Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mom decided she no longer wanted to be married so we are getting a divorce.
Nope.
You can complain and alienate during your custody time the rest of your life.
For now, just keep it simple that things did not work out. Nothing to do with the kids.
Get them a therapist too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is one you need to ask the family counselor about. Like others say, you only tell kids things that are in their benefit to know.
I have a friend currently going through a divorce, and the circumstances are so messed up and out of left field, that the kids could tell something major had happened. So when the parents were saying stuff like "we both decided we didn't love each other like that anymore", their 11 and 14 year old knew something was up. And were being consumed by the stress and guilt of thinking they did something. So the family counselor said in that case it was okay to tell them a very PG version of what dad did, so they stopped wondering.
“We both decided” isn’t fair to one spouse if it’s not true.
Ok - so mom may have decided, but do you really think that’s the whole story of their marriage and divorce? I tell my kids we both decided (I finally called it after years) because it’s better than for me to say: I felt emotionally and sexually abandoned by your father who I realized had anger issues and a low libido and didn’t / couldn’t want to grow emotionally?
An affair is often a symptom of a larger relational issue.
OP - protect your kids and yourself (!) by not starting the blame game!
This. If she divorces after an affair it’s because something was wrong in that marriage. Otherwise she would have kept the affair quiet and stayed in the marriage.
Or she got caught and her life imploded and she realizes that her husband will never see her the same way again. Divorce is easier for a truly avoidant person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here , I do want to protect my children. However, why should there be a "burden" on me to protect her? She didn't think about us when she was having her affair...
For sure you don’t have to protect her, but you have to protect the kids, and telling the kids will hurt their relationship with their mom. They deserve good relationships with both parents and sharing this information will make it very hard for them to have that.
Usually someone who cheats is going to skew things to make the kids like them and hate the other parent.
Anonymous wrote:OP, sir, please lawyer up in a real way. This is only the beginning. I’m worried for you.
Anonymous wrote:DW filed for divorce and she said we should tell our 2 kids 13 and 10 that WE are divorcing. I think she should tell them separately that she is divorcing me. Why do I have to protect her after she cheated and filed for divorce?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is one you need to ask the family counselor about. Like others say, you only tell kids things that are in their benefit to know.
I have a friend currently going through a divorce, and the circumstances are so messed up and out of left field, that the kids could tell something major had happened. So when the parents were saying stuff like "we both decided we didn't love each other like that anymore", their 11 and 14 year old knew something was up. And were being consumed by the stress and guilt of thinking they did something. So the family counselor said in that case it was okay to tell them a very PG version of what dad did, so they stopped wondering.
“We both decided” isn’t fair to one spouse if it’s not true.
Ok - so mom may have decided, but do you really think that’s the whole story of their marriage and divorce? I tell my kids we both decided (I finally called it after years) because it’s better than for me to say: I felt emotionally and sexually abandoned by your father who I realized had anger issues and a low libido and didn’t / couldn’t want to grow emotionally?
An affair is often a symptom of a larger relational issue.
OP - protect your kids and yourself (!) by not starting the blame game!
This. If she divorces after an affair it’s because something was wrong in that marriage. Otherwise she would have kept the affair quiet and stayed in the marriage.
Anonymous wrote:OP didn’t explicitly say he was going to tell his kids their mom cheated. He just said he didn’t want to act like it was a mutual decision. Big difference.
Anonymous wrote:Mom decided she no longer wanted to be married so we are getting a divorce.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP didn’t explicitly say he was going to tell his kids their mom cheated. He just said he didn’t want to act like it was a mutual decision. Big difference.
And she can tell them that it is a mutual decision to her because he failed to keep certain promises leaving her with no other option but to divorce.
Trying to place responsibility and blame here is going to backfire at this time, and the children will look at both of them as selfish.
Anonymous wrote:OP didn’t explicitly say he was going to tell his kids their mom cheated. He just said he didn’t want to act like it was a mutual decision. Big difference.