Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm never the one to say jump to divorce, but honestly...you need to leave him. At least separate and see what it's like. You don't need two kids to raise. I cannot even imagine how frustrating this must be for you. Your son is young enough that he won't remember. You deserve a partner who wants to be a dad.
This is bad advice because she is likely going to have to share custody and she’s not gonna be able to trust him with the baby. It is very difficult for mothers to get full custody now.
It doesn't sound like he will be remotely interested in his half of custody. When the baby is 2 or 3, he will become even less interested. OP and her child deserve a caring and involved husband/father and right now they don't have one. OP has nothing to lose by leaving and everything to gain.
I thought that… but many do suddenly want custody because they don’t wanna pay a lot of child support. You have to pay a lot if the woman has full custody, and a lot of men will take half custody just because they don’t wanna pay that money. Ask me how I know
This is true, although I ended up making a deal with my ex to let him off the hook financially for anything related to our child in exchange for about 1/5 parenting time. I have a good job and family money, so our child was in no way "robbed" and I did it to get child out of what became an unhealthy situation. Once we divorced parenting time from money and support, he started disappearing for months at a time. OP, step one is individual therapy. Go from there and take your time. My story has a happy ending for what it's worth (remarried, had more kids, happier in my family life than most people I know in spite of the challenges with my oldest and his dad). My ex was the same way plus developed substance abuse problems and had an affair (my saving grace that allowed me to move on). We married way too young because we were both heavily influenced by our religion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm never the one to say jump to divorce, but honestly...you need to leave him. At least separate and see what it's like. You don't need two kids to raise. I cannot even imagine how frustrating this must be for you. Your son is young enough that he won't remember. You deserve a partner who wants to be a dad.
This is bad advice because she is likely going to have to share custody and she’s not gonna be able to trust him with the baby. It is very difficult for mothers to get full custody now.
It doesn't sound like he will be remotely interested in his half of custody. When the baby is 2 or 3, he will become even less interested. OP and her child deserve a caring and involved husband/father and right now they don't have one. OP has nothing to lose by leaving and everything to gain.
I thought that… but many do suddenly want custody because they don’t wanna pay a lot of child support. You have to pay a lot if the woman has full custody, and a lot of men will take half custody just because they don’t wanna pay that money. Ask me how I know
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm never the one to say jump to divorce, but honestly...you need to leave him. At least separate and see what it's like. You don't need two kids to raise. I cannot even imagine how frustrating this must be for you. Your son is young enough that he won't remember. You deserve a partner who wants to be a dad.
This is bad advice because she is likely going to have to share custody and she’s not gonna be able to trust him with the baby. It is very difficult for mothers to get full custody now.
It doesn't sound like he will be remotely interested in his half of custody. When the baby is 2 or 3, he will become even less interested. OP and her child deserve a caring and involved husband/father and right now they don't have one. OP has nothing to lose by leaving and everything to gain.
I thought that… but many do suddenly want custody because they don’t wanna pay a lot of child support. You have to pay a lot if the woman has full custody, and a lot of men will take half custody just because they don’t wanna pay that money. Ask me how I know
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm never the one to say jump to divorce, but honestly...you need to leave him. At least separate and see what it's like. You don't need two kids to raise. I cannot even imagine how frustrating this must be for you. Your son is young enough that he won't remember. You deserve a partner who wants to be a dad.
This is bad advice because she is likely going to have to share custody and she’s not gonna be able to trust him with the baby. It is very difficult for mothers to get full custody now.
It doesn't sound like he will be remotely interested in his half of custody. When the baby is 2 or 3, he will become even less interested. OP and her child deserve a caring and involved husband/father and right now they don't have one. OP has nothing to lose by leaving and everything to gain.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of posters are skimming over the fact that this guy had a stillborn with OP. That is massively traumatic. Beyond just adapting to the difficulties of having a newborn, he may also be dealing with unresolved grief, trauma, and guilt over the loss of that baby. OP have you guys been to therapy or had grief counseling? I mean, I can see a situation where he has PTSD or trauma from that experience, has unresolved grief, is terrified of losing this new baby, and feels guilt that that your first baby didn’t survive, and feels guilt for enjoying this baby, and is terrified to get close to the baby, is using avoidance of mom and this new baby and sports and gambling to numb himself from his feelings.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of posters are skimming over the fact that this guy had a stillborn with OP. That is massively traumatic. Beyond just adapting to the difficulties of having a newborn, he may also be dealing with unresolved grief, trauma, and guilt over the loss of that baby. OP have you guys been to therapy or had grief counseling? I mean, I can see a situation where he has PTSD or trauma from that experience, has unresolved grief, is terrified of losing this new baby, and feels guilt that that your first baby didn’t survive, and feels guilt for enjoying this baby, and is terrified to get close to the baby, is using avoidance of mom and this new baby and sports and gambling to numb himself from his feelings.
Anonymous wrote:It’s the gambling that would worry me the most. I would get divorced just so he couldn’t negatively impact my finances.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm never the one to say jump to divorce, but honestly...you need to leave him. At least separate and see what it's like. You don't need two kids to raise. I cannot even imagine how frustrating this must be for you. Your son is young enough that he won't remember. You deserve a partner who wants to be a dad.
This is bad advice because she is likely going to have to share custody and she’s not gonna be able to trust him with the baby. It is very difficult for mothers to get full custody now.
Anonymous wrote:Of course it’s not normal. His old is he? You married a child. Didn’t he do these things before the baby?
Anonymous wrote:Truthfully don’t understand what divorce solves. Now you’re a single mom raising an infant spending money and time on and in court. That’s the life you did sign up for? I think you’re past the point of getting the life you wanted. Not to mention the statistics of kids growing up in a broken home are ABYSMAL. Most of life is dealing with consequences from earlier decisions - both good and bad. You married him knowing what he was like, and brought a child into that relationship. It’s not just about you anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I think you need to give it more time. Right now you know that he hates parenting an infant. Okay. Many people feel this way. How is he going to be with a 6 yo? Will he be spending hours in the backyard kicking soccer goals with them and coach their team? Will he be more interested in a kid? I think you don't know yet.
. . .
Mom of teens and twenty somethings here. This describes my family to a T. Babyhood was all on my plate. But my spouse is a great parent to older kids. I barely have to be responsible for anything now. I don’t think i minded it as much as OP though. And we had a lot of give and take with chores and daycare drop off and we didn’t always have the same days off work. Just chiming in to reinforce what PP says about some people parenting better at different stages.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Truthfully don’t understand what divorce solves. Now you’re a single mom raising an infant spending money and time on and in court. That’s the life you did sign up for? I think you’re past the point of getting the life you wanted. Not to mention the statistics of kids growing up in a broken home are ABYSMAL. Most of life is dealing with consequences from earlier decisions - both good and bad. You married him knowing what he was like, and brought a child into that relationship. It’s not just about you anymore.
It would free OP up to find a better SO, and be less lonely. Maybe the kid could have a step parent who doesn't view spending time together as a burden.