Anonymous wrote:32 weeks?!
I said previously she was being disingenuous at best. She is either seriously disturbed or wanted a baby. Or both.
Someone who doesn't want a baby would have taken OTC pregnancy tests months ago.
She left him with no choice.
He is legally obligated to pay child support but not to marry her. Unless she has mental issues, she lied by omission. Not someone to marry if they have been dating 52 weeks and she is 32 weeks pregnant.
Honestly I would ask for a paternity test before agreeing to 18 years of child support.
Signed, A woman
Anonymous wrote:It was a cryptic pregnancy, people.
Read up on it. There are women with irregular cycles who cannot know they are pregnant the normal way. At-home urine tests come up negative if done past two months of pregnancy, because there is too much HCG for it to turn positive. Some women bleed a little during their pregnancies, and might mistake that for a period. Some women, particularly overweight ones, don't show very much until the last minute, if it's their first pregnancy.
In short, yes, it happens.
Anonymous wrote:32 weeks?!
I said previously she was being disingenuous at best. She is either seriously disturbed or wanted a baby. Or both.
Someone who doesn't want a baby would have taken OTC pregnancy tests months ago.
She left him with no choice.
He is legally obligated to pay child support but not to marry her. Unless she has mental issues, she lied by omission. Not someone to marry if they have been dating 52 weeks and she is 32 weeks pregnant.
Honestly I would ask for a paternity test before agreeing to 18 years of child support.
Signed, A woman
OP here
I don’t really think there’s any likelihood that she did this intentionally. She could have just had the whole pregnancy without dragging him to these appointments in the end with all this drama. She also wouldn’t have had any guarantee that she wouldn’t be showing a long time ago, and somehow she just didn’t. And she hasn’t been “acting pregnant” if you want to read between those lines.
I don’t really know all the details but I saw her as recently as maybe 6 weeks ago and I wouldn’t have noticed anything different. She carries a little extra weight (all his girlfriends always have). I guess if you want to put a name to it, she has an apple body shape. So do I. I also showed easily at 4 months but not all women do.
No one’s thinking of getting married today. That’s a legal arrangement, not anything magical or religious for this family. (I don’t know about hers)
There’s no baby trapping here. We aren’t the royal family or anything.
Anonymous wrote:OP here
I’m going to take a deep breath here.
Son came by. Pale as a ghost, tears.
I hugged him and said, “I’m sorry, is it over now?”
And he shook his head.
It’s a 32 week pregnancy. There is definitely going to be a baby. I do not know how they did not know, but also something like this has not been in my own life experience. I know it does happen but this one was not in my crystal ball.
Now it’s obvious that this is why he said he saw them crossing lines through the word “abortion” at the initial planned parenthood appointment.
He’s obviously absolutely terrified. Also, definitely in a ton of shock. I asked if he knows it’s a girl or a boy, and he said his girlfriend knows, but he did not want to know.
I said, “yes, you do need to know. Until you know whether it’s a boy or a girl it’s going to continue to be something terrifying, a monster shadowing everything. You’re going to have to know whether it’s a boy or girl either way, but that baby needs to become a human. Once it stops being something threatening you, and you realize you’re the one responsible for its future, and it not being something that will ruin yours, it will stop being so scary.”
We went through all the things. You’re in shock etc. Anyone would be. But I’m not upset, I’m not angry, this stuff happens EVERY DAY. You’ve been through college and your licensing. You have a good job. Money is one of the first, most real things to worry about, but you’ve got that support system. Costs are covered. Your dad and I aren’t together but we will both support you and your girlfriend 100%. No one is cutting you loose or insisting you get married, or insisting that you do anything.
I gave him an Ativan from the stash I rarely use myself. Today’s 100% a day for that.
I do not know what is going to happen. He was here for about an hour. He’s absolutely 100% shook, but there’s only so much someone else can talk at him and only so much he can process at one time.
I don’t know whether she’s talked to her mother. She lives with her mother and her grandma. I don’t think they all have the most ideal relationships with one another but who knows. I’m just guessing they will have an opinion one way or another.
He’s on his way now to tell his Dad in person. I have 100 things to say about his dad, but at least I know in this case he’s going to do and say all the rest of the right things. His dad is good at handling stuff like this.
Kind peeps of DCUM, I swear that of all the things I thought I was going to ultimately update with, this is a set of circumstances I absolutely did not expect.
I’m not even sure I’ve absorbed it yet, since I don’t want to get invested too far either way.
Still can’t talk to anyone else about it for the time being, so thanks for listening.
A lot of decisions have to be made now.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for the update. Once the shock wears off, your son will be okay. He’s lucky he has two parents who love him and are supportive.
You should also call the GF to offer your support. Regardless of what happens with your son and her, she’ll always be the mother of your grandchild so you want to be supportive and will also want to stay on her good side since she’ll have a lot to do with how much access you’ll have to your grandchild.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he is 25….. not 15. That’s a very normal age to have a first child. Hopefully they have degrees and jobs with health insurance.
25 is young, and he certainly wasn’t ready emotionally or financially.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got married in our mid 20's, moved to another country for career, had kids, built a life, bought a home, all that without any support network.
And some people are in jail at 20 have a baby in jail and build a life around that.
Why do you think your story is something people want to emulate?
I read your story and I think childhood trauma
We aren't talking about 20 year old prisoners. We are talking about mud 20's educated and employed adults with family support.
No trauma. Just logistics as family was on another continent.
It doesn’t matter what continent of family is on… OP is only available by phone for her son right now and is providing support.
I’m sorry, your family didn’t care enough about you to provide support and yes, that is trauma. Your response shows that you have not done the work.
How do you provide support to someone across continents? Leave your job, sell your home and abandon your own parents to move to kid's country without immigration?
You call them and they talk to you. You don't realize that is support. Oh Lord.
Anonymous wrote:If he is 25….. not 15. That’s a very normal age to have a first child. Hopefully they have degrees and jobs with health insurance.