Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry, your post is confusing.
You said her dad is pcsing.
Then you said that he wilk want her to stay and you will want her to go.
That does not make sense.
Are you mom (non military), staying in DC and want kid to stay in DC?
Or are you dad (military) PCSing to another post and wanting daughter to move with you?
Saying the dad has an assignment and wants her to stay and other parent wants her to go makes no sense.
Her new / current DH is PCSing 1K miles away. ExDH will be in Washington DC.
Daughter stays with her established friends and routines and spends break with mom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry, your post is confusing.
You said her dad is pcsing.
Then you said that he wilk want her to stay and you will want her to go.
That does not make sense.
Are you mom (non military), staying in DC and want kid to stay in DC?
Or are you dad (military) PCSing to another post and wanting daughter to move with you?
Saying the dad has an assignment and wants her to stay and other parent wants her to go makes no sense.
Her new / current DH is PCSing 1K miles away. ExDH will be in Washington DC.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, your post is confusing.
You said her dad is pcsing.
Then you said that he wilk want her to stay and you will want her to go.
That does not make sense.
Are you mom (non military), staying in DC and want kid to stay in DC?
Or are you dad (military) PCSing to another post and wanting daughter to move with you?
Saying the dad has an assignment and wants her to stay and other parent wants her to go makes no sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much time until your husband's PCS?
IMHO you are heavily discounting the fact that you are the one requesting a change to the status quo. I would have a consult with a lawyer to (1) assess the strength of your position which may not be as strong as you think and (2) a lawyer could give you ideas other couples have used to negotiate an agreement in this regard.
I am not discounting that, believe me. But a judge is not going to keep a 13yo girl away from her mother if she expresses a strong preference for being with her. I personally don't think she is thinking through everything though, so I thought the psychologist may be able to help her in that regard.
All I'm saying is that you should confirm this with a lawyer to ascertain the strength of your legal position first if you have not done so already. Maybe you're right, maybe not. I think it would be worth spending $200 to find out for sure as these are state specific and often jurisdiction specific questions.
The other factor to consider, at least when I was in the Army, is that they seemed to rotate AD folks every 3 years or so which would put her in HS when the next rotation comes around. Perhaps your H can work out a deal to stay longer or volunteer for a deployment of some sort in exchange for more time at that station. It always seemed like officers had more say over the timing of their moves.
I asked the first question about when the PCS is scheduled because if it is in the near future your ex could drag this out in court and you will be at a significant disadvantage if you have already moved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much time until your husband's PCS?
IMHO you are heavily discounting the fact that you are the one requesting a change to the status quo. I would have a consult with a lawyer to (1) assess the strength of your position which may not be as strong as you think and (2) a lawyer could give you ideas other couples have used to negotiate an agreement in this regard.
I am not discounting that, believe me. But a judge is not going to keep a 13yo girl away from her mother if she expresses a strong preference for being with her. I personally don't think she is thinking through everything though, so I thought the psychologist may be able to help her in that regard.
Anonymous wrote:How much time until your husband's PCS?
IMHO you are heavily discounting the fact that you are the one requesting a change to the status quo. I would have a consult with a lawyer to (1) assess the strength of your position which may not be as strong as you think and (2) a lawyer could give you ideas other couples have used to negotiate an agreement in this regard.