How exactly is she supposed to do that? |
Yeah you’re still way too involved in this narrative. I get that you believe the kids are so unhappy there etc etc but you likely are not getting the whole story or you are getting the story that the kids unconsciously know you want. As long as the kids have beds there isn’t any neglect going on. |
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I have not read what I am sure is 10 pages of nonsense and vitriol, so apologies if this point has been made already.
Stripped of its fluff, OP's post is, "My lawyer told me X ("insisted," actually), but what do random internet strangers think? Should I do what my lawyer advises, or should I ignore it? Short answer: no. Slightly longer answer: No, don't be an idiot. If you don't trust your lawyer, find a new one. But crowd sourcing this is about the dumbest approach possible. |
Agree and this is because OP has not separated herself mentally from her ex or accepted the situation for what it likely is. Which is that her ex is not a monster and will get some custody time, her kids won’t hate it, and she needs to let go of trying to change her ex. |
DP. OP has not explained all the details of the divorce proceedings. It sounds like they are both taking maximalist positions instead of offering reasonable schedules. Not to say this is necessarily OP’s fault but I wonder what would happen if she offered something reasonable like 2 nights/week. Strongly suspect a guy like her ex would take it. OP may not be able to let go and accept he will get significant custody though. I have seen this happen - a woman fighting tooth and nail for years now and the dad likely going to end up with something she could have offered him on day 1 that he would have taken. She is convinced he is a bad father and will take any small incident to prove it (despite the fact that her kids are VERY challenging so it’s pretty much assured that there will be issues). She truly believed that she could change her ex via the court system, and when that did not work, that she could just get full custody. From my perspective this has just greatly dragged out the kids’ adjustment and obviously destroyed any ability to coparent well. He was a sh*t partner but a good dad (albeit with different parenting values from her). |
She’s not trying to change him, she’s setting him up to fail to get full custody and no contact. Child support goes by time share. No visits, more money. It’s not about the kids or her needs. If the rooms are stressing the kids, she’d help to make them more comfortable. She’s setting it up for everyone to fail not caring about the trauma it’s causing for the kids as she’s rationalizing it as he’s bad and unworthy. No matter what, he is still the kids dad and the behavior from the parents has a long term impact on the kids. |
She's "setting him up to fail" by not furnishing the kids' rooms at his house? Are you remotely serious? Is she setting him up to fail if she doesn't also come over and cook, fold their laundry, and put them to bed in his house? At what point do you feel their dad should assume parenting responsibilities in his home? |
Usually one person in the house handles those things. My spouse wouldn't set up our kids rooms as I handle it and our kids would prefer I do as I'd take the time to get it exactly right. If you care about your kids/step-kids sometimes you do things not because you want to or easier on the other parent but becuase its for the kids. See how that works. You cannot complain if you are not willing to be part of the solution and you are hurting your kids, not him. |
She cannot force the dad to furnish their rooms AND her LAWYER told her to stay out of it. I think you are very confused about what happens in a divorce. |
They.Do.Not.Share.A.House. Please explain exactly how this works that she sets up the rooms at a house that is not her own? |
One person in a house “handles those things” when there are two people in the house. Divorced families have mutually exclusive households where life has to be functional in both. That means both parents have to step up and actually parent. Your default suggestion that the wife continue to enable the husband’s strategic incompetence is unhelpful to her, him, and to the children. It’s also incredibly sexist. Mean can, should, and do parent, despite your suggestion (recommendation?) that they don’t. |
| *Men |
Yes, this is exactly the point - but not in the way that you think, PP. Part of divorce, is being a role model for your children about setting healthy boundaries. My exH never took physical custody of our kids even though he was offered 50/50. He did have them for visitation, but never bought housing with separate bedrooms for them even though he could afford it, and never even bought them beds for any room in his house. He chose to send them the message that he didn't want to make an effort for them and as a result they did not spend a lot of time there. It was really important that I show them that it was OK to set boundaries, by modeling that in my own behavior. No, after divorce, it was absolutely not my job to encourage or make him take custody or get them beds. But, I did get them a therapist with whom they could discuss their feelings about this and who could help them express their needs directly to him. I wanted to teach my daughter that no spouse or partner has a right to her labor, and that it is OK to say "no" to unreasonable demands, especially for things that people can do for themselves. And, I definitely didn't want to teach my son that he had a right to use someone else like his dad seemed to feel free to use me. I was always very polite to their dad, but not a pushover. Now they are grown-ups and TBH, I think they feel like I was too nice to their dad. Out of their own direct experiences with him they came to see him as an unreliable guy who wasn't able to care for them properly and never really had their best interests at heart. That's sad, but it's not something I can fix or control, and the amount of effort I would have put in (and did put in when we were together) to help him and cover for him so he could look like a great dad was effort that would have been better invested in myself and my relationship with my kids. OP should grey or yellow rock her DH and engage in parallel parenting. If he has been abusive in any way, she can have all communication go through attorneys and any parental coordination can be done in writing through third party apps. She should focus on herself and her relationship with the kids and let her husband focus on himself and his relationship with the kids. Be cordial if you must be together for family or school events, but it's OK to keep it brief and polite. |
Right, and so the person who doesn't handle kid stuff like that should not have custody, just visitation. You can't just demand 50 50 custody but also insist your ex spouse handle the parenting. You have to be the sole parent during your custody time and handle everything including housing and their rooms. |
Kids are barely there. He may figure there is no need to set it up till he gets more time. |