Anonymous wrote:It's his responsibility to have a relationship with his child[u], you cannot make that happen. You should have a set visitation schedule, typically at that age what is best for the child is several short visits a week to maintain continuity, but I don't know if he'll be on board with that.
I separated when my son was 18 months and he's now almost 8 and hasn't seen his dad in 4 years. It's hard to believe there are dads out there like that, but there are. And my son is doing fine despite that.
I mean this kindly, but I suggest you invest your time and energy in something that's going to be good for you.
Anonymous wrote:I'd discuss it with a family therapist knowledgeable about divorce/child visitation/etc. And make a plan going forward that is in the best interests of your son's emotional well being.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I knew something was wrong with you when you didn't ask for something that you are legally entitled too, i.e. child support. Your special needs comment only bears that out. You chose to have premarital sex and it bit you in the ass. If you truly felt that children need dads, you would have lived accordingly. I'd be willing to chalk an opps pregnancy to a bad decision, but it seems you've learned nothing, about compassion, about the law, and how to conduct yourself like a lady. Your post is current information about yourself not rehashing the past. From where I sit, you and your ex deserved each other. It's too bad your child has to suffer with an absent father and a cruel mother
Anonymous wrote:OP, I knew something was wrong with you when you didn't ask for something that you are legally entitled too, i.e. child support. Your special needs comment only bears that out. You chose to have premarital sex and it bit you in the ass. If you truly felt that children need dads, you would have lived accordingly. I'd be willing to chalk an opps pregnancy to a bad decision, but it seems you've learned nothing, about compassion, about the law, and how to conduct yourself like a lady. Your post is current information about yourself not rehashing the past. From where I sit, you and your ex deserved each other. It's too bad your child has to suffer with an absent father and a cruel mother
Anonymous wrote:Get some therapy, some legal advice (in case as a PP mentions he meets a new girl and decides to be Superdad to impress her and then files for custody), if his other grandparents want to stay part of your DS's life - find a way to formalize that/make it happen, and find a man worthy of your time and attentions that you can also treat like a King.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, thanks for these replies. Seems that the consensus is to stop reaching out to him, which is my thought as well. And that's heartbreaking for our DS.
To the poster who stated I'm asking a lot from him, am I? I've never sought child support, asked him to do any overnights, or created drama. I understand your point; he didn't ask to be a father. But I didn't ask to be a mom in the way that this happened, and DS is a blessing. Truly. And in life, when two adults decide to sleep together, babies are a possibility. Our responsibility in DS's birth is completely shared, which is why I believe we share responsibility for DS's emotional health. I am happy to take on everything else. But the kid needs his Dad. It pains me that my ex can't even do that, for a healthy child, with no special needs, who's a joy to be around (that is not a statement denigrating special needs children; I mention it only because those parents have huge extra responsibilities).
It just couldn't be easier. Except to him (ex), it's not. Now that DS is 3, I'm considering starting dating again, I'd really like this boy to have a good man in his life. I'd like that for myself as well. I guess we'll see.