Anonymous wrote:I was in your DH’s position a year ago. I had felt dead for years, getting accolades all the time at work but my SAHM DW criticizing my efforts at home. Finally I met someone better and told her that I was divorcing her.
But she couldn’t look at all she did to ruin our marriage. We told the kids we were divorcing and cried and whatever. But once she saw pictures my girlfriend and I took when she was my friend and I took her to Europe for a conference, she went off the deep end. So I had to introduce my kids to my girlfriend so they could see she’s really cool and at her age understands my kids a lot better than my ex.
Now my ex refuses to build and maintain a friendship with us. It’s so selfish and immature. You’re supposed to make things as smooth as possible for the kids’ sake, but yet again my ex’s selfishness rules.
MD here. You have a personality disorder.
You stepped out of your marriage, and blamed your wife's criticisms at home for it, so you could start a relationship with a subordinate at work. You casually label her as "better" than your child's mother.
You blame having to introduce your kids to your AP because your wife saw pictures of your child-free European trip.
You assign the entire series of events, including the rocky path forward, to your ex's selfishness.
You're lurking on a parenting board and unironically piping up with your story. You're likely a troll (I always wonder what people like that get out of these made-up posts). If not, you are truly a cautionary tale of a man.
I was in your DH’s position a year ago. I had felt dead for years, getting accolades all the time at work but my SAHM DW criticizing my efforts at home. Finally I met someone better and told her that I was divorcing her.
But she couldn’t look at all she did to ruin our marriage. We told the kids we were divorcing and cried and whatever. But once she saw pictures my girlfriend and I took when she was my friend and I took her to Europe for a conference, she went off the deep end. So I had to introduce my kids to my girlfriend so they could see she’s really cool and at her age understands my kids a lot better than my ex.
Now my ex refuses to build and maintain a friendship with us. It’s so selfish and immature. You’re supposed to make things as smooth as possible for the kids’ sake, but yet again my ex’s selfishness rules.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Something like this happened when my parents split and I was the college student. For a long time my mother was incandescent with rage and really hard to be around. I didn’t know about the affair until she moved in with my dad. In the interim he was much easier to be around. Therapy is a good idea.
You had absolutely no sympathy for your mom, huh?
Kids (and most people) care about how they are treated. No one wants to be around someone who is raging for long. Parents make big exceptions for their kids, but kids aren’t supposed to have to parents their parents. They aren’t supposed to be doing heavy emotional lifting to manage their parents. I didn’t assume PP lacked sympathy, just that it was difficult to be raged at and around.
As much as I am furious right now, I would never rage/trauma dump on my kid. This is not their burden But they also deserve some version of the truth which is that this was not a mutual decision. They can put two and two together and as I said earlier, it's going to be obvious pretty quickly that Dad has moved on with someone else. I want to protect my kid but this is going to rock their world. But everything we would have done as a family over this break is now not happening. Most of their close HS friends will not be around over Thanksgiving. We've always had some Thanksgiving weekend family rituals that we have done for years that they always look forward to. I just need to figure when and how this news should be presented. It seems like the two best shitty options are 1. I tell them ahead of time what's going on and let them decide if they want to fly back for break or 2. sit down as a family when they get home, let dh break the news with me present so he doesn't get away with not being truthful that this was a unilateral decision. It's so fresh and new and I'm trying to manage two things right now - processing it myself and helping our kid process it. DH has been emotionally absent for years. He is blaming his decision on me - as I said to him the other day "you can point all the fingers you want at me, and I can certainly point plenty of fingers at myself, but you are not owning a single part of this in any way." Ugh. FML.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know if you read that DH took it upon himself to inform dc right away. We didn't have a discussion about it. He just did it. DC said dh told him that he had not been happy for a very long time. I asked if dh told him anything else, which he did not other than "we love you and we're here for you" so I told dc that dh has a girlfriend and left it at that. I'm so sorry your dad brought up sex with you. That's so so bad. I'm not going to be that parent. Ugh.Anonymous wrote:I was the kid in this scenario. Just tell dc the truth. And don’t rely on your spouse to do that. One of my worse memories was my dad like trying to explain that their sex life was bad. No child adult or otherwise wants to hear jack shit about their parents’ sex lives.
I was in your DH’s position a year ago. I had felt dead for years, getting accolades all the time at work but my SAHM DW criticizing my efforts at home. Finally I met someone better and told her that I was divorcing her.
But she couldn’t look at all she did to ruin our marriage. We told the kids we were divorcing and cried and whatever. But once she saw pictures my girlfriend and I took when she was my friend and I took her to Europe for a conference, she went off the deep end. So I had to introduce my kids to my girlfriend so they could see she’s really cool and at her age understands my kids a lot better than my ex.
Now my ex refuses to build and maintain a friendship with us. It’s so selfish and immature. You’re supposed to make things as smooth as possible for the kids’ sake, but yet again my ex’s selfishness rules.
I was in your DH’s position a year ago. I had felt dead for years, getting accolades all the time at work but my SAHM DW criticizing my efforts at home. Finally I met someone better and told her that I was divorcing her.
