Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you want to get divorced do it now and just ask your lawyer to put it in the divorce agreement that DH will continue to provide health insurance of equal or greater value than the kid has now, to age 26 or whatever the law is, and will provide funds for tuition plus room and board and meal plans for four years of in state tuition.
I would never sign that agreement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College professor here. Seen this many times. The timing is very very bad. I mean, it's always a bad time for your parents to divorce, but your first year away from home is pretty bad.
I kinda feel like this is the most important post in this thread, and it's gotten lost in all the talk about...college financing. What about the emotional well-being and development of an 18-year-old who finds out mom and dad are getting divorced.
The issues my husband and I have are not fixable, I don't even want to fix them anymore, but I go back and forth on whether I'm going to leave when our younger kid moves out or wait a little longer. Comments like this make me think I should try to hold out for at least another couple of years until he has his feet under him at school. I'd be curious to hear from others who have dealt with ths.
At very least, try to stay in the family house for a few years. College kids are only at college for 8 months. They still need a home for the other 1/3 of the year. If you take away that home while they are in the first semester, it's very difficult. Like having a rug pulled out from under you when you are already dealing with a ton of changes. By junior-senior year of college they are more settled into their new lives away from mom & dad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It's not a matter of being selfish. If the children have been alienated from the father by the divorced mother, why would he pay for their college?
Because if the child is now in college, it means that child is now over 18 and an adult and no longer living full time with the mother that presumably alienated them, so the loving father that wants a relationship with their child would be interested in demonstrating to his child that he is a supportive father and not a manipulative vindictive jerk who is using money as a tool against the child.
Children who don’t love or respect a parent who was done wrong don’t deserve a free college ride or an inheritance. When the kids are 18 they are free to educate themselves about what their mother did to cause the divorce and how she behaved afterwards. If they aren’t interested in learning the truth then they can go through life poor.
The thing is divorce is never one parents fault. And kids who are minors have limited mental and psychological ability to process who did wrong and what. In fact, making your child to go through this mental processing is manipulative IMHO.
My exH cheated, not me. We divorced when son was 15 and I insisted on college obligation being part of divorce abs assets settlement. It’s contractual on him, but he behaves erratically with son. Last week dad beat up son on his custodial time . Son told him he wanted to live with mom, as my exH is just capable of consistent calm parenting and respecting his son’s opinions. Even if he takes son to make a haircut it must be the style dad wants, not the son. It irritates him immensely.
I will be taking my exH to court if he doesn’t pay as per terms of the divorce settlement and put a lien on his house.
If this is true you have bigger problems than college tuition. I hope he pressed charges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College professor here. Seen this many times. The timing is very very bad. I mean, it's always a bad time for your parents to divorce, but your first year away from home is pretty bad.
I kinda feel like this is the most important post in this thread, and it's gotten lost in all the talk about...college financing. What about the emotional well-being and development of an 18-year-old who finds out mom and dad are getting divorced.
The issues my husband and I have are not fixable, I don't even want to fix them anymore, but I go back and forth on whether I'm going to leave when our younger kid moves out or wait a little longer. Comments like this make me think I should try to hold out for at least another couple of years until he has his feet under him at school. I'd be curious to hear from others who have dealt with ths.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being married or divorced has nothing to do with paying for college
Lol, WTF… of course it does.
Selfish is as selfish does
It's not a matter of being selfish. If the children have been alienated from the father by the divorced mother, why would he pay for their college?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It's not a matter of being selfish. If the children have been alienated from the father by the divorced mother, why would he pay for their college?
Because if the child is now in college, it means that child is now over 18 and an adult and no longer living full time with the mother that presumably alienated them, so the loving father that wants a relationship with their child would be interested in demonstrating to his child that he is a supportive father and not a manipulative vindictive jerk who is using money as a tool against the child.
