Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is very much not the case with my bf and his exwife. She is reactive and controlling, esp when she has any hint that I am involved in plans or whatever. She is very inflexible on the schedule (I get that this is how some divorces are and have a right to be.) But the issue is his lack of wanting to fight with her and how it affects our relationship. I truly love this man. We have known each other for years. But I am reaching my breaking point in terms of boundaries.
Are you actually reading anything you wrote?
You are a girlfriend! That's it. She is the mother of his kids whom he puts first and their kids. As he should be.
For years you have known each other? What does that mean? You were his affair? You knew him when he was married in some capacity?
Why can't you have some self respect and do what is best for you and your kids?
Honestly, your BOYFRIEND and his ex sound like great parents. You and your dh sound like kids come last, after all your girlfriends and boyfriends and your vacation is to put your boyfriend as a priority?
If I was your kid, I would hate you guts and your boyfriends guts. I would know that I am the last thing in mom's head.
So needy and insecure.
YES!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is very much not the case with my bf and his exwife. She is reactive and controlling, esp when she has any hint that I am involved in plans or whatever. She is very inflexible on the schedule (I get that this is how some divorces are and have a right to be.) But the issue is his lack of wanting to fight with her and how it affects our relationship. I truly love this man. We have known each other for years. But I am reaching my breaking point in terms of boundaries.
Are you actually reading anything you wrote?
You are a girlfriend! That's it. She is the mother of his kids whom he puts first and their kids. As he should be.
For years you have known each other? What does that mean? You were his affair? You knew him when he was married in some capacity?
Why can't you have some self respect and do what is best for you and your kids?
Honestly, your BOYFRIEND and his ex sound like great parents. You and your dh sound like kids come last, after all your girlfriends and boyfriends and your vacation is to put your boyfriend as a priority?
If I was your kid, I would hate you guts and your boyfriends guts. I would know that I am the last thing in mom's head.
So needy and insecure.
He should put his kids first, not his ex wife. They are ex's for a reason. Why do you always assume Dad cheated? In some situations, like my husband's, it was the ex who cheated and left to be with the AP. You are assuming the ex is a great parent. Great parents work together and if you take what OP is saying, the ex wife isn't working together and Dad just humors mom so he can see his kids.
Anonymous wrote:This is very much not the case with my bf and his exwife. She is reactive and controlling, esp when she has any hint that I am involved in plans or whatever. She is very inflexible on the schedule (I get that this is how some divorces are and have a right to be.) But the issue is his lack of wanting to fight with her and how it affects our relationship. I truly love this man. We have known each other for years. But I am reaching my breaking point in terms of boundaries.
Are you actually reading anything you wrote?
You are a girlfriend! That's it. She is the mother of his kids whom he puts first and their kids. As he should be.
For years you have known each other? What does that mean? You were his affair? You knew him when he was married in some capacity?
Why can't you have some self respect and do what is best for you and your kids?
Honestly, your BOYFRIEND and his ex sound like great parents. You and your dh sound like kids come last, after all your girlfriends and boyfriends and your vacation is to put your boyfriend as a priority?
If I was your kid, I would hate you guts and your boyfriends guts. I would know that I am the last thing in mom's head.
So needy and insecure.
Anonymous wrote:We are a fully blended family. Two of our adult kids (step siblings) share an apartment. The kids are all very close. My DH’s ex was nuts when we got married 24 years ago. And she is still nuts. There is nothing magical about the kids turning 18. You’ll still be dealing with that crazy until one of you dies. Now it’s graduations, weddings, grandkids, and holiday visits instead of visitation.
My advise - Don’t add to the chaos. It’s not fair to the kids. You be the calm center in the storm. The kids will figure out who they can trust when they get older. I don’t push visits with the adult kids. I just tell them we are happy whenever they are able to be here. Stay above the need to control. Accept that she will be a part of your life for a very long time. If you can do that, you’ll be fine.
Anonymous wrote:This is very much not the case with my bf and his exwife. She is reactive and controlling, esp when she has any hint that I am involved in plans or whatever. She is very inflexible on the schedule (I get that this is how some divorces are and have a right to be.) But the issue is his lack of wanting to fight with her and how it affects our relationship. I truly love this man. We have known each other for years. But I am reaching my breaking point in terms of boundaries.
Are you actually reading anything you wrote?
You are a girlfriend! That's it. She is the mother of his kids whom he puts first and their kids. As he should be.
For years you have known each other? What does that mean? You were his affair? You knew him when he was married in some capacity?
Why can't you have some self respect and do what is best for you and your kids?
Honestly, your BOYFRIEND and his ex sound like great parents. You and your dh sound like kids come last, after all your girlfriends and boyfriends and your vacation is to put your boyfriend as a priority?
If I was your kid, I would hate you guts and your boyfriends guts. I would know that I am the last thing in mom's head.
So needy and insecure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depending on how he treated her during the marriage/divorce, her behavior might be understandable.
Men who have a "crazy" ex are sometimes the reason she's crazy.
And sometimes the crazy is the reason she is an ex![]()
Anonymous wrote:We are a fully blended family. Two of our adult kids (step siblings) share an apartment. The kids are all very close. My DH’s ex was nuts when we got married 24 years ago. And she is still nuts. There is nothing magical about the kids turning 18. You’ll still be dealing with that crazy until one of you dies. Now it’s graduations, weddings, grandkids, and holiday visits instead of visitation.
My advise - Don’t add to the chaos. It’s not fair to the kids. You be the calm center in the storm. The kids will figure out who they can trust when they get older. I don’t push visits with the adult kids. I just tell them we are happy whenever they are able to be here. Stay above the need to control. Accept that she will be a part of your life for a very long time. If you can do that, you’ll be fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's the thing - your two complaints in your post, that she's inflexible about the schedule, and that he's not willing to fight with her, both sound like GOOD things. You can plan around a predictable schedule. Fighting with your ex when there are kids involved is almost never a good idea.
So in order to convince me that she's the problem, and not you, you're going to have to provide more evidence.
Well I did in one post. And she is flexible when it suits her. He agrees to her changes. She never reciprocates.
She doesn't have to reciprocate. He doesn't have to agree to her changes either. The job of both parents of those 3 kids is to stick to the set schedule. If a particular set of dates don't work for YOU, that's not her problem. Make your summer plans for whatever is in their schedule and then your boyfriend will simply have to hold that boundary. If he is not able to do that, then I think you probably need to reconsider whether he is ready to combine families with you. To an extent, minimizing conflict with the ex is important but it sounds like he is unwilling to prioritize your relationship and y'all's blended family over avoiding conflict with her. That's not a good sign, in my experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's the thing - your two complaints in your post, that she's inflexible about the schedule, and that he's not willing to fight with her, both sound like GOOD things. You can plan around a predictable schedule. Fighting with your ex when there are kids involved is almost never a good idea.
So in order to convince me that she's the problem, and not you, you're going to have to provide more evidence.
Well I did in one post. And she is flexible when it suits her. He agrees to her changes. She never reciprocates.