Anonymous wrote:When a decision does not go in favour of the ex husband and he complains he is blamed. An ex wife in a similar situation it is nuanced.
There are countless long posts by women on this forum where they provide their views from start to finish and briefly sprinkle in her DHs side of the story and they get showered with supports.
Anonymous wrote:The reason the judge let her move the kids to a new school district is because she's moving closer to extended family, who will help her as a newly single mother.
Anonymous wrote:The reason the judge let her move the kids to a new school district is because she's moving closer to extended family, who will help her as a newly single mother.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not in DC and our divorce recently concluded with ex wife being granted primary residential custody. I don't consume alcohol, I am not an abuser, and I have been fully involved with my kids. We couldn't agree with the choice of school district. We have 2 kids 13 and 10. I wanted the kids to remain in the same diastatic but my ex wife wanted them in a different lower quality school district where she grew up and her family lives. She argued that she needed to be near family and her lawyer made the case for her I guess because the judge sided with them. I did not get a lawyer because I could not afford one without going into debt. She was to get one with family support.
So the assumption on this forum that the courts always opt for 50/50 unless major issues may be through perhaps in VA and other states.
It seems to me that if you are the parent without a lawyer and you aren't willing to go in debt to get one, the other side is going to get their way.
The kids will stay with her during school days and I will have them weekends and the majority of holidays. During the summer we will have them 50/50.
However the fact that the judge felt that simply because she wanted the kids in the district of her choice, it was the best interest of the children makes it hard to believe that it wasn't a biased decision.
At what age can kids opt to be with one parent mostly? When my son turns 16 can he choose to stay with me instead?
No cheating, no alcohol abuse, no financial neglect. I know some people will quick to use one of these as the reason that it was the right decision. The marriage felt apart because she repeatedly refused to seek individual therapy for being bipolar and as a result was unable to regulate her emotions throughout our marriage.
Nope. Everyone tries it, but it is extraordinarily rare that it splits this cleanly. As a family law attorney I used to work for would say "Snow White doesn't marry Hitler. It just doesn't go down that way." And it doesn't. She might've had her problems, in fact, I'm comfortable saying she did. And you're one of them, because nobody with any self-awareness leaves a marriage and says "Wow, that was all the other person's fault." You wrote a big ol' post about all her flaws, and denied any of the major ones were yours. But you claim the judge showed bias?
This post reeks of bs, OP. Come clean, if you want decent advice. Garbage in, garbage out, and this post sure seems like trash.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you guys have close to 50-50 in terms of time actually.
I get why you are upset about the school issue but I can see it from both sides. If moving to the other school district will give kids extra stability in the form of as n extended family network, there's an argument it's in their best interest. The judge is not going to look at school quality unless there's a safety concern-- way too subjective.
The real issue here is that you and your ex couldn't agree on the school issue and forced it to the judge. That's your collective failure. I see from your perspective why you want them to stay in the current district but we're there issues with things like your ex affording housing there or continuity if childcare if the kids are going back and forth between two houses with working single parents and no family support? Did you try to work out a compromise or did you both dig your heels in?
Judges don't want to make decisions like that and their preference is always for the parents to figure it out while working together to come up with a satisfactory solution. But if you don't, yes there's the risk that the judge's resolution won't be exactly what you want
Next time try to work it out. This is the reality of divorce with kids.
Anonymous wrote:I am not in DC and our divorce recently concluded with ex wife being granted primary residential custody. I don't consume alcohol, I am not an abuser, and I have been fully involved with my kids. We couldn't agree with the choice of school district. We have 2 kids 13 and 10. I wanted the kids to remain in the same diastatic but my ex wife wanted them in a different lower quality school district where she grew up and her family lives. She argued that she needed to be near family and her lawyer made the case for her I guess because the judge sided with them. I did not get a lawyer because I could not afford one without going into debt. She was to get one with family support.
So the assumption on this forum that the courts always opt for 50/50 unless major issues may be through perhaps in VA and other states.
It seems to me that if you are the parent without a lawyer and you aren't willing to go in debt to get one, the other side is going to get their way.
The kids will stay with her during school days and I will have them weekends and the majority of holidays. During the summer we will have them 50/50.
However the fact that the judge felt that simply because she wanted the kids in the district of her choice, it was the best interest of the children makes it hard to believe that it wasn't a biased decision.
At what age can kids opt to be with one parent mostly? When my son turns 16 can he choose to stay with me instead?
No cheating, no alcohol abuse, no financial neglect. I know some people will quick to use one of these as the reason that it was the right decision. The marriage felt apart because she repeatedly refused to seek individual therapy for being bipolar and as a result was unable to regulate her emotions throughout our marriage.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you guys have close to 50-50 in terms of time actually.
I get why you are upset about the school issue but I can see it from both sides. If moving to the other school district will give kids extra stability in the form of as n extended family network, there's an argument it's in their best interest. The judge is not going to look at school quality unless there's a safety concern-- way too subjective.
The real issue here is that you and your ex couldn't agree on the school issue and forced it to the judge. That's your collective failure. I see from your perspective why you want them to stay in the current district but we're there issues with things like your ex affording housing there or continuity if childcare if the kids are going back and forth between two houses with working single parents and no family support? Did you try to work out a compromise or did you both dig your heels in?
Judges don't want to make decisions like that and their preference is always for the parents to figure it out while working together to come up with a satisfactory solution. But if you don't, yes there's the risk that the judge's resolution won't be exactly what you want
Next time try to work it out. This is the reality of divorce with kids.