Children who don’t love or respect a parent who was done wrong don’t deserve a free college ride or an inheritance. When the kids are 18 they are free to educate themselves about what their mother did to cause the divorce and how she behaved afterwards. If they aren’t interested in learning the truth then they can go through life poor.
The thing is divorce is never one parents fault. And kids who are minors have limited mental and psychological ability to process who did wrong and what. In fact, making your child to go through this mental processing is manipulative IMHO.
My exH cheated, not me. We divorced when son was 15 and I insisted on college obligation being part of divorce abs assets settlement. It’s contractual on him, but he behaves erratically with son. Last week dad beat up son on his custodial time . Son told him he wanted to live with mom, as my exH is just capable of consistent calm parenting and respecting his son’s opinions. Even if he takes son to make a haircut it must be the style dad wants, not the son. It irritates him immensely.
I will be taking my exH to court if he doesn’t pay as per terms of the divorce settlement and put a lien on his house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It's not a matter of being selfish. If the children have been alienated from the father by the divorced mother, why would he pay for their college?
Because if the child is now in college, it means that child is now over 18 and an adult and no longer living full time with the mother that presumably alienated them, so the loving father that wants a relationship with their child would be interested in demonstrating to his child that he is a supportive father and not a manipulative vindictive jerk who is using money as a tool against the child.
Children who don’t love or respect a parent who was done wrong don’t deserve a free college ride or an inheritance. When the kids are 18 they are free to educate themselves about what their mother did to cause the divorce and how she behaved afterwards. If they aren’t interested in learning the truth then they can go through life poor.
The thing is divorce is never one parents fault. And kids who are minors have limited mental and psychological ability to process who did wrong and what. In fact, making your child to go through this mental processing is manipulative IMHO.
My exH cheated, not me. We divorced when son was 15 and I insisted on college obligation being part of divorce abs assets settlement. It’s contractual on him, but he behaves erratically with son. Last week dad beat up son on his custodial time . Son told him he wanted to live with mom, as my exH is just capable of consistent calm parenting and respecting his son’s opinions. Even if he takes son to make a haircut it must be the style dad wants, not the son. It irritates him immensely.
I will be taking my exH to court if he doesn’t pay as per terms of the divorce settlement and put a lien on his house.
Anonymous wrote:College professor here. Seen this many times. The timing is very very bad. I mean, it's always a bad time for your parents to divorce, but your first year away from home is pretty bad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It's not a matter of being selfish. If the children have been alienated from the father by the divorced mother, why would he pay for their college?
Because if the child is now in college, it means that child is now over 18 and an adult and no longer living full time with the mother that presumably alienated them, so the loving father that wants a relationship with their child would be interested in demonstrating to his child that he is a supportive father and not a manipulative vindictive jerk who is using money as a tool against the child.
Children who don’t love or respect a parent who was done wrong don’t deserve a free college ride or an inheritance. When the kids are 18 they are free to educate themselves about what their mother did to cause the divorce and how she behaved afterwards. If they aren’t interested in learning the truth then they can go through life poor.
Anonymous wrote:
It's not a matter of being selfish. If the children have been alienated from the father by the divorced mother, why would he pay for their college?
Because if the child is now in college, it means that child is now over 18 and an adult and no longer living full time with the mother that presumably alienated them, so the loving father that wants a relationship with their child would be interested in demonstrating to his child that he is a supportive father and not a manipulative vindictive jerk who is using money as a tool against the child.
Anonymous wrote:We did this. Both spouses work. Both pay college costs. 529 Plan was already in place. There have been no arguments about this whatsoever. And kids say everyone is happier.
Anonymous wrote:
It's not a matter of being selfish. If the children have been alienated from the father by the divorced mother, why would he pay for their college?
Because if the child is now in college, it means that child is now over 18 and an adult and no longer living full time with the mother that presumably alienated them, so the loving father that wants a relationship with their child would be interested in demonstrating to his child that he is a supportive father and not a manipulative vindictive jerk who is using money as a tool against the child.