The biggest mistake my mom made was lack of financial planning. She never really caught on that divorce meant she had to do that herself. She remarried to someone who also has no money and no understanding of money. So I am paying for her and it sucks. Divorce is expensive. |
Something that you need to be aware of are the stepparents like the PP. They’re looking for any reason to aileanate kids from their parents and they’re absolutely obsessed with child support. Just look at PP saying it would be better to terminate the dad’s parental rights in exchange for no child support. There are horrible people out there - your ex could very well marry someone who hates your kids. |
Keep the pictures. My DH, who is the child of an acrimonious divorce, treasures the few he has.
Also, don't make holidays miserable. Shortly after DH married into my family, he stopped spending any holidays with his side of the family at all. I tried to encourage it, but he refused, because he was so sick of dealing with his parents and their endless sniping over the holidays. There was a time in his life where he went to three Xmas dinners in one day to satisfy them, and he just got fed up. He said he wasn't putting me and our eventual kids through that. |
+1 It pains me every time my parents do or say something that suggests every moment they had together was a misery. That "misery" was my childhood. I don't question their choice to divorce at all - it was right for them and for me. But I challenge the notion that there were no good times. It just isn't true, and the pictures show it. |
OP, read the book "Between Two Worlds" asap. Nearly every comment on this thread is echoed in the book, and it also goes into a lot of other topics like spirituality and religion, careers, school achievements, written as a series of studies of children of divorce across decades. it's not a negative book about divorce, but it definitely gives strong evidence for things not to do within a divorce, and gives you a window into a young mind trying to make sense of it, through hundreds of first person testimonials and interviews. |
That's going to work until one parent meets someone else. I can't even imagine dating a single parent who rotates between a house and a condo, but basically that would also mean the new partner also has to rotate living arrangements. Doubt anyone would put up with it. |
My parents divorced hen I was 4. My mother was an abusive, selfish, manipulative woman. My father was a filandered wo drank a bit too much but later in life got sober and faithful. He was always kind. My mother was mean and full of vile drama. She was routinely estranged from her siblings, parents and some of her kids. My father remarried a very kind woman who was an absolutely lovely stepmother to me. I became closer to her and eventually wrote my mother off.
As a father now, I die inside a little remembering the way she treated me. I remember her limiting my time on the phone with my dad and taking away weekends with him when she was angry. I have one distinct memory of being on the phone with him while crying asking him to please come back and my mother 'caught' me on the phone, took it away, hung it up and preceded to beat me. I was about 6. Please be good to your kids people. I'm a bit damaged and I wish I wasn't. |
I think the lesson from this thread is that there is no one way to do it right. Some people think X would have been better while others think definitely Y is the way to go. Try to be flexible and talk to your kids as they grow older and open to the possibilities that a) what is right for one kid may not be right for another; and b) even the same kid may need different things over time. Good luck. |
I disagree with some of the others. I think family dinners are a good idea, and with time the pain will fade. I'd keep SOME pics of you all together. And as you note, do not bad mouth him. I understand this will be incredibly painful for you in the short term, and a therapist should help with that. But, keeping it so the kids don't have to choose, don't always have to be spread between two of everything, will be so, so helpful. The couple of divorced friends and acquaintances that I have that share birthdays, have family dinners, share holidays (so kids get to be with everyone) as much as possible are winning at life. Everyone was (eventually) happier. Kids super well-adjusted. It wasn't always that way at first (esp where there was cheating involved) but after some passage at time, they are all better off. Just recognize there is a light at the end and it will eventually get better. By contrast, my parents were contentious from day one of their separation. It was truly awful. |
PP here - this opinion does not necessarily hold if there was abuse and other serious concerns. That's a harder position. I didn't get that from your post but I just wanted to give that caveat. |
Don’t get remarried quickly. In fact, don’t get remarried with young kids. Odd are you’ll get divorced again. It is traumatic for parents to split up, but to then connect with a stepparent and have that split up too is worse. |
In addition to keeping our photos, we did do dinners together once a week for the first year. They fell off after time. We do holidays together (xmas morning we open all gifts from both parents, xmas eve we split in half). DS birthday we always spend together for dinner and then his actual birthday party we are both there. We share Thanksgiving day and on Halloween we both go TOTing with DS and other families at school. Other than that we don't split the other holidays but we don't do a big celebration for (example) Easter anyway so DS is just with the parent he's with on all of the other holidays and that's fine. |
I keep some pictures out. DD had a family picture of the three of us in her room, ex is in some pictures out in the house, group pics and such. I've kept wedding pictures and other stuff from our relationship to share with her when she's older if she's interested. |
My parents divorced when I was 8 and my sister was 5. My dad cheated and married the woman he was cheating on my mom with a year after the divorce was final and that was really hard. Of course I didn’t really know the circumstances until I was older, but my step mom was a horrible person and was extremely jealous of and competitive with us. She used money to manipulate us (since my dad was the one with money which she somehow controlled now).
So I guess I would say I wish either my mom or dad stood up to her and advocated for us. We went to family therapy and would tell my mom and dad how much we hated her and why yet no one did anything. Not sure why my dad could not have asked her to be nice to us. Or when she made us get jobs at 16 to pay them rent so we could learn responsibility, don’t understand why my dad just went along with it. My parents also couldn’t be in a room together for years and years and that was hard. I think family dinner is a great idea and wish we could have done that. All said, my sister and I are totally fine and other than a lifelong hatred of our evil stepmother no resulting issues from the divorce. |