Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Break up with him, and offer to take his daughter out to hot chocolate just the two of you, and "break up" with her. Tell her she can reach out to you if she wants sometimes. Figure out what you're comfrotable with - meeting for hot chocolate once a month, sending a card at christmas, no contact at all ever? And make that clear to her.
If she asks but why don't you love my dad, refuse to tell her. "That's grownup stuff between your dad and me. Our breakup has NOTHING to do with you - you're FANTASTIC!"
What is this - a script for a soap opera?
Anonymous wrote:Break up with him, and offer to take his daughter out to hot chocolate just the two of you, and "break up" with her. Tell her she can reach out to you if she wants sometimes. Figure out what you're comfrotable with - meeting for hot chocolate once a month, sending a card at christmas, no contact at all ever? And make that clear to her.
If she asks but why don't you love my dad, refuse to tell her. "That's grownup stuff between your dad and me. Our breakup has NOTHING to do with you - you're FANTASTIC!"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is awful. My parents divorced when I was six and my dad met a wonderful woman a year later. From seven to eleven-years-old, I spent weekends and vacations with my dad and his girlfriend and truly loved her. They broke up and I was never allowed to see her. I cannot tell you how much this hurt me.
The first thing I did when I got to college was call her and we’ve been in close contact ever since.
I implore you to stay in the kids lives and do not cut them out.
+ 1 You created a bond with that other child and now you have an obligation to them, and also to your own DC. You need to keep doing things together as a group. Your relationship with your BF is not the kids' business.
Anonymous wrote:Your post makes no sense. Why have a child with a man you'd never marry. That is messy.
Anonymous wrote:Your post makes no sense. Why have a child with a man you'd never marry. That is messy.
Anonymous wrote:It is awful. My parents divorced when I was six and my dad met a wonderful woman a year later. From seven to eleven-years-old, I spent weekends and vacations with my dad and his girlfriend and truly loved her. They broke up and I was never allowed to see her. I cannot tell you how much this hurt me.
The first thing I did when I got to college was call her and we’ve been in close contact ever since.
I implore you to stay in the kids lives and do not cut them out.