But she couldn’t look at all she did to ruin our marriage. We told the kids we were divorcing and cried and whatever. But once she saw pictures my girlfriend and I took when she was my friend and I took her to Europe for a conference, she went off the deep end. So I had to introduce my kids to my girlfriend so they could see she’s really cool and at her age understands my kids a lot better than my ex.
Now my ex refuses to build and maintain a friendship with us. It’s so selfish and immature. You’re supposed to make things as
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know if you read that DH took it upon himself to inform dc right away. We didn't have a discussion about it. He just did it. DC said dh told him that he had not been happy for a very long time. I asked if dh told him anything else, which he did not other than "we love you and we're here for you" so I told dc that dh has a girlfriend and left it at that. I'm so sorry your dad brought up sex with you. That's so so bad. I'm not going to be that parent. Ugh.Anonymous wrote:I was the kid in this scenario. Just tell dc the truth. And don’t rely on your spouse to do that. One of my worse memories was my dad like trying to explain that their sex life was bad. No child adult or otherwise wants to hear jack shit about their parents’ sex lives.
I was in your DH’s position a year ago. I had felt dead for years, getting accolades all the time at work but my SAHM DW criticizing my efforts at home. Finally I met someone better and told her that I was divorcing her.
But she couldn’t look at all she did to ruin our marriage. We told the kids we were divorcing and cried and whatever. But once she saw pictures my girlfriend and I took when she was my friend and I took her to Europe for a conference, she went off the deep end. So I had to introduce my kids to my girlfriend so they could see she’s really cool and at her age understands my kids a lot better than my ex.
Now my ex refuses to build and maintain a friendship with us. It’s so selfish and immature. You’re supposed to make things as smooth as possible for the kids’ sake, but yet again my ex’s selfishness rules.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know if you read that DH took it upon himself to inform dc right away. We didn't have a discussion about it. He just did it. DC said dh told him that he had not been happy for a very long time. I asked if dh told him anything else, which he did not other than "we love you and we're here for you" so I told dc that dh has a girlfriend and left it at that. I'm so sorry your dad brought up sex with you. That's so so bad. I'm not going to be that parent. Ugh.Anonymous wrote:I was the kid in this scenario. Just tell dc the truth. And don’t rely on your spouse to do that. One of my worse memories was my dad like trying to explain that their sex life was bad. No child adult or otherwise wants to hear jack shit about their parents’ sex lives.
I was in your DH’s position a year ago. I had felt dead for years, getting accolades all the time at work but my SAHM DW criticizing my efforts at home. Finally I met someone better and told her that I was divorcing her.
But she couldn’t look at all she did to ruin our marriage. We told the kids we were divorcing and cried and whatever. But once she saw pictures my girlfriend and I took when she was my friend and I took her to Europe for a conference, she went off the deep end. So I had to introduce my kids to my girlfriend so they could see she’s really cool and at her age understands my kids a lot better than my ex.
Now my ex refuses to build and maintain a friendship with us. It’s so selfish and immature. You’re supposed to make things as smooth as possible for the kids’ sake, but yet again my ex’s selfishness rules.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know if you read that DH took it upon himself to inform dc right away. We didn't have a discussion about it. He just did it. DC said dh told him that he had not been happy for a very long time. I asked if dh told him anything else, which he did not other than "we love you and we're here for you" so I told dc that dh has a girlfriend and left it at that. I'm so sorry your dad brought up sex with you. That's so so bad. I'm not going to be that parent. Ugh.Anonymous wrote:I was the kid in this scenario. Just tell dc the truth. And don’t rely on your spouse to do that. One of my worse memories was my dad like trying to explain that their sex life was bad. No child adult or otherwise wants to hear jack shit about their parents’ sex lives.
I don't know if you read that DH took it upon himself to inform dc right away. We didn't have a discussion about it. He just did it. DC said dh told him that he had not been happy for a very long time. I asked if dh told him anything else, which he did not other than "we love you and we're here for you" so I told dc that dh has a girlfriend and left it at that. I'm so sorry your dad brought up sex with you. That's so so bad. I'm not going to be that parent. Ugh.Anonymous wrote:I was the kid in this scenario. Just tell dc the truth. And don’t rely on your spouse to do that. One of my worse memories was my dad like trying to explain that their sex life was bad. No child adult or otherwise wants to hear jack shit about their parents’ sex lives.
Anonymous wrote:OP I was like you at the demise of my marriage. Practical and unemotional and logical, just trying to figure out what the best path forward was while trying to minimize the collateral damage to my son as much as I could. I have never uttered a negative word about his father (well at least not while he was around) and I never lost control during the separation and divorce. I encouraged a strong relationship with his father and new wife and have always offered to take the back seat for him to spend time with them.
This approach has paid dividends in ways I never imagined. I am extremely close to my son who is now an adult. During college I visited as much as he’d allow me to. His dad started family 2.0 and his focus was with the new family. So I went for parents weekends and mom’s weekends and fraternity parents weekends and football games and anything and everything I was invited to. I always offered for him to invite his dad first and if he couldn’t make it I’d go. His dad could never make it.
The divorce actually strengthened my relationship with my son. As much as it sucked holding everything in I think it helped my son by not having to deal with a crazy woman who had nothing but bad things to say about his dad. As much of an idiot as his dad became it’s still his dad and he still loves him very much. And I encourage that love and relationship all the time.