Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I feel for you. I had similar concerns about my exH.
I white-knuckled it in a sh*tty marriage for 8 years. I documented the hell out of the various incidents/insanity, but (obviously) no one could guarantee that he wouldn't have the kids for a substantial proportion of time. I waited until they seemed resilient, mature, and self-sufficient enough to hold their own. I filed when they were 11; divorce was finalized when they were 12 and a half. (Insult to injury, bc I was the plaintiff, I had to take a mandatory parenting class. He did not.)
Ultimately, I have them the vast majority of time; he has them every other weekend.
I'm not saying this was the best / right approach. Just sharing my experience.
Thank you, I've been leaning toward that approach - waiting until he is older and more self sufficient. Why did they make you take a parenting class?? Was all your documentation used in the divorce?
The parenting class is required for plaintiffs in divorce cases in Alexandria - where I live and was divorced.
Documentation - yes, but not all of it.
I'm a lawyer (not a family law / divorce lawyer) so I pulled together enough representative examples over the relevant time frame to show a clear pattern / practice of incompetence on his part, and reasonable and repeated attempts on my part to discuss, enlist professional help, etc., to modify his unreasonable behavior. I gave that documentation to my divorce lawyer.
If you decide to take the wait-til-maturity approach, you really need to commit to documenting. More is better than less. Even when you're tired and angry and wondering WTF is the point.
Do you have a support system? I really hope you do. I did, and it was (and is) invaluable.
Talk to people you trust. There's shame involved here (I know this very well). Don't let the shame factor isolate you.