Anonymous wrote:I think people are being a bit harsh on OP. She waited a full 2 years to introduce the BF - this is a stable relationship and she obviously was trying to protect her kid. Although the playground didn’t work, a casual 1 hour meetup on a child’s familiar turf doesn’t seem THAT crazy of a plan to me.
She does sound a little clueless in envisioning a Hallmark scenario but if her son was really dysregulated then I think she deserves some more thoughtful advice on how to move forward.
I guess the important thing now is how well OP and her BF can “differentiate” from the boy’s behavior. That is - not take it personally and accept it instead of reacting to it emotionally as a personal offense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In front of you?
My boyfriends teenage sons are fairly polite and civil to me in front of him.
They are much less nice to me when he is around.
Which feels very….manipulative.
I haven’t decided yet if it’s a deal breaker
Oh big typo sorry
They are much LESS nice to me when he IS T around. Curt one word answer, unpleasant facial expressions. Nothing solid I can report to my boyfriend but just a very unfriendly vibe.
I did not meet my boyfriend until two years after the divorce so no I am not the AP
Why do you even need to be around them when your boyfriend isn’t there? They are allowed to not like you.
They don’t need to like me, but they do need to be civil and polite to me, as I am to them. I’m not alone with them for long stretches. I’m talking like, we are sitting at dinner and dad goes inside to get something and their attitude completely changes for the few minutes thwt he is gone,
They’re f’ing with you and it sounds like it’s working.
Be the adult and stop caring/noticing. Imagine being this insecure about what some high schoolers are doing to you?
The more you don’t notice their shenanigans, the more frustrated they’ll get. This will either cause them to stop or it will smoke them out so they misstep in front of dad.
If you’re savvy, you could engage in your own campaign of plausibly deniable activities but I have low confidence you’ll pull it off.
Anonymous wrote:I think people are being a bit harsh on OP. She waited a full 2 years to introduce the BF - this is a stable relationship and she obviously was trying to protect her kid. Although the playground didn’t work, a casual 1 hour meetup on a child’s familiar turf doesn’t seem THAT crazy of a plan to me.
She does sound a little clueless in envisioning a Hallmark scenario but if her son was really dysregulated then I think she deserves some more thoughtful advice on how to move forward.
I guess the important thing now is how well OP and her BF can “differentiate” from the boy’s behavior. That is - not take it personally and accept it instead of reacting to it emotionally as a personal offense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In front of you?
My boyfriends teenage sons are fairly polite and civil to me in front of him.
They are much less nice to me when he is around.
Which feels very….manipulative.
I haven’t decided yet if it’s a deal breaker
Oh big typo sorry
They are much LESS nice to me when he IS T around. Curt one word answer, unpleasant facial expressions. Nothing solid I can report to my boyfriend but just a very unfriendly vibe.
I did not meet my boyfriend until two years after the divorce so no I am not the AP
Why do you even need to be around them when your boyfriend isn’t there? They are allowed to not like you.
They don’t need to like me, but they do need to be civil and polite to me, as I am to them. I’m not alone with them for long stretches. I’m talking like, we are sitting at dinner and dad goes inside to get something and their attitude completely changes for the few minutes thwt he is gone,
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you needed to do more groundwork before the meeting. You sprung a "friend" on him. Your kid is old enough to understand dating and boyfriends to at least some degree. You need to reassure him that no one is replacing their father, that it's normal if it's uncomfortable or weird, but that he needs to at least be polite and you hope that he will try to be nice because this is someone important to you. Give an example like if his new best friend from school came over, how he would want you to be friendly, offer snacks, etc.
I like this. And frankly, I think a little bribery can go a long way. Have BF give him a present/treat/etc. Or some undivided attention doing something he likes - a video game? legos?
Ok this is also super weird. What is wrong with you people? Is this child a dog? “Get your boyfriend to give him a treat”? WHAT!?
Anonymous wrote:You are not being at all clear, so we can’t really offer significant advice.
Please give examples. In what way did your kid “make fun of” your boyfriend? It also sounds like part of the issue is your boyfriend’s reaction, which you have omitted.
I’m sorry, I get frustrated by vague posts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you needed to do more groundwork before the meeting. You sprung a "friend" on him. Your kid is old enough to understand dating and boyfriends to at least some degree. You need to reassure him that no one is replacing their father, that it's normal if it's uncomfortable or weird, but that he needs to at least be polite and you hope that he will try to be nice because this is someone important to you. Give an example like if his new best friend from school came over, how he would want you to be friendly, offer snacks, etc.
I like this. And frankly, I think a little bribery can go a long way. Have BF give him a present/treat/etc. Or some undivided attention doing something he likes - a video game? legos?
Anonymous wrote:I think you needed to do more groundwork before the meeting. You sprung a "friend" on him. Your kid is old enough to understand dating and boyfriends to at least some degree. You need to reassure him that no one is replacing their father, that it's normal if it's uncomfortable or weird, but that he needs to at least be polite and you hope that he will try to be nice because this is someone important to you. Give an example like if his new best friend from school came over, how he would want you to be friendly, offer snacks, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I think you needed to do more groundwork before the meeting. You sprung a "friend" on him. Your kid is old enough to understand dating and boyfriends to at least some degree. You need to reassure him that no one is replacing their father, that it's normal if it's uncomfortable or weird, but that he needs to at least be polite and you hope that he will try to be nice because this is someone important to you. Give an example like if his new best friend from school came over, how he would want you to be friendly, offer snacks, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In front of you?
My boyfriends teenage sons are fairly polite and civil to me in front of him.
They are much less nice to me when he is around.
Which feels very….manipulative.
I haven’t decided yet if it’s a deal breaker
Oh big typo sorry
They are much LESS nice to me when he IS T around. Curt one word answer, unpleasant facial expressions. Nothing solid I can report to my boyfriend but just a very unfriendly vibe.
I did not meet my boyfriend until two years after the divorce so no I am not the AP
Why do you even need to be around them when your boyfriend isn’t there? They are allowed to not like you.
They don’t need to like me, but they do need to be civil and polite to me, as I am to them. I’m not alone with them for long stretches. I’m talking like, we are sitting at dinner and dad goes inside to get something and their attitude completely changes for the few minutes thwt he is gone,
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In front of you?
My boyfriends teenage sons are fairly polite and civil to me in front of him.
They are much less nice to me when he is around.
Which feels very….manipulative.
I haven’t decided yet if it’s a deal breaker
Oh big typo sorry
They are much LESS nice to me when he IS T around. Curt one word answer, unpleasant facial expressions. Nothing solid I can report to my boyfriend but just a very unfriendly vibe.
I did not meet my boyfriend until two years after the divorce so no I am not the AP
Curt one word answers sounds like how teens treat their actual parents.
Unpleasant facial expressions? From immature teenage boys? Report it to Guinness Book!
Well yeah. But it’s kinda weird that they know to be nicer to me when their dad is around, but when he is not around, they are rude to me. I mean I guess that’s a good sign he’s told the, or they know they have to be polite in front of their dad. But it feels weird to have them be ok when dad is around and rude when he isn’t.