Anonymous wrote:Because he is now living in the reality of his actions. The excitement has worn off but he's still the same person with the same problems but he has alienated himself from his kids. If the kids are adults, they get to decide how and if they want to rebuild their relationship with him. People who blow up their lives like that usually do face a reckoning at some point. He just woke up with a severe hangover from a several year binge. Your friend doesn't owe him anything. I would encourage my kids to reconnect with their father in whatever way they are comfortable but if they don't want to, that's totally fine as well.
Anonymous wrote:Because he is now living in the reality of his actions. The excitement has worn off but he's still the same person with the same problems but he has alienated himself from his kids. If the kids are adults, they get to decide how and if they want to rebuild their relationship with him. People who blow up their lives like that usually do face a reckoning at some point. He just woke up with a severe hangover from a several year binge. Your friend doesn't owe him anything. I would encourage my kids to reconnect with their father in whatever way they are comfortable but if they don't want to, that's totally fine as well.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe discuss your ex-husband’s behavior with your therapist, OP. Crowd-sourcing this isn’t healthy. Nor is the “asking for a friend” construct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My mother’s husband did this. His adult kids despise him. I personally don’t blame them.
He’s attempting to reach out to his own because well they’re his kids.
Yes, they are his kids, but he ghosted them for years. He didn’t attend his daughter’s phd graduation ceremony and he has a grandchild he has never met.
Imagine being ghosted by your dad for years and then being expected to act like nothing happened? And they have tried to contact him over the years and he never responded. They need a dad, he wasn’t available.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My mother’s husband did this. His adult kids despise him. I personally don’t blame them.
He’s attempting to reach out to his own because well they’re his kids.
Yes, they are his kids, but he ghosted them for years. He didn’t attend his daughter’s phd graduation ceremony and he has a grandchild he has never met.
Imagine being ghosted by your dad for years and then being expected to act like nothing happened? And they have tried to contact him over the years and he never responded. They need a dad, he wasn’t available.
Anonymous wrote:
My mother’s husband did this. His adult kids despise him. I personally don’t blame them.
He’s attempting to reach out to his own because well they’re his kids.