Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Includes half of birthdays, holidays, games, dances, college drop offs and breaks.
What? A lot of divorced people still do a lot of that together. Only the nasty ones are like you describe.
Uh, no. Most divorced people do not celebrate holidays together. The ones who do are in the minority..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband and I have had some very, very dark times together where we really wanted to split up. During those times the only reason we didn't is because neither of us could ever imagine not seeing our kids every single day. It would kill us. So no, I don't get this.
Same. And I judge parents that, barring some TRULY awful shit in their marriage like physical abuse, don't feel this way about not seeing their kids daily.
Anonymous wrote:My husband and I have had some very, very dark times together where we really wanted to split up. During those times the only reason we didn't is because neither of us could ever imagine not seeing our kids every single day. It would kill us. So no, I don't get this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Includes half of birthdays, holidays, games, dances, college drop offs and breaks.
What? A lot of divorced people still do a lot of that together. Only the nasty ones are like you describe.
Uh, no. Most divorced people do not celebrate holidays together. The ones who do are in the minority..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Includes half of birthdays, holidays, games, dances, college drop offs and breaks.
What? A lot of divorced people still do a lot of that together. Only the nasty ones are like you describe.
Anonymous wrote:When the kids were very little I was jealous of divorced friends who had days to themselves. Now that they are middle school and older and easier I prefer to see them every day, especially since they will be gone to college sooner than I realized
Ask me if I am jealous of my divorced friends dating lives and I will say heck yes. My two best divorced friends have beautiful women will them all the time !
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was reading the thread on staying together for the kids, and someone said that they no longer love their spouse, but it was worth it to stay in the marriage to see the kids every day.
I know that divorce is difficult and painful, but if you trust that your ex-spouse is a good parent, the one benefit seems to be that you have entire days or weeks that you aren’t responsible for the kids at all.
Am I just a terrible mother? Looking in from the outside, every other weekend without the kids sounds great.
Yes. Kids are better off in an intact family. If you need personal time, get a babysitter, nanny, childcare, camp, grandparent to give you a break. Its not an easy job to raise kids but by having kids, you signed up for it, unless you were a minor or was raped. If you feel too overwhelmed and need professional help, seek that. If you don't want to be in this marriage for other reasons, seek marriage counseling. Bottom line is to understand your problems and find healthy solutions.
Or PP and her DH can just give each others weekends off? Why does one need to be divorced to do this?
Anonymous wrote:Includes half of birthdays, holidays, games, dances, college drop offs and breaks.
Anonymous wrote:No, I'm not jealous of my friends custody agreements, that's crazy!
Anonymous wrote:No, I'm not jealous of my friends custody agreements, that's crazy!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The reason I had kids was to spend time with them.
Also, if my spouse was a good parent, why on earth would I divorce them?
Because he’s a bad husband.