| Anyone reading this and looking for legal advice: talked to attorney. The way I could do this would only be to get a protective order for myself which would exclude my kids from contact with their father. I do not want to cut them off from the visitation they have now on their own terms. They’ll have to deal with him showing up in public places. Attorney advised having the older ones speak with teachers/coaches about their concerns just so they can keep an eye on them and check in with me if they notice behavior changes. Will continue to talk to all 3 kids about setting boundaries. |
Why would a protective order for yourself exclude the kids from contact? There are plenty of families where parents have protective order and kids still have visits. |
It may be specific to my jurisdiction and/or the legal proceedings currently underway in my case. I only know that it would eliminate the current arrangement we have until/if their father had anofher custody hearing scheduled and the earliest hearing dates are the last week of December. |
| I'm not a lawyer, at all, but...maybe you could stop putting events on the shared calendar. Maybe not all events, but ones that are small and would have him upset the kids. |
OP: anyone reading this, do not do this. Grounds for alienation charges if they stretched it and at minimum it looks uncooperative. In my case we don’t have a shared calendar but he these are events that show up on the school calendar or on emails from the music teacher at school, so I wouldn’t be able to hide them if I wanted to. |
OP's ex could look at the school calendar himself. I don't see why she needs to be his secretary by putting it on the shared calendar. |
This |
OP, please ignore this troll. They post on literally every single thread about custody and accuse the mom of keeping the kids from the dad. |
+1. It sucks that the kids will need to do this for themselves, but they will. Hopefully their dad just backs off, but if he doesn't the school and coaches may be able to bar him from attending events. |
I agree. Alienation is a form of abuse. OP stated, "Attorney advised having the older ones speak with teachers/coaches about their concerns just so they can keep an eye on them and check in with me if they notice behavior changes." This is problematic on a couple of fronts. First of all, the KIDS should not be in a position to be telling teachers/coaches that they are "concerned" or "afraid" of their own father. That seems like an attorney is encouraging/piling on towards involving others in the father alienation, driven by the mother. IMO, OP should have a clear, concise list of dates/times and what exactly the father has done which could be considered abuse. For example, throwing covers off of tween kids (maybe they refused to get up?) does not rise to the level of abuse. |
OP here. I can’t put in details because about other incidents but for the covers it was not an attempt to wake the kids up, but a chasing and pursuit and hiding situation following verbal abuse and threats. My attorney has advised me that there is nothing wrong with having the kids tell their coaches or teachers why they are upset. Coaches need to know why a kid’s performance is off. Teachers need to understand why a kid might be hiding in a classroom until the last minute when all of the other kids are mingling in the hall before the concert. Volleyball is pretty benign, but one kid is in a sport where having an off day mentally is dangerous, so it’s important that the coaches know that and have the information they need to pull a kid over to a conditioning station if they’re rattled or upset. Kids have never said “afraid” to coaches about their father nor have I said that, because I’m very aware of the legal implications of that kind of language. And yet they truly are afraid. It is really hard to walk the line of protecting children and avoiding false accusations of alienation. Dates, times and events have been extensively documented. |
I understand you fear legal issues but you should not be doing this, My mother made me visit my dad until she couldn't physically force me, Even now we have a very strained relationship because of that. |
Super inappropriate. On the flip side, they an say mom is abusive and CPS can come. |
Your mom was right. |
That's a mater of perspective, From my perspective she couldn't have been more wrong and she paid the price for it when i went no contact for nearly 10 years. |