Anonymous wrote:She took a situation she did not like, Dad and new gf meeting kid- overreacted and got the lawyers involved. She started the post by talking about how a long and drawn out court battle is what put them down the road to no communication, and is headed there again.
This lets her paint herself as the one true parents who cars for the 'best interest of her child' and Dad as loose cannon.
Go ahead and get your court oder- and have fun getting enforced. Its not my kid, clearly... but I cannot stand it when grownups act like kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm late to the party, but I just have to post my thoughts.
I'm in the midst of a high conflict divorce. Given that my ex has borderline personality disorder and is also narcissistic and am lead to believe the OPs ex also has something similar that she either A). doesn't recognize as a mental illness or B). has chosen not to post that fact.
At any rate, OPs ex doesn't sound like the run-of-the-mill crappy ex. I, too, felt relief when my ex got a new gf because I believed it would take "some of the pressure off of me". It would give him another source for his narcissistic supply, thus relieving me of the barrage of vitriol spewed my way because he lacked one.
To the posters viewing this situation through a single lens (and slamming OP because of that), please realize there are other lenses. Not everyone divorced a mentally and emotionally stable individual. Because YOUR H gets along beautifully with his ex merely points to the fact that they are two whole people who love their kids enough to co-parent in a loving way. It is impossible to co-parent with a person who has a mental illness (not saying that this is the case with OPs ex) and you have to "keep score" because any one incident in isolation doesn't seem like much, but establish a pattern of incidents and you can make a pretty convincing case that ex's actions are emotionally detrimental to the child.
I am going through this now and I'm sure my friends IRL think I am being childish when I don't agree to seemingly benign requests from my ex. On another thread someone suggested that I stop discussing my situation with those friends who haven't BTDT. That is what I suggest to you OP. If your ex has some type of diagnosed or undiagnosed mood/personality disorder, then your thread title should include that. That way you can at least attempt to eliminate responses from people who don't know what the hell they are talking about and haven't a clue what you're are dealing with. Good Luck!
And I recommend bpdcentral.com for information on bpd & npd. If the description fits your ex, then you will find some helpful strategies for how to deal with him.
On the contrary, I think YOU are the one viewing this from only one lens. OP never mentions BPD or bipolar disorder in any of her posts about her ex. I think it's a leap to assume those issues exist if she never once brought them up. Also hard to believe that she just doesn't 'recognize' it.
Anonymous wrote:I'm late to the party, but I just have to post my thoughts.
I'm in the midst of a high conflict divorce. Given that my ex has borderline personality disorder and is also narcissistic and am lead to believe the OPs ex also has something similar that she either A). doesn't recognize as a mental illness or B). has chosen not to post that fact.
At any rate, OPs ex doesn't sound like the run-of-the-mill crappy ex. I, too, felt relief when my ex got a new gf because I believed it would take "some of the pressure off of me". It would give him another source for his narcissistic supply, thus relieving me of the barrage of vitriol spewed my way because he lacked one.
To the posters viewing this situation through a single lens (and slamming OP because of that), please realize there are other lenses. Not everyone divorced a mentally and emotionally stable individual. Because YOUR H gets along beautifully with his ex merely points to the fact that they are two whole people who love their kids enough to co-parent in a loving way. It is impossible to co-parent with a person who has a mental illness (not saying that this is the case with OPs ex) and you have to "keep score" because any one incident in isolation doesn't seem like much, but establish a pattern of incidents and you can make a pretty convincing case that ex's actions are emotionally detrimental to the child.
I am going through this now and I'm sure my friends IRL think I am being childish when I don't agree to seemingly benign requests from my ex. On another thread someone suggested that I stop discussing my situation with those friends who haven't BTDT. That is what I suggest to you OP. If your ex has some type of diagnosed or undiagnosed mood/personality disorder, then your thread title should include that. That way you can at least attempt to eliminate responses from people who don't know what the hell they are talking about and haven't a clue what you're are dealing with. Good Luck!
And I recommend bpdcentral.com for information on bpd & npd. If the description fits your ex, then you will find some helpful strategies for how to deal with him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:By OP's original post she has no direct information on anything that happened with the ex's weekend. There's a whole lot of guessing and assuming the worst. OP's drawn a conclusion on what she thinks took place and is now taking up legal action. How are you going to prove anything for purposes of this legal motion and how will enforce it go forward?
Talking to lawyers is not legal action. It's consulting.
Why worry how I am going to proove something?
Was your lawyer able to tell you then what actually took place on your ex's weekend? You still have no first hand account on which to base your superior outrage.
Why post a question on here if you only want responses that validate your point of view?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:By OP's original post she has no direct information on anything that happened with the ex's weekend. There's a whole lot of guessing and assuming the worst. OP's drawn a conclusion on what she thinks took place and is now taking up legal action. How are you going to prove anything for purposes of this legal motion and how will enforce it go forward?
Talking to lawyers is not legal action. It's consulting.
Why worry how I am going to proove something?
Anonymous wrote:By OP's original post she has no direct information on anything that happened with the ex's weekend. There's a whole lot of guessing and assuming the worst. OP's drawn a conclusion on what she thinks took place and is now taking up legal action. How are you going to prove anything for purposes of this legal motion and how will enforce it go forward?
Anonymous wrote:OP, you said you found out about all this from friends. Your son never said it bothered him to you, and you never talked to your EX about it, it sounds. It sounds to me like you heard from your friends a woman came with your ex, then you thought back and noticed some misbehavior from your 7 year old, and put 2 and 2 together and decided to go after your EX with lawyers. You've got a tough road ahead of you if that's the way you're going to play it. Maybe you should have called your EX and gotten his side of the story, and tried to work something out with him. Instead, you've taken gossip and gone to the lawyers and started tossing around the idea of court orders and contempt. Come on. You KNOW there was a better way to handle this, you sound like you were just chomping at the bait to nail your ex's ass to the wall.