Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless BF wants to be a dad to your kids, wait until your kids go to college.
I don't know what to say...your kids are teenagers and almost out of the house, and I would have no interest in being their father.
My kids have a dad. But BF is definitely interested in being "on the team," helping with logistics, homework, similar pastimes, and eventually combining households.
Anonymous wrote:I waited until I was divorced to date (keeping in mind I didn't want to ever have my kids know I was dating before being legally divorced, so I waited) and then not until I was dating one person exclusively for a year, with marriage as a mutual goal.
Anonymous wrote:One year POST DIVORCE minimum
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not until you're divorced FFS!
And the boyfriend has to actually be divorced too. 100% divorced. Not "separated".
It really depends on the circumstances, but I see very little benefit to introducing. Are you planning to insert this person into their home lives and make them spend time with this person? Expect pushback.
Why? Unless you were a total jerk to their other parent, most teenagers can understand that relationships end, and new ones start.
I'd want to be sure my kids had time to process the split, but once it's done, it's done. Expecting your parents to not move on is unhealthy in and of itself.
Feel free to move on but don’t expect them to live with your boyfriend. Just like you don’t want your child’s boyfriend shacking up at your house.
Don’t rotate people through your life.
Nobody wants a new dude in their life. You are welcome to have one but children don’t want to be around them.
Why are you assuming a rotation? OP said this is the first and only person they would be meeting, and it sounds like "serious" here means the BF/GF is interested in participating in all aspects of their joint lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not until you're divorced FFS!
And the boyfriend has to actually be divorced too. 100% divorced. Not "separated".
It really depends on the circumstances, but I see very little benefit to introducing. Are you planning to insert this person into their home lives and make them spend time with this person? Expect pushback.
Why? Unless you were a total jerk to their other parent, most teenagers can understand that relationships end, and new ones start.
I'd want to be sure my kids had time to process the split, but once it's done, it's done. Expecting your parents to not move on is unhealthy in and of itself.
Feel free to move on but don’t expect them to live with your boyfriend. Just like you don’t want your child’s boyfriend shacking up at your house.
Don’t rotate people through your life.
Nobody wants a new dude in their life. You are welcome to have one but children don’t want to be around them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless BF wants to be a dad to your kids, wait until your kids go to college.
I don't know what to say...your kids are teenagers and almost out of the house, and I would have no interest in being their father.
My kids have a dad. But BF is definitely interested in being "on the team," helping with logistics, homework, similar pastimes, and eventually combining households.
Anonymous wrote:Unless BF wants to be a dad to your kids, wait until your kids go to college.
I don't know what to say...your kids are teenagers and almost out of the house, and I would have no interest in being their father.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not until you're divorced FFS!
And the boyfriend has to actually be divorced too. 100% divorced. Not "separated".
It really depends on the circumstances, but I see very little benefit to introducing. Are you planning to insert this person into their home lives and make them spend time with this person? Expect pushback.
Why? Unless you were a total jerk to their other parent, most teenagers can understand that relationships end, and new ones start.
I'd want to be sure my kids had time to process the split, but once it's done, it's done. Expecting your parents to not move on is unhealthy in and of itself.
Anonymous wrote:Not until you're divorced FFS!
And the boyfriend has to actually be divorced too. 100% divorced. Not "separated".
It really depends on the circumstances, but I see very little benefit to introducing. Are you planning to insert this person into their home lives and make them spend time with this person? Expect pushback.