreshStartsRegistry 🎙 Podcast IG: https://www.instagram.com/divorcehappenspod/ 📬 Magazine: https://divorceguidemagazine.com/

    18 min

Trailers

5
out of 5
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About

Welcome to Divorce Happens, the podcast where we inspire, educate, and support you through divorce and beyond so that you can start fresh on the next phase of your journey. Produced by Fresh Starts Registry, the only divorce registry platform for everything you need to begin again, including home items, hype team, and everything in between. Remember, divorce happens...and then, we start fresh. We're here to support you before, during, and after divorce. Hosted by Olivia Dreizen Howell, the co-founder and CEO of Fresh Starts Registry.

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