Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here, I think my friend is a great mom and is there for her child more than her soon to be ex ever has. However, her divorce has had too much drama and I feel like she keeps turning to me for support. I already missed a few days of work due to testifying against her STBX in a domestic violence case. Not to be rude, but I do have my own things going on and I just don’t want to physically be involved in this anymore.
You’re a bad person
Yes - with friends like that you don't really need enemies.
I mean, WTF, if I happened to witness an assault, I would skip work to testify for a stranger.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, I think my friend is a great mom and is there for her child more than her soon to be ex ever has. However, her divorce has had too much drama and I feel like she keeps turning to me for support. I already missed a few days of work due to testifying against her STBX in a domestic violence case. Not to be rude, but I do have my own things going on and I just don’t want to physically be involved in this anymore.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, I think my friend is a great mom and is there for her child more than her soon to be ex ever has. However, her divorce has had too much drama and I feel like she keeps turning to me for support. I already missed a few days of work due to testifying against her STBX in a domestic violence case. Not to be rude, but I do have my own things going on and I just don’t want to physically be involved in this anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She doesn’t have family or godparents to vouch for her?
In many jurisdictions family members cannot serve at character witnesses in custody proceedings because they may be self-interested or otherwise too biased. For instance, the child’s grandparent may think they will get to see more of their grandchild if their own child has custody, even if their child isn’t really a fit parent.
And not everyone has godparents. Please don’t assume everyone is Christian.
But if she is Christian, it's good advice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here, I think my friend is a great mom and is there for her child more than her soon to be ex ever has. However, her divorce has had too much drama and I feel like she keeps turning to me for support. I already missed a few days of work due to testifying against her STBX in a domestic violence case. Not to be rude, but I do have my own things going on and I just don’t want to physically be involved in this anymore.
So your friend is trying to get out of an abusive marriage, and you don’t feel like missing a day of work to help her protect her kids from being abused as well? That’s beyond being a shitty friend, you’re a fundamentally shitty person.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, I think my friend is a great mom and is there for her child more than her soon to be ex ever has. However, her divorce has had too much drama and I feel like she keeps turning to me for support. I already missed a few days of work due to testifying against her STBX in a domestic violence case. Not to be rude, but I do have my own things going on and I just don’t want to physically be involved in this anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here, I think my friend is a great mom and is there for her child more than her soon to be ex ever has. However, her divorce has had too much drama and I feel like she keeps turning to me for support. I already missed a few days of work due to testifying against her STBX in a domestic violence case. Not to be rude, but I do have my own things going on and I just don’t want to physically be involved in this anymore.
You’re a bad person
Yes - with friends like that you don't really need enemies.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, I think my friend is a great mom and is there for her child more than her soon to be ex ever has. However, her divorce has had too much drama and I feel like she keeps turning to me for support. I already missed a few days of work due to testifying against her STBX in a domestic violence case. Not to be rude, but I do have my own things going on and I just don’t want to physically be involved in this anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you decline, you will probably torch the friendship because it implicitly sends the message that you don’t think your friend is an adequate parent.
What if they think the other parent is just as adequate?
Anonymous wrote:Years ago I had a friend ask me to speak against her husband in the custody case. She didn't ask me to speak for her as a character witness, but against him. She told me he was abusive to her and showed me bruises on her arm that she said he caused. I believed her, but I told her I could not testify that he was abusive because I had not personally observed it. Our friendship was never the same after that. Did I make the wrong decision?