Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
Parenting -- Special Concerns
Reply to "What’s the best housing situation during divorce?"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]How long have you been bouncing around? Why did you file for divorce without a plan for where to live with your children? [/quote] It’s only been ~7 weeks and some of that was spent traveling for work on trips that have been planned since last spring, so it’s time that has always been planned around me being away for work. I’m making the plan now. It would have been wasteful to spend money on a lease before I really needed it.[/quote] Only would be wasteful if you didn't value having custody with your kids. You have just demonstrated that they weren't important enough to you to spend time with them and make them feel at home with you during [b]the hardest moment in their lives[/b]. But this is actually super helpful for everyone to see, as you clearly can't be more than an every other weekend dad. Get furnished and let them choose some accents that they love - you don't care enough to make it a true home for them.[/quote] This is hard for me and arguably for their mom, but it is not hard for the kids. Their lives aren’t changing and they still have two parents who love them and friends and school and their activities. If anything this is the moment in their lives when everything is getting better.[/quote] Oh my God. Your custody evaluation is going to go *so badly*. Tell me again why they refuse to unpack at your house, if their life is great and they aren't having a hard time.[/quote] They don’t bring anything over and won’t stay over, presumably because their mother is preventing them from doing so. The custody evaluator will see that. My wife is going to come across as emotional and not able to support the kids. I can provide the financial stability they need.[/quote] It isn't hard for the kids?:?? Their father just left their family and decided that work was more important than being with them for the transition. It is incredibly hard for them. But it is good that you prioritized work now if that is your goal. You are now just a $$$ dad.[/quote] That’s a bunch of nonsense. The transition has hardly started and if they want a roof over their head, I have to work. I don’t have a choice. It really isn’t hard for them. I’m the one juggling work with finding an entire new house and dealing with huge expenses and legal obligations. They go to school and to fun activities and see their friends. They are fine. [/quote] You don't think their refusal to unpack or enter their new bedrooms indicates [b]anything of concern[/b]? If juggling all of this is hard for you, maybe more advance planning would have helped. Advance planning is an important part of parenting, so you're going to have to learn to do it. [/quote] Yes, it brings up concerns that the kids are too lazy to set up their rooms because they’re spoiled by their mother, and won’t go into them because she’s told them not to. [/quote] Didn’t you say your kids are 10 and 12? Be careful, they’re getting close to the ages where a judge won’t force them to spend time with you and it sure doesn’t seem like they want to.[/quote] It’s 18 in my state.[/quote] So you'll be happy as long as they're coerced into your presence? You don't care if they actually enjoy it at all? Legally it may be 18 but I think you'll find it quite difficult to coerce a 17 year old, even if a judge is willing.[/quote] My 14yr old regularly declines visits and refuses to spend time with her father. These kids are going to do the same thing in just a few years. [/quote] My attorney said that as soon as the custody evaluation is done and we have a parenting plan in place, their mother can be held in contempt if the kids don’t sho up where they are required to.[/quote] Again, is showing up the only goal, or do you aspire to have a good relationship? Because courts will not blame the mom for every instance of teenage rudeness that occurs when she isn't even present. You need to take some responsibility here and stop blaming everything on their mother. Maybe some of this is your fault. Because nobody's perfect, right?[/quote] One of the hallmarks of high conflict personalities is splitting people into all-good or all-bad. OP is all-good. OP's spouse is all-bad. Kids will end up one or the other depending on if they behave like good little automatons or not. And their status can change from day-to-day. Only thing that will stay the same is that OP is all-good. This divorce is going to be incredibly awful for their kids. I hope their mother is a good protective parent, and not also high conflict.[/quote] I promise you that any conflict is coming from my wife. I’ve said from the beginning to her that I want this to be easy and cooperative. She’s the one getting in the way of that.[/quote] And I’ll add that she is the one who ran out and hired her own attorney when that really wasn’t even necessary. It wasn’t adversarial until she did that. [/quote] Lol. Wow, is there a playbook? My exH said the exact same to me 10 years ago when I retained a lawyer (both he and his AP were lawyers). [/quote] OP and I think your ex had a point. If I was already paying for one attorney AND my wife isn’t working, it makes zero sense for me to pay for two attorneys replicating each others’ work for one divorce. Maybe if my wife had an income it would start to make sense, but given our financial situation, our financial interests are one and the same and obviously since we share our children that should be aligned as well. [/quote] Even if we accept your pretty psychopathic take on the world and the people in it, it would be illogical for your wife not to lawyer up and try to get every cent she can from you. You clearly despise her and think she deserves the legal minimum, so what would be the upside of cooperating with you? She should hire a shark and fight every inch. This is a serious question because you are consistently terrible but this part doesn’t even make sense. [/quote] Per my attorney, the obvious upside is speeding up the divorce process, saving money, and getting a more fair split of custody and our assets. Bringing in another legal party into this is only going to slow things down and dilute whatever my wife gets, and she’s just buying whatever her attorney feeds her about it being a better outcome to do it her way. [/quote] No sane spouse would NOT get their own lawyer. Especially dealing with a cold, no feeling jerk like you. Your poor kids. [/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics