Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who is right? I work fully remote and have permission to work from anywhere. So during the summer I am talking the teens to my hometown (amazing, cool city) for 2 months. Kids love it. DH put himself in a position where it’s a bit harder to join, due to a complicated per situation he caused himself. Also he just doesn’t want to do it. Now he’s angry. AITA?
Yes, not only are YTA but your DH also has grounds for legal proceedings. You don’t get to unilaterally decide to relocate your kids for two months and deprive the other parent of access without his consent.
OMG, what a strange and weird person you are. It’s not that he said he refuses to let them go, and withheld consent, he’s just not happy about it. He never did anything with them during the summer anyway. So we’d all just be sitting at home all summer and do nothing if it were up to him. What a peach you are. Go somewhere else with your fake “legal” statements. What a loser you are.
Wow! Why did you ask if you don’t really want to hear anyone’s opinion? And then you call them a loser? Are you 12?
It’s really outrageous when people adopt pseudo-legal arguments in an attempt to scare someone into some sort of action or non-action. It’s a pet peeve. PP is clearly not a lawyer, otherwise s/he wouldn’t have written such nonsensical threat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who is right? I work fully remote and have permission to work from anywhere. So during the summer I am talking the teens to my hometown (amazing, cool city) for 2 months. Kids love it. DH put himself in a position where it’s a bit harder to join, due to a complicated per situation he caused himself. Also he just doesn’t want to do it. Now he’s angry. AITA?
Yes, not only are YTA but your DH also has grounds for legal proceedings. You don’t get to unilaterally decide to relocate your kids for two months and deprive the other parent of access without his consent.
This is hilarious.
DH is shorthand for husband. They are married and until they divorce they both have full custody of their children and there is no scenario where a summer trip would be a legal issue.
It sounds like the husband is jealous the mom and kids are going to have fun without him.
I honestly don’t get how people are saying this is okay. So as a mom who has a non telework friendly job, my teleworking DH can just inform me that he is taking the kids to spend the entire summer with his family in another state and I have no recourse to prevent him from doing so and effectively depriving me of seeing my children for 8-10 weeks? Thankfully he isn’t an a**hole and would never dream of doing so but still that just doesn’t seem right.
What if rather than being teens the children were preschool aged or younger? Does that change your perspective? This isn’t a case of DH just being jealous of missing out on a fun experience but rather a significant chunk of time in his children’s life.
I would hope this would be a dialog between the parents and I think it's really pretty immature of one parent to say "I can't go so no one can". This situation begs for some kind of compromise - maybe the teleworking parent goes for a shorter time or the non-teleworking parent comes for part of the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who is right? I work fully remote and have permission to work from anywhere. So during the summer I am talking the teens to my hometown (amazing, cool city) for 2 months. Kids love it. DH put himself in a position where it’s a bit harder to join, due to a complicated per situation he caused himself. Also he just doesn’t want to do it. Now he’s angry. AITA?
Yes, not only are YTA but your DH also has grounds for legal proceedings. You don’t get to unilaterally decide to relocate your kids for two months and deprive the other parent of access without his consent.
OMG, what a strange and weird person you are. It’s not that he said he refuses to let them go, and withheld consent, he’s just not happy about it. He never did anything with them during the summer anyway. So we’d all just be sitting at home all summer and do nothing if it were up to him. What a peach you are. Go somewhere else with your fake “legal” statements. What a loser you are.
Wow! Why did you ask if you don’t really want to hear anyone’s opinion? And then you call them a loser? Are you 12?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who is right? I work fully remote and have permission to work from anywhere. So during the summer I am talking the teens to my hometown (amazing, cool city) for 2 months. Kids love it. DH put himself in a position where it’s a bit harder to join, due to a complicated per situation he caused himself. Also he just doesn’t want to do it. Now he’s angry. AITA?
Yes, not only are YTA but your DH also has grounds for legal proceedings. You don’t get to unilaterally decide to relocate your kids for two months and deprive the other parent of access without his consent.
This is hilarious.
DH is shorthand for husband. They are married and until they divorce they both have full custody of their children and there is no scenario where a summer trip would be a legal issue.
It sounds like the husband is jealous the mom and kids are going to have fun without him.
I honestly don’t get how people are saying this is okay. So as a mom who has a non telework friendly job, my teleworking DH can just inform me that he is taking the kids to spend the entire summer with his family in another state and I have no recourse to prevent him from doing so and effectively depriving me of seeing my children for 8-10 weeks? Thankfully he isn’t an a**hole and would never dream of doing so but still that just doesn’t seem right.
What if rather than being teens the children were preschool aged or younger? Does that change your perspective? This isn’t a case of DH just being jealous of missing out on a fun experience but rather a significant chunk of time in his children’s life.
Anonymous wrote:NP. I grew up spending the summers with grandparents 10,000 miles away. My dad couldn't come. My mom came. I would have never been so close with my grandparents without those summers. My kids are now 3,000 miles away from their grandparents who don't travel anymore because of age/health. I have been taking them since they were 2 years old every summer for two months to stay with them. If DH is upset, then that is his issue. Who knows how long my parents will be living. They are already in their mid-80s. In OPs case she is going to her hometown so I assume there will be her family there too. Go for it. DH has 10 months of the year with them.
Anonymous wrote:I can see why DH is upset. And your attitude in the OP and subsequent weirdly aggressive additional post suggests that you don’t care about him or his feelings. You asked if YATA. Someone indicated you might be. You got upset.
It sounds great for you and the kids but not your DH. Can’t you reach a compromise?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who is right? I work fully remote and have permission to work from anywhere. So during the summer I am talking the teens to my hometown (amazing, cool city) for 2 months. Kids love it. DH put himself in a position where it’s a bit harder to join, due to a complicated per situation he caused himself. Also he just doesn’t want to do it. Now he’s angry. AITA?
Yes, not only are YTA but your DH also has grounds for legal proceedings. You don’t get to unilaterally decide to relocate your kids for two months and deprive the other parent of access without his consent.
This is hilarious.
DH is shorthand for husband. They are married and until they divorce they both have full custody of their children and there is no scenario where a summer trip would be a legal issue.
It sounds like the husband is jealous the mom and kids are going to have fun without him.
I honestly don’t get how people are saying this is okay. So as a mom who has a non telework friendly job, my teleworking DH can just inform me that he is taking the kids to spend the entire summer with his family in another state and I have no recourse to prevent him from doing so and effectively depriving me of seeing my children for 8-10 weeks? Thankfully he isn’t an a**hole and would never dream of doing so but still that just doesn’t seem right.
What if rather than being teens the children were preschool aged or younger? Does that change your perspective? This isn’t a case of DH just being jealous of missing out on a fun experience but rather a significant chunk of time in his children’s life.
So even if it were a great opportunity for your kids, you'd say no because it's not good for you?
That's a bummer.
Anonymous wrote:Who is right? I work fully remote and have permission to work from anywhere. So during the summer I am talking the teens to my hometown (amazing, cool city) for 2 months. Kids love it. DH put himself in a position where it’s a bit harder to join, due to a complicated per situation he caused himself. Also he just doesn’t want to do it. Now he’s angry. AITA?