Who is forcing you to do that? You're grown. It's a choice you're making. |
This is the kind of thing people say when they're defensive about how their divorce burdens others. The fact that I even have to make this choice at all is a burden regardless of what I choose. I do it because I feel a moral obligation to my children that they spend time with their grandmother and their grandfather both. The best interests of children, imagine that. |
So it's a choice you're making. No one is forcing you to do that. Stop playing the perpetual victim. PS We all put the best interests of our children first. You're not special. |
Of course it's a choice. A choice between two bad options due to a situation I did not create. And the point is, regardless of what I choose, it affects me in the present. Not just the past. Divorce has lifelong consequences for the whole family. But divorced people don't like to acknowledge it. |
| I mean, most non-blended families aren’t healthy, because that requires a high level of self-awareness and intentional decisions about how to relate. Most people are just not capable of that level of introspection or challenge. |
I'm pretty sure you chime in on every step-parent and divorced families thread to tell us how difficult your life even now that you're fully grown and have a family of your own. Seems to me like you're pretty selfish and never really grew up. I'm sure you'd rather that your parents stayed miserable and togehter so the holidays are not hard on you. Bless your heart. |
You DO probably need therapy, and if so, so do I. I can relate to this so much, you aren’t alone! |
Seems like you are in denial of how your divorce affects others. Saying "it's a choice" doesn't remove your responsibility. |
Ignore that PP, the rest of us get what you are saying. This is what it means to be a chain breaker, someone who heals generational trauma by intentionally making other choices. I am doing the same with my kids and parents and it's hard but I believe worth it to create healthier, more functional family patterns. And then hopefully when my kids are grown and navigating these issues, it will be easier for them. |
Far from it. I am a product of divorced parents as well. Just not the perpetual victim. |
I'm super glad that the two of you are so amazingly perfect. It's good to know that there are at least two perfect people in the world. |
No, they don’t. The best interests of the children would have been to have a strong marriage, not run off with an AP instead of being a present dad. To give only one example from this thread. Anyway, no one has really talked about the long term impacts at end of life. I deal with this all the time at work. Blended families almost always have resentments about end of life issues/inheritances/etc and very often end up in court over it. It’s a nightmare even if it does pay my bills. I’ve seen enough that I would deal with a LOT from a spouse before putting my kids through a divorce. An intact family can end up with issues too of course, but the blended family issues occur more often than not, where intact families it’s a small minority that implode. |
No one claimed to be perfect. People are specifically talking about how the cope with and find solutions for decidedly imperfect situations. |
I LOVE how every sanctimonious post, such as yours, automatically assumes that we ALSO didn't put up with a lot before deciding to divorce. You just assume that we (and your parents) just woke up on the wrong side of the bed one day and decided to screw up everyone's life. You assume that we are all selfish and don't put our kids first or that we didn't fight hard enough for our own marriages. Somehow, despite your parents' divorce, you managed to still think you're the main character and that everyone was done to you. In reality, your life is a lot more fragile than you think and can fall apart in an instant despite your best attempts to make it work. Humble yourself or life might. |
On you two are definitely patting yourselves on the back for finally doing it right and breaking generational trauma. Get real. |