Anonymous wrote:If you’re trying to do this without the courts involved, you’re going to have to let dad have (most of the) summer and school breaks (alternating who gets the first/second half of Christmas break).
If dad is actually unstable you may need court involvement for him to agree to limited visits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reasonable:
You are moving away so:
You fly the child out, leave chid with Dad Thanksgiving, Christmas and Spring Break and fly back and get him when break is over paying all expenses. Reasonable is Dad gets 8 weeks in the summer with you flying child back/forth and paying for the flights.
Reasonable is a 10 minute phone call every night.
No, 8 weeks alone is not reasonable for a 6 year old and a parent who sounds like they are basically unfit. reading between the lines, something is going on with the dad’s mental health.
OP, I think daily calls would be great but not if your ex will flake. Sometimes though it can be easier just to do something every day than 2x/week in terms of scheduling.
For visits - can your ex stay with you when he visits? One of the more functional long-distance divorces I know of, the noncustodial dad would go stay in the mom’s house for long visits (up to 2 weeks I think). An unusual situation but they were very dedicated to their child.
For visits to dad’s house - I would plan to travel out their with the child for a few years as much as possible, stay in an airbnb
Another possibility would be if your ex has any relatives you trust? Kid and dad could stay together with the in laws.
We only know OP side and OP is taking her child cross country and moving away. We don't know if he is unfit or she is making that up. She is claiming all these bad things about Dad. THIS IS WHY DAD's give up as they aren't allowed a relationship with their kids. OP needs to give Dad a chance to be Dad on his own and take care of his child. If she is always there, he cannot be a Dad and parent. At that point, just terminate the relationship all together as in the long run its easier than seeing your kid maybe once a year supervised and a few phone calls a month.
Dad absolutely should get the bulk of the summer. Child is going without Dad for 10-12 months a year. How is that ok, but not ok to be without mom so he can be with his Dad. Dad should not have to go to Mom's house to see his child. Dad probably only gets so much leave from his job.
Seriously, just tell ex, you don't want him involved anymore and let everyone move on and don't complain Dad isn't involved when its people like this poster who are preventing the relationships.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reasonable:
You are moving away so:
You fly the child out, leave chid with Dad Thanksgiving, Christmas and Spring Break and fly back and get him when break is over paying all expenses. Reasonable is Dad gets 8 weeks in the summer with you flying child back/forth and paying for the flights.
Reasonable is a 10 minute phone call every night.
No, 8 weeks alone is not reasonable for a 6 year old and a parent who sounds like they are basically unfit. reading between the lines, something is going on with the dad’s mental health.
OP, I think daily calls would be great but not if your ex will flake. Sometimes though it can be easier just to do something every day than 2x/week in terms of scheduling.
For visits - can your ex stay with you when he visits? One of the more functional long-distance divorces I know of, the noncustodial dad would go stay in the mom’s house for long visits (up to 2 weeks I think). An unusual situation but they were very dedicated to their child.
For visits to dad’s house - I would plan to travel out their with the child for a few years as much as possible, stay in an airbnb
Another possibility would be if your ex has any relatives you trust? Kid and dad could stay together with the in laws.
Anonymous wrote:Reasonable:
You are moving away so:
You fly the child out, leave chid with Dad Thanksgiving, Christmas and Spring Break and fly back and get him when break is over paying all expenses. Reasonable is Dad gets 8 weeks in the summer with you flying child back/forth and paying for the flights.
Reasonable is a 10 minute phone call every night.
Anonymous wrote:Why can't dad read him a story each night via FaceTime? If you're East Coast, at 8pm it's 5pm in CA and dad can get off work, read DS a story and chat about his day for a half hour. That can be your time to shower, clean up the kitchen, whatever.
Anonymous wrote:I'm going through a divorce where my ex will live on one coast and I will live on the other. He agrees that it's best for our 6 year old son to live with me primarily. (He is a very loving father but does not have his life together and can barely take care of himself.) I want to foster a good relationship between him and my son, and I know he misses our son terribly and wants to see him as much as possible. He's very sad we will be living on opposite coasts and is in a bit of a tailspin about it. I'd like to set some sort of expectations so that not everything is "we will see." We are also trying to do this without court involvement, if possible. What is reasonable for phone/video calls with dad- maybe twice a week? What about visits? (Remember, he is young and can't fly alone that far.) I was thinking dad could try to come here maybe 3x/year and I could take son to other coast maybe 2x/year. Am I totally off base? I'm hesitant to commit to something like full summers there for kid, as his dad really needs to get his life together before that makes sense. I also don't think my kid would be able to go that long without me as he's quite attached. I mean, I'm sure he'd survive, I'm not trying to be self-centered, but it would be very hard for him emotionally as I know he feels more secure/safe with me. Just trying to get a sense for what others have done in similar situations, what is reasonable, etc. (Side note- child support is not in question here. We have a written agreement that neither of us will pay child support and I intend to honor it.)