Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The thing about 2/2/5 is it's inconsistent as to days of the week. Some children do better with a schedule they can more easily understand, or there are logistical reasons to have them always in a certain home on a certain day of the week.
It's not inconsistent. Ex. Dc with Dad Mon/Tues, Dc with Mom Wed/Thu, rotate Fri Sat Sun.
Right, so Fri Sat Sun are inconsistent. Some kids or families find this hard, others don't.
OP, ask yourself if you would like to live on this schedule yourself. Would you find it burdensome, even if someone else packed your suitcase for you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was also a 50/50 kid and did 7/7. But after a while I got sick of being shuffled back and forth and started doing 14/14. As your child gets older she may assert a preference to spend less time packing and unpacking.
I'm the PP who does 2/2/5. My dc desires to see both of us often and does not want 7/7 at this time. I just wanted to point out that it's not hard to make it so dc does NOT have to pack/unpack all the time. We literally exchange any meds (if any) and the charger cord for the gizmo watch and the Ipad (if dc had a locking locker I'd let them take it to school but they dont). Dc has their school backpack which they would carry regardless of our marital status. Dc has everything they need at both homes because they live there and does not 'pack' anything.
That's fine for little kids, but for older kids it's a lot different. They care what they wear, they may have all their sports stuff, and electronics, and school assignments. You can't duplicate everything, or it's too expensive, and some things like half-done schoolwork are truly one-of-a-kind.
For me it was also just the disruptive feeling of the transition. I never felt settled in any one place and could never truly unpack because I knew I'd have to pack up again. I felt like an object being moved around. I really resented the time spent in transit as well. If parents are too invested in the "my divorce has not burdened my child at all" way of thinking, that's unrealistic and prevents them from empathizing.
The OP was asking about a schedule for a 7 yo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The thing about 2/2/5 is it's inconsistent as to days of the week. Some children do better with a schedule they can more easily understand, or there are logistical reasons to have them always in a certain home on a certain day of the week.
It's not inconsistent. Ex. Dc with Dad Mon/Tues, Dc with Mom Wed/Thu, rotate Fri Sat Sun.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was also a 50/50 kid and did 7/7. But after a while I got sick of being shuffled back and forth and started doing 14/14. As your child gets older she may assert a preference to spend less time packing and unpacking.
I'm the PP who does 2/2/5. My dc desires to see both of us often and does not want 7/7 at this time. I just wanted to point out that it's not hard to make it so dc does NOT have to pack/unpack all the time. We literally exchange any meds (if any) and the charger cord for the gizmo watch and the Ipad (if dc had a locking locker I'd let them take it to school but they dont). Dc has their school backpack which they would carry regardless of our marital status. Dc has everything they need at both homes because they live there and does not 'pack' anything.
That's fine for little kids, but for older kids it's a lot different. They care what they wear, they may have all their sports stuff, and electronics, and school assignments. You can't duplicate everything, or it's too expensive, and some things like half-done schoolwork are truly one-of-a-kind.
For me it was also just the disruptive feeling of the transition. I never felt settled in any one place and could never truly unpack because I knew I'd have to pack up again. I felt like an object being moved around. I really resented the time spent in transit as well. If parents are too invested in the "my divorce has not burdened my child at all" way of thinking, that's unrealistic and prevents them from empathizing.
Anonymous wrote:The thing about 2/2/5 is it's inconsistent as to days of the week. Some children do better with a schedule they can more easily understand, or there are logistical reasons to have them always in a certain home on a certain day of the week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was also a 50/50 kid and did 7/7. But after a while I got sick of being shuffled back and forth and started doing 14/14. As your child gets older she may assert a preference to spend less time packing and unpacking.
I'm the PP who does 2/2/5. My dc desires to see both of us often and does not want 7/7 at this time. I just wanted to point out that it's not hard to make it so dc does NOT have to pack/unpack all the time. We literally exchange any meds (if any) and the charger cord for the gizmo watch and the Ipad (if dc had a locking locker I'd let them take it to school but they dont). Dc has their school backpack which they would carry regardless of our marital status. Dc has everything they need at both homes because they live there and does not 'pack' anything.
Anonymous wrote:I was also a 50/50 kid and did 7/7. But after a while I got sick of being shuffled back and forth and started doing 14/14. As your child gets older she may assert a preference to spend less time packing and unpacking.
Anonymous wrote:What works best for the child is that you and your spouse work out your differences and maintain a civil.relationshop so that your child can grow up in one home with two parents.
If that is not an option, the second best is that the child stays in.one home and the parents alternate staying with the child.
If neither of those are options, then what you really are looking is the option that is best for the parents, but will not be good for the child.