I generally feel like men who abandon their children never have a bond with their mother. When they love the mom, they typically love the children of that woman. |
If we were talking about people with severe mental illness or physical disabilities, sure. People who have kids and then simply decide they don't like being a parent should be held accountable for that. We want to discourage people from having kids they don't want to care for. A true inability to care for children is a different situation. |
Same. Kids I grew up with. Mom married a Marine stationed in a crappy small town. She abandoned her two young girls to move to Ca for a good job. Never spoke to kids again. Dad married woman. Dad divorced woman and abandoned kids with step mom who hated them. No child deserves this. I hope both parents rot in hell. |
Regarding the new wives not wanting the kids around, it’s often because having the kids around dad means he’ll always some connection with his ex and contact with her.
(Kind of like how in miss Saigon, the new wife says she might consider bringing the son to America and giving him a better life, but only if the ex is out of the picture.) |
What??? Do you have any children? |
My own brother did this. He was married forever and was told he could not have kids. As he and wife were divorcing, she realized she was pregnant. She kept it hidden from my brother. I assume for good reason. He's a shady guy even though from outward appearances seems like a nice guy. He is selfish and was in to weird stuff. Kid eventually contacted my brother and brother wants nothing to do with him. It's even more sad that his ex wife died because of poverty. She was ill and a hospital ignored her. She died as soon as she got home. She was abandoned by her own family and my brother. I mad at myself that I never contacted her after they got divorced. |
A lot of parents of both gender abandon kids and leave them to be raised by grandparents. For example, the number of kids in communities impacted by drug use and high incarceration rates that have little to no contact with their parents but are raised by grandparents is extremely high. |
OP is either a troll or not an active member of the adoption community. About half of adoptions are family related.
I adopted my sister's baby, who was born with Down Syndrome. My sister had mental health issues her whole life and could not parent her child. My co-worker adopted her cousin's two little kids when the cousin went to prison for repeated drug offenses. These were winning situations for everyone involved. |
I saw my friend go from a wonderful and involved mom to a nearly neglectful one after the death of her husband. I think the only reason that they survived that time period was because so many of her friends stepped in to help. We don't know the whole story. It sounds like this guy knew he wasn't in a place to raise her. It sounds like he's had issues since as well. Seems much better he didn't attempt to raise the child too. |
Your head is in the sand. Just about every guy friend I have has told me he did not bond with his child until the toddler years. |
You obviously have no idea how long post-partum depression or psychoses lasts. Tell me you are not a therapist without telling me you are not a therapist. |
+1 We actually know several kids in this situation (being raised by grandparents) even in our UMC community. Seems semi-common to have one grown child with “serious issues”- usually drugs- and have grandparents step in. In one case, the child is now a teen and, though he still lives with the grandparents, visits biodad for some weekends and/or vacations. Biodad is now clean and sober but all have agreed that uprooting the teen would not be a good idea for anyone involved. |
I'm a school counselor at a low-income high school in MoCo. Yes, parents of teens (try to) do this. Most often the teen moves in with a relative or friend. |
I mean, if he was truly not going to parent her, the daughter's aunt adopting her is probably the best case scenario.
But yes I'd judge him terribly. Even arranging the aunt to care for the child and taking her on weekends or something... |
+1 and sometimes tend to prioritize the children of the women they love whether they are the biodad or not. So many stories of men in 2nd marriages preferring the stepkids over their biokids from the first marriage. |