Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Funny how everyone is saying now it's "moral" abandonment. Check the last thread. No one was saying that. Nice try. Can't admit you are just wrong? Also, I've been gone for work trips many time. My kid is fine. Hello...my husband stays at home! Wow, you people are clueless.
Perhaps next time don't preach what you don't know.
I think the "I travel for work" rationalization only works if your husband is willing to lie for you. So, yes, if your husband will lie to your child and tell them you are on a work trip, then it's no harm no foul.
Can you ask him to do that?
Well, you lie for your child, not for your spouse. Or you could be like the above poster that listens to her child crying himself to sleep and thinks about how bad that ought to make her ex-husband feel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Funny how everyone is saying now it's "moral" abandonment. Check the last thread. No one was saying that. Nice try. Can't admit you are just wrong? Also, I've been gone for work trips many time. My kid is fine. Hello...my husband stays at home! Wow, you people are clueless.
Perhaps next time don't preach what you don't know.
I think the "I travel for work" rationalization only works if your husband is willing to lie for you. So, yes, if your husband will lie to your child and tell them you are on a work trip, then it's no harm no foul.
Can you ask him to do that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not calling it abandonment still won't stop your husband from using it against you if you end up divorcing and child custody has to be decided. You don't necessarily have to call a thing a thing in court. Mom left for a month is quite enough for the judge.
The husband cannot use it as "abandonment" because it's not. The attorney clarified. Also, if the OP consulted with an attorney there are records to indicate this was brought up and confirmed by the attorney prior to asking for a "break from the marriage". A judge would have that information during discovery.
Anonymous wrote:I am a parent & I believe leaving your child for a month IS abandonment.
No exceptions.
Maybe not in the legal sense - but definitely in the emotional sense.
If you do not believe me, then ask your son in a few yrs.
Anonymous wrote:Not calling it abandonment still won't stop your husband from using it against you if you end up divorcing and child custody has to be decided. You don't necessarily have to call a thing a thing in court. Mom left for a month is quite enough for the judge.
Anonymous wrote:OP do what you need to do, don't think of DCUM as any kind of steady moral compass, it's a cess pit of vipers. Keep your own counsel.
Anonymous wrote:I am a parent & I believe leaving your child for a month IS abandonment.
No exceptions.
Maybe not in the legal sense - but definitely in the emotional sense.
If you do not believe me, then ask your son in a few yrs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A few weeks ago I posted here asking for how I should approach telling my husband I wanted a one month break from him and (by force) our kid (because he's the stay at home parent and our kid is older so it's not like I'm leaving a baby). I wanted time to think about our marriage. I am the person who works and supports the family. My thread turned into a hate fest of: By doing this you are abandoning your family!!!
I had a consult with the divorce firm Livesay & Myers this week. They confirmed it is NOT abandonment! 1) I am still paying for everyone's living expenses. 2) I am returning. 3) There is communication of when I will be leaving and returning.
For all you "know it all" people who think you "know" the law. You do not. Have a nice day.
Np I feel sad that you feel that you have to post back here to get approval? or a comeback to people you don't know and really don't care what you do.
I had a consult with the divorce firm Livesay & Myers this week. They confirmed it is NOT abandonment! 1) I am still paying for everyone's living expenses. 2) I am returning. 3) There is communication of when I will be leaving and returning.
For all you "know it all" people who think you "know" the law. You do not. Have a nice day.
Anonymous wrote:A few weeks ago I posted here asking for how I should approach telling my husband I wanted a one month break from him and (by force) our kid (because he's the stay at home parent and our kid is older so it's not like I'm leaving a baby). I wanted time to think about our marriage. I am the person who works and supports the family. My thread turned into a hate fest of: By doing this you are abandoning your family!!!
I had a consult with the divorce firm Livesay & Myers this week. They confirmed it is NOT abandonment! 1) I am still paying for everyone's living expenses. 2) I am returning. 3) There is communication of when I will be leaving and returning.
For all you "know it all" people who think you "know" the law. You do not. Have a nice day.