Anonymous wrote:Seriously! So typically male! of course, the kids say, no thanks!
Almost all kids will say that, in an awkward situation. Dad should be saying here is pizza!
Anonymous wrote:I think your ex should put dinner on the table, in response to your expressions of how this isn’t working well for you, and if kid doesn’t eat it, so be it. But since you can’t control your ex or your child on this issue, you have to control yourself. You have to not care he’s not getting a perfect dinner, finish your dinner before he gets home, and sit at the table and chat with him while he gets his own food after he gets home if he wants to eat. No anger, be pleasant and engaged, but he does it. Teach him how to make an egg or heat up a frozen dinner.
Anonymous wrote:Tell him that he has to eat dinner at Dad’s. There will be no dinner at home other than oatmeal. Do this every time. He will change his ways very soon. He may just like that you eat as a family on these days (you say ex joins you?).
Anonymous wrote:You need to talk to your ex and say Larlo needs to eat at 7 PM. Dad isn't really a Dad and just a favorite uncle and this is an issue when he's only a visitor in Dad's home vs. a parent. Maybe you should "allow" Dad to be a real parent. It sounds like you are restricting time with Dad and then acting upset that Dad isn't a Dad. That's on you. Dad doesn't do "child care" because you restrict his access. Its one night a week. Dad offers, your kid is a brat and prefers video games, says no and knows you will feed him later. So, other option is to say eat at Dad's or no dinner when you get home.
I think what’s generally seen as normal is every other weekend.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is dad only seeing him a few hours a week? Maybe the kid feels uneasy or awkward around him if he only sees him that infrequently. We saw my dad every other weekend and I was a bit afraid of him because he was an alcoholic and didn't want him to yell at me.
I thought this was a normal custody arrangement for a younger kid still in school??
Anonymous wrote:Why is dad only seeing him a few hours a week? Maybe the kid feels uneasy or awkward around him if he only sees him that infrequently. We saw my dad every other weekend and I was a bit afraid of him because he was an alcoholic and didn't want him to yell at me.
Anonymous wrote:Why is dad only seeing him a few hours a week? Maybe the kid feels uneasy or awkward around him if he only sees him that infrequently. We saw my dad every other weekend and I was a bit afraid of him because he was an alcoholic and didn't want him to yell at me.
Anonymous wrote:Your ex sounds annoying. He should just fix dinner like a normal adult and put it on the table. By putting it on your son, I’m sure your son is just trying to be “easy” and not create work. And that’s really weird that your kid doesn’t spend the night more with his dad. I would tell your ex that you are switching to an overnight visit vs the 8pm late dinner/ pick up. Once they get into a dinner routine, this will work itself out. Or tell your ex your son is nervous and doesn’t like being asked if he is hungry. Maybe you and your ex can sort dinner and telll you son what the plan is when you drop him off.
Anonymous wrote:Tell him that he has to eat dinner at Dad’s. There will be no dinner at home other than oatmeal. Do this every time. He will change his ways very soon. He may just like that you eat as a family on these days (you say ex joins you?).