Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He's 17. As long as you brought him to visitation and encouraged him to try and work it out with his dad and not cheering or egging him on to walk out, then it's not on you. You can only do but so much... At that age can you truly force a child? This is on his father to reach out, encourage him to stay and work it out. You shouldn't have to do that for your ex.
He’s not 17, that was another poster. He’s 14.
If I said “I need you to do this.” he’d listen to me. Especially if he thought it could influence custody.
The court is going to expect you to follow and support the agreement. To me that means telling him they he needs to stay. You seem to be sending a message otherwise by letting him believe he doesn’t have to follow the custody schedule. If you don’t support it, it would be easy to argue that you aren’t complying.
You can’t force a kid to go with a parent unwillingly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He's 17. As long as you brought him to visitation and encouraged him to try and work it out with his dad and not cheering or egging him on to walk out, then it's not on you. You can only do but so much... At that age can you truly force a child? This is on his father to reach out, encourage him to stay and work it out. You shouldn't have to do that for your ex.
He’s not 17, that was another poster. He’s 14.
If I said “I need you to do this.” he’d listen to me. Especially if he thought it could influence custody.
At 14 you need to be a parent and support dad no matter how much you hate him. If you don’t want him as dad then be honest and don’t take child support.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He's 17. As long as you brought him to visitation and encouraged him to try and work it out with his dad and not cheering or egging him on to walk out, then it's not on you. You can only do but so much... At that age can you truly force a child? This is on his father to reach out, encourage him to stay and work it out. You shouldn't have to do that for your ex.
He’s not 17, that was another poster. He’s 14.
If I said “I need you to do this.” he’d listen to me. Especially if he thought it could influence custody.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He's 17. As long as you brought him to visitation and encouraged him to try and work it out with his dad and not cheering or egging him on to walk out, then it's not on you. You can only do but so much... At that age can you truly force a child? This is on his father to reach out, encourage him to stay and work it out. You shouldn't have to do that for your ex.
He’s not 17, that was another poster. He’s 14.
If I said “I need you to do this.” he’d listen to me. Especially if he thought it could influence custody.
The court is going to expect you to follow and support the agreement. To me that means telling him they he needs to stay. You seem to be sending a message otherwise by letting him believe he doesn’t have to follow the custody schedule. If you don’t support it, it would be easy to argue that you aren’t complying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For now yes, he has to stay for the whole time frame. Tell him to go for a run if he needs a break.
That's what I'm asking, what happens if he goes for a run. So, he's leaving his Dad's home. He would of course come back for me to pick him up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He's 17. As long as you brought him to visitation and encouraged him to try and work it out with his dad and not cheering or egging him on to walk out, then it's not on you. You can only do but so much... At that age can you truly force a child? This is on his father to reach out, encourage him to stay and work it out. You shouldn't have to do that for your ex.
He’s not 17, that was another poster. He’s 14.
If I said “I need you to do this.” he’d listen to me. Especially if he thought it could influence custody.
Anonymous wrote:He's 17. As long as you brought him to visitation and encouraged him to try and work it out with his dad and not cheering or egging him on to walk out, then it's not on you. You can only do but so much... At that age can you truly force a child? This is on his father to reach out, encourage him to stay and work it out. You shouldn't have to do that for your ex.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, kid had a temper tantrum and you are supporting it. The teenage years will be very rough for you. Yes, you are trying to alienate dad. You tell teen to see his dad or there will be consequences and follow through. He is doing it to make you happy.
His Dad had a tantrum. He alienated my son himself. My question is whether I need to tell my kid to stay for the whole time period anyway.
Yes, you do. You should be encouraging him to build a healthy relationship with his father, to the extent possible. Also, you weren't there during the incident and shouldn't be so quick to demonize your ex. That doesn't help your son as much as you think it does. Ands the court will not look kindly on the perception you might be contributing to any alienation.
I was there. The incident happened when he came to my house without permission.
A healthy relationship with a parent includes boundaries. My kid frequently goes for a run or to a friend's house when he's at my house. And, I wouldn't want his Dad to get involved with what happens at my house.
This is why your kid behaves like he does. You both need to parent together. Both of you need to be equally involved in everything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, kid had a temper tantrum and you are supporting it. The teenage years will be very rough for you. Yes, you are trying to alienate dad. You tell teen to see his dad or there will be consequences and follow through. He is doing it to make you happy.
His Dad had a tantrum. He alienated my son himself. My question is whether I need to tell my kid to stay for the whole time period anyway.
NP and do you have a temporary custody agreement or order? If so, then yes, you have to abide by it. I mean, why you would you think you didn't have to follow the agreement or order? If not, then no you don't have to honor the informal visitation schedule. In that case probably not a big deal if you're doing 50/50 but if the dad has a nominal amount of time like every other weekend it's not going to look good if you're not making a solid effort to facilitate that minimal amount of visitation.
I have a temporary order.
To be clear, I plan to bring him to visitation. I'm not planning on picking him up early. But I want to know what happens if I drop him off, and then he leaves. Is that my responsibility? Or his dad's responsibility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, kid had a temper tantrum and you are supporting it. The teenage years will be very rough for you. Yes, you are trying to alienate dad. You tell teen to see his dad or there will be consequences and follow through. He is doing it to make you happy.
His Dad had a tantrum. He alienated my son himself. My question is whether I need to tell my kid to stay for the whole time period anyway.
Yes, you do. You should be encouraging him to build a healthy relationship with his father, to the extent possible. Also, you weren't there during the incident and shouldn't be so quick to demonize your ex. That doesn't help your son as much as you think it does. Ands the court will not look kindly on the perception you might be contributing to any alienation.
I was there. The incident happened when he came to my house without permission.
A healthy relationship with a parent includes boundaries. My kid frequently goes for a run or to a friend's house when he's at my house. And, I wouldn't want his Dad to get involved with what happens at my house.
Anonymous wrote:For now yes, he has to stay for the whole time frame. Tell him to go for a run if he needs a break.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, kid had a temper tantrum and you are supporting it. The teenage years will be very rough for you. Yes, you are trying to alienate dad. You tell teen to see his dad or there will be consequences and follow through. He is doing it to make you happy.
His Dad had a tantrum. He alienated my son himself. My question is whether I need to tell my kid to stay for the whole time period anyway.
NP and do you have a temporary custody agreement or order? If so, then yes, you have to abide by it. I mean, why you would you think you didn't have to follow the agreement or order? If not, then no you don't have to honor the informal visitation schedule. In that case probably not a big deal if you're doing 50/50 but if the dad has a nominal amount of time like every other weekend it's not going to look good if you're not making a solid effort to facilitate that minimal amount of visitation.