Anonymous wrote:Just say, how can I best get full custody with only limited supervised visitation? And, how can I maximize my child support?
Anonymous wrote:OP you’re ridiculous thinking that you’re going to tell him you want to divorce and that he’s going to do the research and neatly give you his plan. If he could do that you wouldn’t be divorcing.
YOU need to figure out what you want, research it, ask for it and file for separation. YOU need to figure out how you’re going to live in separate houses and who’s going to move or whatever. If you wait for him to take initiative you’re going to be waiting fir a decade or more.
Anonymous wrote:It seems like you're a little bit in denial and hoping he's going to collaborate with you (or not be a giant pain) and that he's going to be an adequate parent for any amount of time longer than 20 minutes. And he's in denial that you're really going to divorce him and what that's going to mean for his lifestyle and his money. You need to do something to get him out of his denial, but that'll probably make life in the home much worse because he'll dysregulate and act out. I dunno what you can do about it. Maybe serve him and have a plan to stay elsewhere while he processes and calms down.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like he is going to avoid until you serve him. He needs to accept that you are serious and that he needs to undertake what is likely a very emotionally upsetting and logistically difficult process for him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:May need to consider requesting a guardian ad litem (spelling?) to represent the kid, so court does not see it as an parent tug of war.
What’s the tug of war here?
She sounds ready to offer 50/50 and that 50/50 is better for the kids than this current state of being.
It seems to be over the house, and over his willingness to collaborate at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:May need to consider requesting a guardian ad litem (spelling?) to represent the kid, so court does not see it as an parent tug of war.
What’s the tug of war here?
She sounds ready to offer 50/50 and that 50/50 is better for the kids than this current state of being.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much custody does your husband want?
Does your child have an IEP? Ask your lawyer about putting language in your divorce agreement that custodial parent must take child to all medical appointments including therapy. Failure to do so should be grounds for losing physical custody.
Can they put in language that the kid be on time for all appointments (ortho, sports practice, games, parties) as well?
Anonymous wrote:How much custody does your husband want?
Does your child have an IEP? Ask your lawyer about putting language in your divorce agreement that custodial parent must take child to all medical appointments including therapy. Failure to do so should be grounds for losing physical custody.
Anonymous wrote:May need to consider requesting a guardian ad litem (spelling?) to represent the kid, so court does not see it as an parent tug of war.