Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have not read these responses
You earn fine. Congratulations and I bet you work hard. My response: The conflict will age you. I think you are circling around the right choice. Make a deal. I actually would advise trying to make the parenting very even and balanced out of the gate. Beginnings matter. Build a good foundation for the rest of your parenthood…
My only advice now is figure out how to make the person you married content post-marriage. It will make your life easier. That’s a project in itself.
—From Experience
Yikes, as someone who did the bold for a good 10-15 years, I do disagree. Orienting myself around making placating divorced Dad was a time, money and energy-suck. I had no control over him and all that was energy wasted.
It also was a bad example for my kids. It taught them not to have boundaries for themselves. Only when the kids started seeing a therapist did they have someone who told them it was OK to say NO.
I would figure out how to disconnect yourself from STBXDH. Parallel parent don’t co-parent. What happens at his house is his responsibility and if the kids are unhappy with him, that is a problem for him to solve.
Grey rock him. Do not tell him anything about your life. Tell him what is necessary for the logistics and safety of the kids, but beyond that, it’s his job to develop a relationship with the kids so that they tell him stuff about their inner lives.
Stop doing the labor for your co-parent. Do the labor for yourself and your kids instead. That is your best investment.
Your life is separate from your kids lives. He does not need to know about your life, nor do you need to know about his. However you both share kids and you need to co-parent. You are the problem.
Ex-spouses do not need to CO-parent with uncooperative partners - co-parenting implies doing things together, and that is not always possible. A parent can choose to parallel parent, and this may be healthier for the kids. Parallel parenting means that each parent basically does what they want on their time and the other parent doesn't participate or comment and there are either no or very limited joint events.
I tried for many years to co-parent. I invited the other parent into my home for meals on a weekly basis (otherwise he simply wouldn't have seen the kids because it required too much effort on his part), I split all holidays (gave him Xmas gift lists, etc.), looped him in on all health and school issues, etc. But, TBH, he still couldn't step up. I finally stopped all this when he was verbally abusive to me in my own home in front of the kids. Previously, he had only been verbally abusive and manipulative in private, but I tolerated that for many years because I thought it was in my kids' interest to maintain a relationship with their dad. It took me a lot of therapy to learn that I was setting a bad example for the kids and that I needed to let him sink or swim on his own. He sank. It's sad for the kids, but it's better that they know the reality and learn to deal with it. It's not something I have the power to fix.
So, no, I am not the problem. I am the parent who offered 505/50 custody and ended up with full custody because exDH didn't want to have custody. But, thanks for playing blame the woman.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have not read these responses
You earn fine. Congratulations and I bet you work hard. My response: The conflict will age you. I think you are circling around the right choice. Make a deal. I actually would advise trying to make the parenting very even and balanced out of the gate. Beginnings matter. Build a good foundation for the rest of your parenthood…
My only advice now is figure out how to make the person you married content post-marriage. It will make your life easier. That’s a project in itself.
—From Experience
Yikes, as someone who did the bold for a good 10-15 years, I do disagree. Orienting myself around making placating divorced Dad was a time, money and energy-suck. I had no control over him and all that was energy wasted.
It also was a bad example for my kids. It taught them not to have boundaries for themselves. Only when the kids started seeing a therapist did they have someone who told them it was OK to say NO.
I would figure out how to disconnect yourself from STBXDH. Parallel parent don’t co-parent. What happens at his house is his responsibility and if the kids are unhappy with him, that is a problem for him to solve.
Grey rock him. Do not tell him anything about your life. Tell him what is necessary for the logistics and safety of the kids, but beyond that, it’s his job to develop a relationship with the kids so that they tell him stuff about their inner lives.
Stop doing the labor for your co-parent. Do the labor for yourself and your kids instead. That is your best investment.
Your life is separate from your kids lives. He does not need to know about your life, nor do you need to know about his. However you both share kids and you need to co-parent. You are the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s a bad idea because it’s for your kids. If you don’t need it for day to day expenses, then save it for college or grad school. If not needed for that, give it to them for a down payment or wedding or whatever it is.
