You tell your child this is the schedule and you will follow it. If he refuses, there will be consequences and be clear on what it is. Its fine to be sympathetic and ask dad to change a weekend or two but you need to be firm that this is the schedule and Dad and I are sticking to it. When he is 18/graduates then it is his choice. |
Good grief. I've said several times now. This is not about money, at all. I do not want more CS, nor do I expect it, nor would I even take it if it was offered to me. It. Isn't. A. Factor. Sorry for preemptively trying to clarify that. I'm sorry I even mentioned it. I just didn't want to be accused of trying to get more money, as moms so frequently are on these boards. |
He needs to understand adult choices lead to adult consequences and that if he stops his relationship with Dad, and wants to be an adult, come 18, he needs to pay for his own college and life and not count on Dad. |
Honestly, the way the docket is in many jurisdictions, I wonder if you'd even get a court date before graduation. |
Then, tell your son, this is the schedule, we are sticking to it but if something comes up, like a dance or test or something, we will ask Dad to switch weekends and be done with it. You are the parent. You do not debate this. |
Dad gets 4 days a month. You reducing it to that is not fair to Dad. |
OP here: this is really neither here nor there, but dad isn't paying for college and has already made that clear. He had to pay for college himself, so he thinks DS should too. My income is such that I am hoping DS will qualify for significant need-based aid. DS also has good grades and hopefully could get merit scholarships too. I have some saved, but not a ton. |
Other posters are correct that there is not way filing this through your attorney would be only 2-4 hours of time. That said, it may be worth paying for an hour or two of time to consult on the issue and get a sense of how a court is likely to rule on a request by your son to get a sense of how it’s likely to go. Then your son would have more information to decide whether he wants to file something on his own with the court. |
It would be nice if Dad helped but often it does just go by your income so hopefully there is aid. However, bottomline is you are the parent, you tell him he's going and end of discussion. Its 4 days a month. |
This would not involve GOING to court. It's all filed pleadings. And this is a very simple issue. |
OP here: again, I have explained to my DS multiple times what the court order says and what contempt of court means and the importance of spending time with his dad. So I am asking what I can *actually* do if my DS physically refuses to get in the car next weekend? Call the cops? |
it would be a promise between son and dad and a genuine relationship vs court ordered contact |
force him to talk to his dad when it is time for his butt to be in the car and its not I'm sorry op, this is not an easy situation and many of the posters seem to have forgotten what teens are like |
If he wants a relationship with his child he needs to be willing to compromise. A senior in high school has a life outside of his parents. The father should be respectful of this. Forcing a kid to spend 2 weekends a month at a place he doesn't want to be is going to drive a wedge between them. This sounds like it's about control, not about having a healthy relationship with his son. My parents were divorced and I spent every weekend with my dad. Once I started driving I did not go there every weekend. I was involved with sports and my friends. I wasn't hanging out at home every weekend with either parent. Instead of acting like a control freak or a child, my dad adjusted his expectations and found other ways to spend time with me. He was always at my sporting events and we'd other go out to dinner after games or practice. Your ex is being unreasonable and he's going to ruin his relationship with his son. I would let him take it to court. Your son turns 18 in less than a year. Let your son plead his case in front of the judge. |
This! Let him take you to court. Good luck getting anything decided before your son turns 18. |