Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you have reasons for divorce that they thought were adequate? If you can decide you don't want to live with their dad, they can decide they don't want to live with your boyfriend.
Maybe they don't think your relationship will last. Fresh off a divorce, you can't really expect them to.
How is 4 years fresh off a divorce?
NP, btw.
Anonymous wrote:Did you have reasons for divorce that they thought were adequate? If you can decide you don't want to live with their dad, they can decide they don't want to live with your boyfriend.
Maybe they don't think your relationship will last. Fresh off a divorce, you can't really expect them to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Think about it from their perspective, OP. The status quo is tolerable to them. If they tell you the real reasons, you will just get upset and be mad at them or tell them they are wrong, and then you will tell hom what they said and marry him anyway and won't that be awkward. There is nothing good that could come from telling you.
+1. OP, what kind of reason could they give that would change anything for you?
Anonymous wrote:I've been divorced for 4 years. Dating a guy for 2 years. We recently got engaged. I'm very excited. He's a great guy, provides for my family well, loves my boys very much.
Problem is my boys have never taken to him. For the reason as they put it "he's not dad". There is nothing that I or my fiancé" can do to change this or make it better. My boys just want their parents back together. They have said this to me several times. I give no signs or indications that we are or ever will get back together. I have talked to them about why it didn't work out with their dad, and that their dad and I are trying to be great parents as that is our number 1 priority.
My boys are 17 and 12.
This is so difficult. When you get divorced, you think that you will be alone forever. I feel so lucky to have found someone so loving and supportive.
The fact that my kids won't accept him eats at him and me.
Day to day my kids act completely fine. We go to dinner, movies, amusement parks, have bonfires in the back yard, they play basketball together, we've even gone camping a few times and went on a beach vacation. They have fun and act happy every day.
The second the word wedding or marriage is brought up, they become extremely defensive and sometimes upset. They have said that they would not go to the wedding.
No wedding date is set, we are not in a hurry, we are thinking 1 year from now possibly, and nothing huge.
What do I do?
Break the engagement as that will please my kids?
Get married, and not have my kids at the wedding or happy?
I'm seriously stressed about this. Please help with some advice. I'm interested to know if any others have experienced this, and what seems to make it a bit easier for all involved.
Anonymous wrote:Think about it from their perspective, OP. The status quo is tolerable to them. If they tell you the real reasons, you will just get upset and be mad at them or tell them they are wrong, and then you will tell hom what they said and marry him anyway and won't that be awkward. There is nothing good that could come from telling you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have already broken their family. Do not continue to break their spirits by not listening to them. Post divorce your kids should be your focus. Their happiness trumps yours. Sorry about that.
+10000. Until they are 18, their happiness is yours OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good grief. No. You don't sacrifice your happiness to please them.
Start with family therapy.
+1
Exactly. Ask the therapist to help you talk about it, but they don't get to decide on the marriage.
A couple thoughts: Ask your sons to try to respect your fiance, even if they don't like him or want you to get married. Ask the oldest one how he wants girlfriends he brings home to be treated, and ask him if he thinks you get a say in who he dates. Remind them both that you love them and will support them no matter what happens--see if you can figure out what scares them so much about the change.