Anonymous wrote:
I'd absolutely die on this hill. No way he'd be coming to my home (esp. with a young child) at this point. If DH would leave me, I guess I'd have to live with that. I'd start getting your ducks in a row and not waiting for things to happen.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.... I should add, things are just short of personally violent at his moms. Broken doors, window glass, screaming, cursing, etc. my husband feels that it would be different here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why OP thinks she will lose custody of her daughter if her husband leaves over this.
Either OP is full of it and this is an excuse to play victim, or there’s something problematic in OP’s history that she’s withholding. Either way, her credibility is suspect here.
Anonymous wrote:He’s not your child. Let his dad take the lead.
Would you be so hard if this was about your younger child? Another reason why mixed families rarely work.
Anonymous wrote:To those who are suggesting that they get DSS his own apartment or some variation of this, remember that OP will have to sign the lease and will have her family’s credit ruined when DSS doesn’t step up to the plate - which by history is unlikely.
I don’t know the answer here. I agree with those who say that mom and dad created the problem and that OP might have some complicity here. But what’s done is done. Sadly they didn’t deal with issues before DSS hit age 18 - they could have forced treatment. But now they have to live with the bed they made. I think that moving DSS into the house poses serious risks for OPs daughter. She’s the shining star to the problem child who has demonstrated a propensity for violence. It is a no brainer that this is a problem and you get child is at risk. But dad who bears some responsibility and stepmom who has some role have to make a plan. Do they abandon or do they give every resource they have (time, money or whatever) to make him successful regardless of the impact of the lives of the adults.