am trying to ensure DC feels loved and valued despite dad not showing much interest.
Anonymous wrote:This might be a tad Machiavellian, but after supporting your kid per PP's advice above, you might want to suggest he make the most of a friendship with the gf's kids.
The gf's kids probably aren't 100% happy either, but if they are personable enough to also try, he can learn to do some things with them that are fun, without necessarily embracing them as family or permanent fixtures in his life.
That includes fairly neutral things like watching tv, playing video games, tutoring, baking, etc.
Girlfriend may be nicer if DS is popular with her children.
Anonymous wrote:Did he not want custody or you fought for full custody, got it and gone gave up as the fighting impacted the child too much? What does the court order say?
Anonymous wrote:When I divorced my ex he moved on with his mistress. My sons are not dumb. I never had bad mouthed her. They were in high school.
She would stay on the weekends and my sons were old enough to leave to stay with me. I finally asked my sons to accept her since my ex wanted to remarry. NOPE!
Soon enough the shit hit the fan and he broke up with her. Thank goodness.
This was the best outcome for all of us. You never know what the future holds.
Anonymous wrote:This might be a tad Machiavellian, but after supporting your kid per PP's advice above, you might want to suggest he make the most of a friendship with the gf's kids.
The gf's kids probably aren't 100% happy either, but if they are personable enough to also try, he can learn to do some things with them that are fun, without necessarily embracing them as family or permanent fixtures in his life.
That includes fairly neutral things like watching tv, playing video games, tutoring, baking, etc.
Girlfriend may be nicer if DS is popular with her children.
Anonymous wrote:How do you address this?
My child feels bad and I do not want it affecting 12yo DC's self-esteem that my ex is too "busy" to bother to make time for them to spend together. He averages one night a week with DC, which is around dinnertime til school the next morning, which when factoring in bedtime, is just a few hours of time together per week. If it's a weekend night, it is the same - DC picked up at dinnertime & dropped off at home by 9/10am. This is only IF he can fit it into his life with new GF and her kids whom he lives with (they are not his kids, he only met them in the past year but is with them every day, and my DC knows this).
I am trying to reassure DC of being absolutely worthy of parental love and not being in any way at fault or deserving of being treated this way by a parent. But it is hard to see DC hurting and wishing for dad to want to spend time together and continually being rejected bc dad is too busy with other priorities, ie a "new family."
Anonymous wrote:Is he paying you a ton of child support to make up for the fact he never has custody???
He better be.
I would never have agreed to this custody schedule. Dad needs more time with kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This might be a tad Machiavellian, but after supporting your kid per PP's advice above, you might want to suggest he make the most of a friendship with the gf's kids.
The gf's kids probably aren't 100% happy either, but if they are personable enough to also try, he can learn to do some things with them that are fun, without necessarily embracing them as family or permanent fixtures in his life.
That includes fairly neutral things like watching tv, playing video games, tutoring, baking, etc.
Girlfriend may be nicer if DS is popular with her children.
This is insane.