Anonymous wrote:Men are seriously selfish and stupid when it comes to their kids and sex partners.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, let him move. He barely sees the kids but he should be responsible for all transportation. Don’t give in. He is moving, not you. You continue to drive the same distance and that is it.
OP here. I’m repeating myself now, but again…if I refuse to continue to split the driving 50/50 after ex moves, and we have to go to mediation/court to resolve this dispute, I’m afraid a judge will just tell me we have to split it equally anyway. In which case I will have wasted $$$$ for nothing.
Which is why I was trying to figure out the actual odds of winning this fight in court.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, let him move. He barely sees the kids but he should be responsible for all transportation. Don’t give in. He is moving, not you. You continue to drive the same distance and that is it.
OP here. I’m repeating myself now, but again…if I refuse to continue to split the driving 50/50 after ex moves, and we have to go to mediation/court to resolve this dispute, I’m afraid a judge will just tell me we have to split it equally anyway. In which case I will have wasted $$$$ for nothing.
Which is why I was trying to figure out the actual odds of winning this fight in court ck.
Anonymous wrote:Op, let him move. He barely sees the kids but he should be responsible for all transportation. Don’t give in. He is moving, not you. You continue to drive the same distance and that is it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell yourself ex is moving for work and see if you feel differently. Yes the extra driving sucks because you are not used to it. But you have been lucky it’s been so close all this time. Their Dad wants to continue visitation, there are a lot of dead beat dads out there. I would try my best to make this work.
OP here. I moved on and remarried several years ago. I have no insecurities/jealousies about my ex’s new relationship (although I was surprised ex is moving in with someone they’ve been with for a very short period of time). Ex’s reasons for moving doesn’t really play into my concern.
And I’m not just lucky; we both signed a stipulation saying neither of us would move outside of the area. We both agreed to stay here and raise our kids here; ex is the one going back on that.
Well I guess he can’t move.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell yourself ex is moving for work and see if you feel differently. Yes the extra driving sucks because you are not used to it. But you have been lucky it’s been so close all this time. Their Dad wants to continue visitation, there are a lot of dead beat dads out there. I would try my best to make this work.
OP here. I moved on and remarried several years ago. I have no insecurities/jealousies about my ex’s new relationship (although I was surprised ex is moving in with someone they’ve been with for a very short period of time). Ex’s reasons for moving doesn’t really play into my concern.
And I’m not just lucky; we both signed a stipulation saying neither of us would move outside of the area. We both agreed to stay here and raise our kids here; ex is the one going back on that.
Well I guess he can’t move.
He COULD move if he made a reasonable, good-faith effort to accommodate the situation -- by flexing his visitation time so his kids don't miss out on activities, and by doing more of the driving. But instead he's proposing a bottom line of breaching the agreement AND making OP and his children bear all the burden of it. That's a really, really crappy way to start out something that should be a negotiation with kid's best interests in mind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was the kid in this situation. It sucked. It made it next to impossible for me to participate in anything that required me to consistently be there on the weekends. I missed homecoming my freshman and sophomore year because it was my dad's weekend and he wouldn't switch or let me skip. His stance was that spending time with him was more important than anything else I could be doing at age 14-18, and this mentality contributed pretty significantly to our tense relationship through my 20s.
At some point, your ex is going to need to recognize that your kids are going to have social needs that are different than they were when they were little kids. It is a big thing to require kids to leave their lives behind every weekend.
I don't want to hijack this thread, but my ex is that type of parent. Any tips on how to navigate this for my DS? I'm very flexible with my ex when I can be on schedules/weekends/etc. so I can have some leeway for DS's important events and playdates, and if I play all my cards right, I get to convince my ex that it was his idea or in his benefit to switch weekends/time for DS. But, it doesn't always line up and it's so much mental work! Also, I'm sorry you went through that.
Parents are more important than playdates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would get an updated parenting agreement that Ex does majority of the driving since he is the one moving. If you want to be charitable, you can offer to meet him part way once every 4th time.
OP here: ex is currently refusing to do anything other than split driving 50/50.
I will speak with my attorney and see what he says. But I’m scared to spend $$$$ fighting this battle and lose.
what a selfish jerk. he couldn't wait a few years before moving that far away?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell yourself ex is moving for work and see if you feel differently. Yes the extra driving sucks because you are not used to it. But you have been lucky it’s been so close all this time. Their Dad wants to continue visitation, there are a lot of dead beat dads out there. I would try my best to make this work.
OP here. I moved on and remarried several years ago. I have no insecurities/jealousies about my ex’s new relationship (although I was surprised ex is moving in with someone they’ve been with for a very short period of time). Ex’s reasons for moving doesn’t really play into my concern.
And I’m not just lucky; we both signed a stipulation saying neither of us would move outside of the area. We both agreed to stay here and raise our kids here; ex is the one going back on that.
Well I guess he can’t move.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would get an updated parenting agreement that Ex does majority of the driving since he is the one moving. If you want to be charitable, you can offer to meet him part way once every 4th time.
OP here: ex is currently refusing to do anything other than split driving 50/50.
I will speak with my attorney and see what he says. But I’m scared to spend $$$$ fighting this battle and lose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell yourself ex is moving for work and see if you feel differently. Yes the extra driving sucks because you are not used to it. But you have been lucky it’s been so close all this time. Their Dad wants to continue visitation, there are a lot of dead beat dads out there. I would try my best to make this work.
OP here. I moved on and remarried several years ago. I have no insecurities/jealousies about my ex’s new relationship (although I was surprised ex is moving in with someone they’ve been with for a very short period of time). Ex’s reasons for moving doesn’t really play into my concern.
And I’m not just lucky; we both signed a stipulation saying neither of us would move outside of the area. We both agreed to stay here and raise our kids here; ex is the one going back on that.
Anonymous wrote:Tell yourself ex is moving for work and see if you feel differently. Yes the extra driving sucks because you are not used to it. But you have been lucky it’s been so close all this time. Their Dad wants to continue visitation, there are a lot of dead beat dads out there. I would try my best to make this work.