Anonymous wrote:I would listen to her mom for the most part. The one departure would be frequent text. Estranged ACs complain about that a lot. I would send one letter telling you that you love her and the door is always open. Tell her you are always willing to listen without judgment. Tell her you will participate in family therapy with her if she ever wants to do that. Don’t tell her how much you are hurting or that you miss her terribly, because she’ll be encouraged to view that as guilt tripping. And then respect her boundaries around communicating. If she comes back, do not push anything about your GF. Just concentrate on strengthening your relationship with DD and start from there.
I’m sorry OP, this NC thing has been an epidemic and so many families are needlessly damaged.
Anonymous wrote:Write a letter, tell her that it is not what you want, remind her that you love her and she will always be your priority but that you will do it only because she asked. You hope she has a change of heart and if and when she does you will still be there.
I’m undecided on including a part about deserving an explanation, I think that you deserve one but I’m not sure it won’t make matters worse.
Anonymous wrote:Follow your ex-wife's advice.
Anonymous wrote:Parents tend to see a rosy picture of how divorce was the best thing and hoe well kids adjusted. That's not the case, she is still emotionally unsorted. Also, you or GF might have knowingly or unknowingly offended her. Divorce was one shock, now that she is adjusted to new reality of two homes, one is getting restricted access. That's a whole new adjustment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not this simple unless your DD has major mental health issues. It sounds like at least one of you does.
There's something missing from this story.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not this simple unless your DD has major mental health issues. It sounds like at least one of you does.