Use articles, scripts and phase guides to handle the next decision, conversation or practical step.
Use Guides when you need practical context before making a decision. Articles, scripts, checklists and explainers sit here.
First goal: understand the next decision.
The phase model is Atlas's core framework. Here's what each phase means — and what it demands of you.
You're not separated yet, but you can see it coming. This phase is defined by uncertainty — and the temptation to either ignore the situation or overreact to it. Neither helps.
What you can do now: gather your documents, understand your financial position, and get a clear picture of what the legal process actually involves. Information is not commitment. Getting informed is not giving up.
What to avoid: making major financial decisions under emotional pressure, or assuming the worst before the process has started. Stay practical.
Separation is official. The immediate priority is stability: somewhere to live, legal basics understood, kids seeing both parents regularly. That's it. Don't try to optimise — just survive.
Money decisions made in the Survive phase often look terrible in hindsight. The financial fog is real. If you can avoid major commitments for the first few months, do it. The one exception: get your budget mapped. You need to know what's actually coming in and going out.
This phase is harder than people expect and shorter than it feels. The fog lifts. Focus on keeping the wheels on.
Two households are running. The immediate chaos has passed. Now the job is to get your foundations right — budget mapped properly, routines established, legal documents sorted, admin caught up.
This is when most of the practical work happens. Bank accounts, super, insurance, tax — all the things you put off during the Survive phase. Work through them systematically. The admin checklist in Atlas covers most of it.
Stability also means building small habits: consistent kids week routines, a savings buffer, regular time for yourself. These compound. Don't underestimate them.
The hard stuff is largely behind you. Two households are running, the kids have a routine, and you have a clearer picture of your financial position. Now you build — deliberately.
Rebuild is when goals start to matter. Not vague aspirations — concrete targets. Savings goals. Fitness. Career. Identity. You've survived; now you decide what you're building toward.
This phase can stall if you're still in survival mode mentally. Watch for it. The circumstances have stabilised. The question is whether your thinking has caught up.
You've rebuilt. The post-separation identity crisis is resolved. You know who you are, what matters to you, and how your finances work. The kids are settled. The legal machinery is behind you.
This phase is about extension and optimisation — not starting over, but compounding what you've built. Super contributions, investment thinking, the next significant financial goals, deeper relationships with your kids as they grow.
It looks different for everyone. Some people arrive here in two years; others take five. What matters is that you get here — and Atlas is built to help you track the progress.
68 scripts for the conversations you need to have — and don't know how to start. Use them as a scaffold. The opening is close to verbatim. The rest is yours.