Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s your concern for your child then bases on this text to you?
Dad is expressing regret. I don’t want to deprive my child of a relationship w/their father, but his past behavior has shown he isn’t a person to trust. Dad deprived child from a relationship with him, purposely.
I don’t want to harm my child by exposing them to a someone who may end up adding another layer of trauma and pain into their lives.
Respectfully- you chose to make said child with an untrustworthy man. You can’t now decide that they can’t see them. If dad wants a relationship he has a right to one.
Sounds like dear old dad left mom with a special needs 10 year old completely on her own to deal with puberty and a time when he was growing physically stronger and mom really could have used a dad in the household to help. Now that kid is in HS and the harder stuff is done he can come and play hero dad (or not, and leave the OP to deal with any disappointment and setbacks).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s your concern for your child then bases on this text to you?
Dad is expressing regret. I don’t want to deprive my child of a relationship w/their father, but his past behavior has shown he isn’t a person to trust. Dad deprived child from a relationship with him, purposely.
I don’t want to harm my child by exposing them to a someone who may end up adding another layer of trauma and pain into their lives.
Respectfully- you chose to make said child with an untrustworthy man. You can’t now decide that they can’t see them. If dad wants a relationship he has a right to one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s your concern for your child then bases on this text to you?
Dad is expressing regret. I don’t want to deprive my child of a relationship w/their father, but his past behavior has shown he isn’t a person to trust. Dad deprived child from a relationship with him, purposely.
I don’t want to harm my child by exposing them to a someone who may end up adding another layer of trauma and pain into their lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old is the kid? The answer would be very different if 5 years old or 17.
My child is 15 and has autism. He is has a flat presentation, verbal communication issues, and emotional regulation deficits. He is easily agitated and will physically lash out when upset frustrated.
I have no intention of doing anything that will be problematic for him.
PP with the suggestion you liked. With this added information, I think it's even more important to run the contact by/through the therapist.
Your ex probably will need professional help to re-establish any positive relationship. Because he may not know how to make a meaningful apology and how to keep in-person contacts positive with a teenager who views life through an ND perspective.
I would say to be cautious about in-person meetings. Maybe stick to Zoom calls of a predetermined fixed length (controllable environment, easily ended vs. a visit).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s your concern for your child then bases on this text to you?
Dad is expressing regret. I don’t want to deprive my child of a relationship w/their father, but his past behavior has shown he isn’t a person to trust. Dad deprived child from a relationship with him, purposely.
I don’t want to harm my child by exposing them to a someone who may end up adding another layer of trauma and pain into their lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old is the kid? The answer would be very different if 5 years old or 17.
My child is 15 and has autism. He is has a flat presentation, verbal communication issues, and emotional regulation deficits. He is easily agitated and will physically lash out when upset frustrated.
I have no intention of doing anything that will be problematic for him.
Anonymous wrote:What’s your concern for your child then bases on this text to you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to be careful that your kid doesn’t hate you later to find out that dad came to his senses but mom didn’t let them connect.
What? The dad reached out to the mom. The child has a cell phone, dad can reach out to kid directly. Don’t put dad’s choices on mom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d block him.
Who cares about his regret his emotions are not your problem anymore. I’d forward his text to his new wife then block them both.
It would create problems for everyone I think if I involved his wife. Not my circus. They can continue the circus without my attendance. Or my child. My kid is the one who deserves peace and respect.
I mean- she’s the ap who stepped into your circus. Would you have appreciated it if you’d gotten a heads up from AP before having your life dismantled?
Anonymous wrote:How old is the kid? The answer would be very different if 5 years old or 17.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d block him.
Who cares about his regret his emotions are not your problem anymore. I’d forward his text to his new wife then block them both.
It would create problems for everyone I think if I involved his wife. Not my circus. They can continue the circus without my attendance. Or my child. My kid is the one who deserves peace and respect.