Anonymous wrote:My DD had a friend whose parents divorced & they a)kept the family home & b)got a condo relatively nearby (also in DMV). Then the parents, not the child, rotated. So the parents had to live out of a bag, not their DD. I think it was big of the adults to do this.
I am also a child of divorce, although my parents didn't split until I was in college. I cannot agree enough with PPs that it would help tremendously if the adults involved could be present in the same space without acrimony so that all future events (graduations, marriages, etc.) were not fraught with tension. One of my best friends splits 50:50 custody with her ex of their 16yo DC & they have worked so hard to become amicable. I am so proud of her/them. They will likely know I'm talking about them here bz it's such a telling detail, but they all (exes + new spouses + DC) attend trivia nights together as a team. +1000 for this couple, who are definitely doing this for the kids (it took awhile, but nobody wanted to live with bitterness).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The number one thing, looking back, is that I wish they had not made me shuffle between their houses every week (one week with dad, one week with mom). It left me feeling like I had no real home and was just living out of a duffel bag.
+1. Our schedule was 2 days, 2 days, 5 days, 5 days and it SUCKED. My friends' parents would even comment to me that it was so hard to try to make playdates with me because of my schedule. That's a lot for an 8 year old.
I'll also agree with the unpopular opinion on remarriage.
Don't use your kid as your therapist.
Don't point out things you dislike about your ex and then identify that trait in your child. To their face.
Put them away, but keep the photos. I'm always intrigued to look at them and think that, once upon a time, my parents could be in the same room and smiling.
How hard is it for the other parent to forward the email saying Larla is being asked for a play date. This is your day so please coordinate or decline.
As a stepparent if I have both addresses, I sent things like invitations to both parents since many would not work together.
Parenting with a every other weekend and 6 weeks summer is pointless. That's your favorite uncle situation, not a parent. At that point, just terminate the parents rights so everyone can move on.
You are very wrong. Plus logistically speaking divorced parents are not always able to remain within a 10 min drive from each other. 50/50 custody is not always possible when one parent gets relocated for work or various other life situations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The number one thing, looking back, is that I wish they had not made me shuffle between their houses every week (one week with dad, one week with mom). It left me feeling like I had no real home and was just living out of a duffel bag.
+1. Our schedule was 2 days, 2 days, 5 days, 5 days and it SUCKED. My friends' parents would even comment to me that it was so hard to try to make playdates with me because of my schedule. That's a lot for an 8 year old.
I'll also agree with the unpopular opinion on remarriage.
Don't use your kid as your therapist.
Don't point out things you dislike about your ex and then identify that trait in your child. To their face.
Put them away, but keep the photos. I'm always intrigued to look at them and think that, once upon a time, my parents could be in the same room and smiling.
How hard is it for the other parent to forward the email saying Larla is being asked for a play date. This is your day so please coordinate or decline.
As a stepparent if I have both addresses, I sent things like invitations to both parents since many would not work together.
Parenting with a every other weekend and 6 weeks summer is pointless. That's your favorite uncle situation, not a parent. At that point, just terminate the parents rights so everyone can move on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The number one thing, looking back, is that I wish they had not made me shuffle between their houses every week (one week with dad, one week with mom). It left me feeling like I had no real home and was just living out of a duffel bag.
+1. Our schedule was 2 days, 2 days, 5 days, 5 days and it SUCKED. My friends' parents would even comment to me that it was so hard to try to make playdates with me because of my schedule. That's a lot for an 8 year old.
I'll also agree with the unpopular opinion on remarriage.
Don't use your kid as your therapist.
Don't point out things you dislike about your ex and then identify that trait in your child. To their face.
Put them away, but keep the photos. I'm always intrigued to look at them and think that, once upon a time, my parents could be in the same room and smiling.
Anonymous wrote:My parents divorced when I was 5 and while I think overall they did a good job of maintaining civility and didn't badmouth each other to me, the thing that affected me most in a negative way was them using me as a conduit for communication rather than communicating with each other directly. One example I remember vividly was that my dad for some reason expected me, at 9, to tell my mom that my stepmother was moving in with us and later that she was pregnant. I was so anxious to discuss something like that with my mom that I held out for way too long and by the time she found out, she was upset with ME for keeping something so important from her. Many other times had to do with money, from the simple ("does your dad intend to pay for that field trip?") to the important ("tell your mom it's her turn to pay for college tuition this year."). I always felt caught in the middle and I hated it. So whatever you do, communicate directly with your ex, never through your kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The number one thing, looking back, is that I wish they had not made me shuffle between their houses every week (one week with dad, one week with mom). It left me feeling like I had no real home and was just living out of a duffel bag.
+1. Our schedule was 2 days, 2 days, 5 days, 5 days and it SUCKED. My friends' parents would even comment to me that it was so hard to try to make playdates with me because of my schedule. That's a lot for an 8 year old.
I'll also agree with the unpopular opinion on remarriage.
Don't use your kid as your therapist.
Don't point out things you dislike about your ex and then identify that trait in your child. To their face.
Put them away, but keep the photos. I'm always intrigued to look at them and think that, once upon a time, my parents could be in the same room and smiling.
Anonymous wrote:The number one thing, looking back, is that I wish they had not made me shuffle between their houses every week (one week with dad, one week with mom). It left me feeling like I had no real home and was just living out of a duffel bag.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The number one thing, looking back, is that I wish they had not made me shuffle between their houses every week (one week with dad, one week with mom). It left me feeling like I had no real home and was just living out of a duffel bag.
If you are still checking this thread, do you mind sharing what would have been preferred? The only friend I have with divorced parents who I really know well told me that his parents divorced when he was 12 or so and he told them he would not swap houses. He stayed solely at his mom's but maintained a great relationship with his dad and his dad picked him up from and dropped him off at his mom's but they went on outings. It seems that would pose a lot of logistical challenges as well- like if certain nights were dad's night to hang out, but there was homework or some other thing, then he still might have had to get driven to his dad's house or whatever to work on it. I am going to ask...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The number one thing, looking back, is that I wish they had not made me shuffle between their houses every week (one week with dad, one week with mom). It left me feeling like I had no real home and was just living out of a duffel bag.
If you are still checking this thread, do you mind sharing what would have been preferred? The only friend I have with divorced parents who I really know well told me that his parents divorced when he was 12 or so and he told them he would not swap houses. He stayed solely at his mom's but maintained a great relationship with his dad and his dad picked him up from and dropped him off at his mom's but they went on outings. It seems that would pose a lot of logistical challenges as well- like if certain nights were dad's night to hang out, but there was homework or some other thing, then he still might have had to get driven to his dad's house or whatever to work on it. I am going to ask...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The number one thing, looking back, is that I wish they had not made me shuffle between their houses every week (one week with dad, one week with mom). It left me feeling like I had no real home and was just living out of a duffel bag.
If you are still checking this thread, do you mind sharing what would have been preferred? The only friend I have with divorced parents who I really know well told me that his parents divorced when he was 12 or so and he told them he would not swap houses. He stayed solely at his mom's but maintained a great relationship with his dad and his dad picked him up from and dropped him off at his mom's but they went on outings. It seems that would pose a lot of logistical challenges as well- like if certain nights were dad's night to hang out, but there was homework or some other thing, then he still might have had to get driven to his dad's house or whatever to work on it. I am going to ask...