Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You were a bit of an AH. Your son is young to have lost a parent and he’s naturally more affected by grief than you do you have a responsibility to be less reactive and more understanding.
(Source: I have step siblings mourning their dad who was an absolutely awful stepparent and I manage to empathize with their grief and not bring up my gripes with their dad while also maintaining boundaries or faking a level of grief I don’t have.)
Don't your step-siblings owe it to you to find another shoulder to cry on? If they are aware you were treated poorly by the deceased, why come to you with their sorrow?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not hesitate to share what a crappy husband he was, OP. They deserve to know.
My husband of 20 years is difficult to live with, and has had episodes of rage and hyper controlling behavior. They stem from his ADHD and high-functioning autism. I've wondered whether divorce was the solution several times in our married life.
My children were aware of his problems from a young age, because he couldn't exactly hide them! They're teens now. I would never let myself be misunderstood or unfairly critiqued by a teen or young adult child: I would explain and defend myself.
Do you think your kids wonder why you put up with that? I was in shoes similar to yours and after I decided to split with my ex, my kids asked me why it took so long and said they used to really wish we would divorce.
Anonymous wrote:I would not hesitate to share what a crappy husband he was, OP. They deserve to know.
My husband of 20 years is difficult to live with, and has had episodes of rage and hyper controlling behavior. They stem from his ADHD and high-functioning autism. I've wondered whether divorce was the solution several times in our married life.
My children were aware of his problems from a young age, because he couldn't exactly hide them! They're teens now. I would never let myself be misunderstood or unfairly critiqued by a teen or young adult child: I would explain and defend myself.
Anonymous wrote:You were a bit of an AH. Your son is young to have lost a parent and he’s naturally more affected by grief than you do you have a responsibility to be less reactive and more understanding.
(Source: I have step siblings mourning their dad who was an absolutely awful stepparent and I manage to empathize with their grief and not bring up my gripes with their dad while also maintaining boundaries or faking a level of grief I don’t have.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel for the son. He's just trying to get a copy of his prom video then gets dumped on. OPs frst response was fine. I think son was fine say the "family " needs to take better care of the stuff. He wasn't even asking about his dad's personal effects but a camcorder, which happened to have belonged to the ex, with the FAMILY videos, like the sons prom. So I don't actually understand why OP would reply that she's not family because the son was asking about family videos. Maybe son's phrasing wasn't the best but this is where mom can gently offer for him to take dad's things and not rant about son needing therapy. This man, the ex, sounds like a dog but he no longer exists. Keeping a good relationship with the kids is much more important.
Op here, for added context, we go through this every year around the anniversary where he wants me to pull out photos and send them to him via text. He wants me to go down memory lane with him, it feels somewhat manipulative, and I'm not interested. The camera was his dad’s camera. We were already separated at the time of his prom so its a camera/video I don't have but that my son has seen multiple times. He wants me to share in his grief. I respect his grief and memories by holding my peace but he wants me to grieve for his dad but I don't. That's why I recommended therapy. I am the wrong form of support and frankly tired of it this many years later. His aunt/that side of the family are the better support option if he wants to walk down memory lane.
Anonymous wrote:I feel for the son. He's just trying to get a copy of his prom video then gets dumped on. OPs frst response was fine. I think son was fine say the "family " needs to take better care of the stuff. He wasn't even asking about his dad's personal effects but a camcorder, which happened to have belonged to the ex, with the FAMILY videos, like the sons prom. So I don't actually understand why OP would reply that she's not family because the son was asking about family videos. Maybe son's phrasing wasn't the best but this is where mom can gently offer for him to take dad's things and not rant about son needing therapy. This man, the ex, sounds like a dog but he no longer exists. Keeping a good relationship with the kids is much more important.
Anonymous wrote:To answer your question give his stuff to your kids let them pixk the things they want to save.
Don't trash talk him. Just don't. Save that for your own therapist.
Understand how difficult it is for them and despite what you deluded yourself into believing they know he wasn't a perfect man and he failed them in someway they have towork through all of that while having lost a parent at a young age. Those are very hard things, your empathy here will go a long way for your relationship with them into adulthood.
Don't lose your relationship with them trying to get back what you lost with their dad.