Write for DivorcedMoms
DivorcedMoms is the ultimate online community for divorced moms to connect, communicate, share experiences, and find expert information and advice. We provide meaningful, current information about all topics relating to divorce — expert advice on how to manage the process, the humor and the heartache involved, and the strength that comes with redefining your life and carving a new path.
Whether you are thinking about separating, newly divorced or have already navigated the divorce process, whether you are in your 20s with an infant or in your 50s with grown children, you have experience and a unique point of view. Your stories will help other moms who are going through the same process.
DivorcedMoms is above all a community of shared experiences.
All of our writers will have:
Experience and passion.
A unique voice and story.
Expertise and passion for the subject of divorce.
The desire to reach and help other divorced people.
The drive to submit original, meaningful content.
The benefits of writing:
When you join our team of writers, you become an integral part of our engaging community and will have:
The ability to share your stories with 500,000 monthly DivorcedMoms users.
The opportunity to be syndicated on one of DivorcedMoms content partners. Partners like The Huffington Post, Scary Mommy, Mama Mia and more.
Guidance on how to write effectively and maximize your exposure.
The means to develop a following and readership via promotion to over 48,000 DivorcedMoms social media followers.
How to get started:
Kyra Koch says
This story resembles mine so much. It’s amazing how your eyes open to what you were so blind to when you were living with a narcisisstic addict. He twisted everything to make it into my fault. He made me out to be “ridiculous” or “crazy” as he would put it. He made me think my kids were against me, and that I could not live my life without him. He claimed he never cheated on me, but many things came out when I finally walked away from our marriage. He was an addict plain and simple, that would never admit he was an addict. He took a ride on the “H” train, and thought he could jump off, but it keeps rolling faster down hill, and somewhere I found a way to jump off and left him behind. I could no longer put up with his addiction or his mental abuse. It was dragging me so down that I had a hard time believing my worth.. But today I am free. I chose to walk away from 26 years of marriage. I feel free and finally at peace because I did.