Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have been divorced from my husband for over a year. Recently, he started bringing his girlfriend around our kids all the time. She is watching them when he is unavailable. And attending high school events as well. I have no respect for my ex-husband and our marriage did not end on great terms. We do not co-parent; we parallel parent.
I am trying to get comfortable with a woman being around my children and it is a struggle for me. I am wondering how others in my situation have dealt with this and whether it made you anxious. And how did you finally get comfortable with the situation. While I know my kids adore me and we have a great relationship, I guess there is a slight worry that they may see her as the new shiny penny and me as the boring mom.
I was never comfortable with it because he was mentally ill and most of the women he dated were also mentally ill or had some other issue that created unnecessary drama. He was also briefly remarried. That lasted shy of a year, but they had a really nasty divorce that she tried to drag me into although just months earlier she paid for a lawyer so he could try to get out of paying CS. I remained nervous about his dating partners until he died unexpectedly.
As for your other question. You won’t be replaced. It’s okay to be boring mom because the most important part of that title is mom.
Anonymous wrote:It’s normal to feel this way in the beginning. At some point those feelings will fade. Once you start healing and get further away from the emotion surrounding the dissolution of the marriage you won’t be as bothered by it. You divorced for a reason. Keep that reason at the forefront of your mind.
My XH remarried shortly after our divorce was finalized. I have had very little contact with her over the years but early on, when we are at the same event for the kids, she seemed to be more uncomfortable with me than I was with her. It took about two years to be emotionally free and since then I can honestly say I’m not at all bothered by whatever my XH is doing. His wife is very nice. I heard awhile back he and the new wife were divorcing but it’s not my monkey or my circus.
Anonymous wrote:I have been divorced from my husband for over a year. Recently, he started bringing his girlfriend around our kids all the time. She is watching them when he is unavailable. And attending high school events as well. I have no respect for my ex-husband and our marriage did not end on great terms. We do not co-parent; we parallel parent.
I am trying to get comfortable with a woman being around my children and it is a struggle for me. I am wondering how others in my situation have dealt with this and whether it made you anxious. And how did you finally get comfortable with the situation. While I know my kids adore me and we have a great relationship, I guess there is a slight worry that they may see her as the new shiny penny and me as the boring mom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised everyone is convinced the kids can’t possibly prefer being around dad and the new girlfriend. I’ve known several cases where that happened (and some where it didn’t). I don’t know that assuring OP her fears are completely unfounded because this can’t possibly happen is the best advice.
The kids could prefer it, or the kids could get along with the girlfriend or new stepmom but that person normally doesn’t take the place of the mother. My son adores his stepmom. His relationship with her doesn’t impact his relationship with me. And I don’t have any issues with his stepmom being another caring adult in his life. I’m happy his stepmom has such a great relationship with him. Because the alternative could be a horrible person who drives a wedge between he and his father.
Anonymous wrote:Why are the kids with dad when they're not with dad? Does he want less time with them?
Anonymous wrote:Did you read my question? Because your answer is completely non-responsive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you last three posters. I appreciate these comments. I was beginning to think I was mean and nastyAnd I am seeing a therapist and I am getting little better each week.
You are not at all mean and nasty- and no person who had been in your shoes would ever say you were. Hugs OP
Are you joking? Because this:
Anonymous wrote:Did you read my question? Because your answer is completely non-responsive.
Was very mean and very nasty.
+1. Especially since that poster gave her great advice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have been divorced from my husband for over a year. Recently, he started bringing his girlfriend around our kids all the time. She is watching them when he is unavailable. And attending high school events as well. I have no respect for my ex-husband and our marriage did not end on great terms. We do not co-parent; we parallel parent.
I am trying to get comfortable with a woman being around my children and it is a struggle for me. I am wondering how others in my situation have dealt with this and whether it made you anxious. And how did you finally get comfortable with the situation. While I know my kids adore me and we have a great relationship, I guess there is a slight worry that they may see her as the new shiny penny and me as the boring mom.
You sound nasty. Is it ok you date and not him? You are divorced, she is "new" so it wasn't an affair. Grow up and be supportive. Change your behavior so you both can better co-parent and try to work with him. You need to be cordial but not friends.
NP and you sound nasty PP. She never said that it wasn't allowed - it is OF COURSE an entirely reasonable feeling and human nature to be uncomfortable about someone you don't know and didn't pick spending so much time around your kids and influencing the way they are raised. OP - don't fight the feeling (as in don't try to force yourself to not feel this way, no one likes being in this situation)...but work on rising above it with a therapist. It'll get easier over time most likely assuming the girlfriend isn't an awful person or undermining you. And if she is an awful person or undermining you, it'll still have paid off to find the behaviors to rise above and have as productive of relationship as possible with her so that you're close the situation.
Also for your worry - they might see her as the new shiny penny, just like they might with the fun aunt / friends mom that seems way cooler / whoever. But in those situations you know that you still hold the singular place of mom, even if its "boring old mom who enforces the rules and doesn't take us on random shopping sprees" and that trumps all the potential shiny pennies out there
Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised everyone is convinced the kids can’t possibly prefer being around dad and the new girlfriend. I’ve known several cases where that happened (and some where it didn’t). I don’t know that assuring OP her fears are completely unfounded because this can’t possibly happen is the best advice.