Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what happens when women spitefully exclude their ex from their sons lives in order to punish their ex.
WTF? You must be a troll. Sure some kids their kids away, but plenty of dads ignore their kids, mine included. Mom encouraged me to maintain a relationship but he stood us up or ignored us when we visited. Good times, not.
The damage an uninterested father can do is awful. I offered 50/50 custody, but Ex never took it. I bend over backward to facilitate Ex to visitw/ kids. I really had to back him in a corner to get him to take kids for 2 nights this Xmas holiday & he made other plans for Xmas day, which was available to him.
In retrospect I wish I had gotten the kids to therapy earlier. Even though things appeared good on the surface, they were not.
Exactly. The men’s rights troll needs to go look at the data. Many men tend to parent whatever children are in their house. So they often provide more attention to their step kids or younger kids with new partner.
How is "the data" going to show you whether or not the reason men "parent the child that is in the house" id because they have no chiice, because their spiteful ex-wife denied them access to the kids and alienated the kids? That is precisely the kind of problem that won't be studied because it would make women look bad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what happens when women spitefully exclude their ex from their sons lives in order to punish their ex.
WTF? You must be a troll. Sure some kids their kids away, but plenty of dads ignore their kids, mine included. Mom encouraged me to maintain a relationship but he stood us up or ignored us when we visited. Good times, not.
The damage an uninterested father can do is awful. I offered 50/50 custody, but Ex never took it. I bend over backward to facilitate Ex to visitw/ kids. I really had to back him in a corner to get him to take kids for 2 nights this Xmas holiday & he made other plans for Xmas day, which was available to him.
In retrospect I wish I had gotten the kids to therapy earlier. Even though things appeared good on the surface, they were not.
Exactly. The men’s rights troll needs to go look at the data. Many men tend to parent whatever children are in their house. So they often provide more attention to their step kids or younger kids with new partner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what happens when women spitefully exclude their ex from their sons lives in order to punish their ex.
WTF? You must be a troll. Sure some kids their kids away, but plenty of dads ignore their kids, mine included. Mom encouraged me to maintain a relationship but he stood us up or ignored us when we visited. Good times, not.
The damage an uninterested father can do is awful. I offered 50/50 custody, but Ex never took it. I bend over backward to facilitate Ex to visitw/ kids. I really had to back him in a corner to get him to take kids for 2 nights this Xmas holiday & he made other plans for Xmas day, which was available to him.
In retrospect I wish I had gotten the kids to therapy earlier. Even though things appeared good on the surface, they were not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what happens when women spitefully exclude their ex from their sons lives in order to punish their ex.
WTF? You must be a troll. Sure some kids their kids away, but plenty of dads ignore their kids, mine included. Mom encouraged me to maintain a relationship but he stood us up or ignored us when we visited. Good times, not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what happens when women spitefully exclude their ex from their sons lives in order to punish their ex.
WTF? You must be a troll. Sure some kids their kids away, but plenty of dads ignore their kids, mine included. Mom encouraged me to maintain a relationship but he stood us up or ignored us when we visited. Good times, not.
Anonymous wrote:This is what happens when women spitefully exclude their ex from their sons lives in order to punish their ex.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in a similar situation OP. My DS is 16 and struggles with depression, anxiety, and now awful outbursts of anger. He sometimes really loses it and I know that he is scared and feels out of control. It's horrible for his two sisters and me, as well as for him.
He's been seeing the same therapist since he was in grade school, attends a wonderful and supportive school, does well academically and has good friends. Generally, he is a good kid, and a good brother and son. But I know he is angry at his father, and I'm the safe one (and the only one) he can take it out on. Impulse control is a challenge at this age anyway, and I am scared that with this anger about the divorce and his absent father, I'm scared he is going to run off the rails, or get in real trouble. It's hard enough to be a single mom, but I feel like I'm failing my son. He needs a father figure, and I am just me, his mom. it's just hard. I keep trying, and listening, and telling him that I love him and that I will never ever give up on him or our family.
IMO you should both start therapy ASAP.
Hugs.
I sent my 16 y o to residential treatment. I didn't find that weekly therapy or even intensive outpatient was enough. Problem is cost - insurance paid very little so it's mostly out of pocket. If you can afford it, it's worth looking into. Good luck to you both.
Anonymous wrote:I'm in a similar situation OP. My DS is 16 and struggles with depression, anxiety, and now awful outbursts of anger. He sometimes really loses it and I know that he is scared and feels out of control. It's horrible for his two sisters and me, as well as for him.
He's been seeing the same therapist since he was in grade school, attends a wonderful and supportive school, does well academically and has good friends. Generally, he is a good kid, and a good brother and son. But I know he is angry at his father, and I'm the safe one (and the only one) he can take it out on. Impulse control is a challenge at this age anyway, and I am scared that with this anger about the divorce and his absent father, I'm scared he is going to run off the rails, or get in real trouble. It's hard enough to be a single mom, but I feel like I'm failing my son. He needs a father figure, and I am just me, his mom. it's just hard. I keep trying, and listening, and telling him that I love him and that I will never ever give up on him or our family.
IMO you should both start therapy ASAP.
Hugs.