I think people underestimate the role of the Father/Mother.
My neighbor told me that her children teared up during a “father scene” in a movie. My neighbor shared that seeing her kids (maybe it was her youngest, a boy?? ) do that made her feel sad and awful.
Think about it.
Anonymous wrote:I did this many years ago. No child support for primary physical custody. The father did not want to pay any child support which is why he originally wanted at least 50 percent custody until I said I’d waive child support completely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:if he’s lazy or selfish he simply will not take them to their activities on his days.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he has them every weekend and you have them before and after work during the week, you are probably both spending about equal amounts of time with them / actively engaged and parenting. He might even be spending more time with the kids if he has Friday evening and all day Saturday and Sunday and you are spending Mon-Fri before work and Mon to Thurs after work. So forgoing child support makes sense. The time spent with kids is about 50/50 even if the official custody wouldn't be as it uses overnights.
It would be really stupid to give him every weekend. Is he going to take the kids to extracurriculars? Is he going to take them to friends birthday parties and play dates? If he has to drive along way to facilitate those activities it seems doubtful. I don’t know how old the kids are, but this type of stuff becomes increasingly important throughout elementary and especially in middle school.
OP didn't say he wouldn't. However, its not reasonable to only give him two days and then say he has to do all the heavy lifting with weekend stuff and he gets no downtime with the kids or free weekends while mom gets every weekend off.
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s a bad idea because it’s for your kids. If you don’t need it for day to day expenses, then save it for college or grad school. If not needed for that, give it to them for a down payment or wedding or whatever it is.
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone waived or accepted a very small amount of child support in exchange for getting primary custody of kids? Is that a bad idea? I make 200K/year working as an attorney and think I have a stable enough job. My priority is to keep my kids for the weekdays so there is no disruption in their school routine. Dad lives in another county.
Anonymous wrote:Obviously it depends on the individuals involved like um, everything. (?)
In my case, my former mate returned to the baseline—his personality baseline. We kneww each other for nearly 2o years prior to splitting.
He was livid angry with me for about two years. Perhaps 2.5: Those years were very difficult. He earned well and very well toward the end of our relationship. Money always flowed to the kids. His angry was all directed to me.
All by way of saying all individuals and circumstances are different. Sorry it was “yikes” and “yuck” you. I had a very challenging few years and then it got better. Many people told me that it would get better. And it did with effort.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have not read these responses
You earn fine. Congratulations and I bet you work hard. My response: The conflict will age you. I think you are circling around the right choice. Make a deal. I actually would advise trying to make the parenting very even and balanced out of the gate. Beginnings matter. Build a good foundation for the rest of your parenthood…
My only advice now is figure out how to make the person you married content post-marriage. It will make your life easier. That’s a project in itself.
—From Experience
Yikes, as someone who did the bold for a good 10-15 years, I do disagree. Orienting myself around making placating divorced Dad was a time, money and energy-suck. I had no control over him and all that was energy wasted.
It also was a bad example for my kids. It taught them not to have boundaries for themselves. Only when the kids started seeing a therapist did they have someone who told them it was OK to say NO.
I would figure out how to disconnect yourself from STBXDH. Parallel parent don’t co-parent. What happens at his house is his responsibility and if the kids are unhappy with him, that is a problem for him to solve.
Grey rock him. Do not tell him anything about your life. Tell him what is necessary for the logistics and safety of the kids, but beyond that, it’s his job to develop a relationship with the kids so that they tell him stuff about their inner lives.
Stop doing the labor for your co-parent. Do the labor for yourself and your kids instead. That is your best investment.
Anonymous wrote:I have not read these responses
You earn fine. Congratulations and I bet you work hard. My response: The conflict will age you. I think you are circling around the right choice. Make a deal. I actually would advise trying to make the parenting very even and balanced out of the gate. Beginnings matter. Build a good foundation for the rest of your parenthood…
My only advice now is figure out how to make the person you married content post-marriage. It will make your life easier. That’s a project in itself.
—From Experience