Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. I currently live in the same house as my ex. The kids know we are not together. We live in separate areas.
I was curious if kids had positive experiences from this (having parents in one home, rather than kids having to go to separate homes).
As far as kids seeing the parents happy, is that really a concern of children, in the big scheme of things? I was telling a coworker that I lived this way and her response was, "kids need to see you Happy".
Do my kids really need to see me happy with someone other than their father? I am curious of this because my Kids know their Father and I aren't together, but are they really not benefiting from seeing a happy parent?
Np: I do think your kids should see both parents happy, but that doesn’t mean with someone else - just happy. I think that regardless of marital status. If one or both of you are visibly miserable that’s not good for anyone.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. I currently live in the same house as my ex. The kids know we are not together. We live in separate areas.
I was curious if kids had positive experiences from this (having parents in one home, rather than kids having to go to separate homes).
As far as kids seeing the parents happy, is that really a concern of children, in the big scheme of things? I was telling a coworker that I lived this way and her response was, "kids need to see you Happy".
Do my kids really need to see me happy with someone other than their father? I am curious of this because my Kids know their Father and I aren't together, but are they really not benefiting from seeing a happy parent?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. I currently live in the same house as my ex. The kids know we are not together. We live in separate areas.
I was curious if kids had positive experiences from this (having parents in one home, rather than kids having to go to separate homes).
As far as kids seeing the parents happy, is that really a concern of children, in the big scheme of things? I was telling a coworker that I lived this way and her response was, "kids need to see you Happy".
Do my kids really need to see me happy with someone other than their father? I am curious of this because my Kids know their Father and I aren't together, but are they really not benefiting from seeing a happy parent?
Ignore your coworker. No, your kids do not need to "see you happy" with another man. That coworker should mind their own damn business.
I do what you do in a marriage...we may continue to live this way even in a divorce for awhile but not forever. I have no interest in having my kids "see me happy" with another partner. The kids are the first priority...not another relationship. Your kids are not missing anything by not seeing you with someone else. That is a crazy statement. If you are pretty content, it is fine (and not yelling at your ex all the time and such). Your kids do not need to know about personal relationships. I am sure they are very happy with both parents in the house...even if it is not the perfect loving marriage example.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. I currently live in the same house as my ex. The kids know we are not together. We live in separate areas.
I was curious if kids had positive experiences from this (having parents in one home, rather than kids having to go to separate homes).
As far as kids seeing the parents happy, is that really a concern of children, in the big scheme of things? I was telling a coworker that I lived this way and her response was, "kids need to see you Happy".
Do my kids really need to see me happy with someone other than their father? I am curious of this because my Kids know their Father and I aren't together, but are they really not benefiting from seeing a happy parent?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What you are describing is bird nesting. There are tons of articles on it, and several threads on DCUM about bird nesting.
The alternative arrangement that you propose is not equal to bird nesting. Something more along the lines of a 50/50 split during the week but not a custody schedule where one parent only sees the kids everyone weekend.
It really sounds like you have a hidden agenda the way that you write the post.
NP here. I do not see nesting in the OP's description. OP is describing 1) parents who stay together in the house but live separately in the house as roommates (loveless, sexless, affectionate marriage) or 2) regular divorce where kids switch houses every week.
Bird nesting is where the kids stay put and the parents move in and out of the house. That is not what OP is describing.
My kids have scenario #1 and don't know any different. But it is miserable...and finally, after years, we plan to pull the plug and get divorced (and probably not nest...but might for a short period).
You can bird nest in the same house, parents just have assigned designated spaces.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What you are describing is bird nesting. There are tons of articles on it, and several threads on DCUM about bird nesting.
The alternative arrangement that you propose is not equal to bird nesting. Something more along the lines of a 50/50 split during the week but not a custody schedule where one parent only sees the kids everyone weekend.
It really sounds like you have a hidden agenda the way that you write the post.
NP here. I do not see nesting in the OP's description. OP is describing 1) parents who stay together in the house but live separately in the house as roommates (loveless, sexless, affectionate marriage) or 2) regular divorce where kids switch houses every week.
Bird nesting is where the kids stay put and the parents move in and out of the house. That is not what OP is describing.
My kids have scenario #1 and don't know any different. But it is miserable...and finally, after years, we plan to pull the plug and get divorced (and probably not nest...but might for a short period).
Anonymous wrote:What you are describing is bird nesting. There are tons of articles on it, and several threads on DCUM about bird nesting.
The alternative arrangement that you propose is not equal to bird nesting. Something more along the lines of a 50/50 split during the week but not a custody schedule where one parent only sees the kids everyone weekend.
It really sounds like you have a hidden agenda the way that you write the post.
Anonymous wrote:What you are describing is bird nesting. There are tons of articles on it, and several threads on DCUM about bird nesting.
The alternative arrangement that you propose is not equal to bird nesting. Something more along the lines of a 50/50 split during the week but not a custody schedule where one parent only sees the kids everyone weekend.
It really sounds like you have a hidden agenda the way that you write the post.