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Relationship Discussion (non-explicit)
Reply to "When to tell kids the truth about their father’s adultery as reason for divorce"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I think there are two questions here. The first one, do you proactively tell your children that a parent cheated? The answer to that, to me, is no. Your kids should not be in the middle of their parents fights. And they shouldn't feel responsible for picking a side. And the moment one parent decides to put the burden of that knowledge on them, they will feel that. Just like your kids might know you're not wealthy but shouldn't know how much is in your bank account and when the electricity bill is due, they can know that the marriage is struggling but don't need to know the details if both parents expect to play active present roles in their kids lives. When a marriage ends because...the two people just fell out of love or something more ambiguous and harder to grasp you don't give your kids your marriage counseling notes. They just don't need to know that. That said, the second question, 'should I tell my kid's that I/their parent had and affair when they ask me directly?' I think the answer to that is to be honest in a way that doesn't make the child feel like they should cut off the other partner. If they have figured it out, then lying to them is in fact gaslighting. But again, the primary goal should be avoiding inserting the child into the fight as a player vs spectator. And perhaps a third question is, 'if my spouse had an affair and just bounced out of our lives, should I be honest with my kid?' And in that case, where one parent either abandoned the kid or truly put them on the 'first family' back burner, you should be honest with them about what happened and validate their feelings and not push them to try have a relationship with an absent crappy parent where they end up continually crushed with disappointment. [/quote] You aren’t god. Stop acting like there is one way. I happen to disagree and think the truth is best always but without the vindictiveness. Every time in my life when someone has withheld information that would have been helpful has just made me more confused. And if it’s cheating than quite easily the kid feels odd the hook. People think differently about these things. [/quote] I'm not a god, certainly. But one thing that is shown time and time again when evaluating outcomes with children of divorce and whether they maintain positive relationships with their parents is whether the parents put the kid in the middle of the conflict. Think what you want but inserting the child into the conflict is NOT good for the child. That doesn't mean lying if the kid asks directly when they are older, but it means not pushing the responsibility to act on that information to the kid. [/quote] [b]Telling your child that you left your husband because he was regularly cheating on you and you felt used, betrayed, and unsafe with people you didn't know in the house is not putting your child in the middle. Nor is it explicit. [/b]Saying to your child he was having sex with her in our bedroom and using my clothes and my sheets and then coming home and lying to me and having sex with me and now I have a disease and found all their gross sex toys is explicit. Saying to your child daddy cheated and is moving in with his affair partner because he was so unhappy having to do all the childcare and housework even though he told me he loved me is putting your child in the middle.[/quote] Yes, it is putting your child in the middle. That is 100% wrong. And worse than cheating. I don't know what planet you live on that you think kids should have these details. They should not. You're crazy.[/quote] No you are. You are the cheater. Stop cheating. I live on planet earth. Stop hurting people on it.[/quote] Should a parent also tell their child all the all person details of marital problems? Mom stopped having sex with me after she had you. Details about parents’ sex lives should be off limits for kids. [/quote] 100% agree with you! Kids should not know about parents marital issues whether than is cheating, sexlessness anything. Should be off limits. I am a woman but I feel like only women would say to tell your kids...it is an abhorrent thing to do. Men seem to be more logical than most women (even though I am a woman). Kids should not know about their parents sex lives ever...including cheating and sexlessness.[/quote] Well the two of you (if in fact you are both actually two different people) can live your sexless married lives in the privacy of your own homes. Why are you on this page exactly? To tell OP to never tell her kids? Ok, she's gotten that viewpoint from you already. So glad you have time from not having sex to be on here.[/quote] I am divorced. I did not tell my kids all of the many reasons, including the sexlessness. Yes, I am on here to tell her never to tell her kids because that is far worse than just a divorce. No good can come of it. And I have plenty of sex divorced, thanks. Again, my kids will never know that. What happens in the bedroom is not kids' business.[/quote]
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