Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They say under 2 and over 22 are the best times to divorce
They don’t know. Youngest was 2 and he has been most affected. Very anxious and I think some of this is because older siblings get all the attention. Plus just has back fourth between houses at very young age. I still remember him bawling because he wanted his mother.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I told my wife we were divorcing when my kids were finishing 6th and 3rd grades. We do the 2-2-5-5 thing, and the kids are thriving.
My ex dragged her feet on some things which has made reaching a settlement difficult. But that doesn’t affect the kids. When my ex tried to tell me that I needed to wait a while before introducing them to my girlfriend, I realized I had to assert my rights.
So I went ahead and had my girlfriend swing by when I had the kids, and then we had her over for a bbq. She bought my younger kid an XBox game and recorded TikTok videos with my older one. They love her.
My ex fumes, but who cares. She can’t demonize my girlfriend and I if we define ourselves first. We take the kids on trips my ex can’t afford, and treat them much more lavishly than her.
Ideally my ex will accept being friends with us for the good of the kids. I hope she can stop being petty about it. But if not, the kids recognize how much more successful we are, and how much more interesting than my ex. They know they are better off with us, and that the smart play is to ignore my ex’s tired emotions.
Wow, you’re a piece of work. And your kids will realize it one day if they haven’t already.
Anonymous wrote:At least your ex is no longer married to a sociopath. But your kids are stuck with a sociopath parent. Sad.Anonymous wrote:I told my wife we were divorcing when my kids were finishing 6th and 3rd grades. We do the 2-2-5-5 thing, and the kids are thriving.
My ex dragged her feet on some things which has made reaching a settlement difficult. But that doesn’t affect the kids. When my ex tried to tell me that I needed to wait a while before introducing them to my girlfriend, I realized I had to assert my rights.
So I went ahead and had my girlfriend swing by when I had the kids, and then we had her over for a bbq. She bought my younger kid an XBox game and recorded TikTok videos with my older one. They love her.
My ex fumes, but who cares. She can’t demonize my girlfriend and I if we define ourselves first. We take the kids on trips my ex can’t afford, and treat them much more lavishly than her.
Ideally my ex will accept being friends with us for the good of the kids. I hope she can stop being petty about it. But if not, the kids recognize how much more successful we are, and how much more interesting than my ex. They know they are better off with us, and that the smart play is to ignore my ex’s tired emotions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They say under 2 and over 22 are the best times to divorce
They don’t know. Youngest was 2 and he has been most affected. Very anxious and I think some of this is because older siblings get all the attention. Plus just has back fourth between houses at very young age. I still remember him bawling because he wanted his mother.
If you’re going to have joint custody, doing it when the kids are under 5 is really tough on them. For attachment reasons and because kids that young don’t do well with frequent routine/environment changes. It can trigger anxiety especially if they’re prone to it.
If no joint custody, then as early as possible.
Mine were 7 and 11. I would say the older one is more or less adjusted a few months later. Their life is at school, at activities, with friends… the younger one is not totally ok but getting there. They are actually doing much better at school this year. There is occasional anxiety. I set up the schedule so we wouldn’t be separated for longer than a day or two most weeks (we do 2-2-5-5, but with a mid five visit and 1-1 time with each kid on weekends so I get the youngest on his).
I wouldn’t have wanted to split earlier. My ex went off the rails and had major mental health issues. Even so, I’m glad I hung in there an extra gut wrenching year. When we split my youngest was just starting to sleep through consistently without night wakings.
At least your ex is no longer married to a sociopath. But your kids are stuck with a sociopath parent. Sad.Anonymous wrote:I told my wife we were divorcing when my kids were finishing 6th and 3rd grades. We do the 2-2-5-5 thing, and the kids are thriving.
My ex dragged her feet on some things which has made reaching a settlement difficult. But that doesn’t affect the kids. When my ex tried to tell me that I needed to wait a while before introducing them to my girlfriend, I realized I had to assert my rights.
So I went ahead and had my girlfriend swing by when I had the kids, and then we had her over for a bbq. She bought my younger kid an XBox game and recorded TikTok videos with my older one. They love her.
My ex fumes, but who cares. She can’t demonize my girlfriend and I if we define ourselves first. We take the kids on trips my ex can’t afford, and treat them much more lavishly than her.
Ideally my ex will accept being friends with us for the good of the kids. I hope she can stop being petty about it. But if not, the kids recognize how much more successful we are, and how much more interesting than my ex. They know they are better off with us, and that the smart play is to ignore my ex’s tired emotions.
Anonymous wrote:I told my wife we were divorcing when my kids were finishing 6th and 3rd grades. We do the 2-2-5-5 thing, and the kids are thriving.
My ex dragged her feet on some things which has made reaching a settlement difficult. But that doesn’t affect the kids. When my ex tried to tell me that I needed to wait a while before introducing them to my girlfriend, I realized I had to assert my rights.
So I went ahead and had my girlfriend swing by when I had the kids, and then we had her over for a bbq. She bought my younger kid an XBox game and recorded TikTok videos with my older one. They love her.
My ex fumes, but who cares. She can’t demonize my girlfriend and I if we define ourselves first. We take the kids on trips my ex can’t afford, and treat them much more lavishly than her.
Ideally my ex will accept being friends with us for the good of the kids. I hope she can stop being petty about it. But if not, the kids recognize how much more successful we are, and how much more interesting than my ex. They know they are better off with us, and that the smart play is to ignore my ex’s tired emotions.
Anonymous wrote:I told my wife we were divorcing when my kids were finishing 6th and 3rd grades. We do the 2-2-5-5 thing, and the kids are thriving.
My ex dragged her feet on some things which has made reaching a settlement difficult. But that doesn’t affect the kids. When my ex tried to tell me that I needed to wait a while before introducing them to my girlfriend, I realized I had to assert my rights.
So I went ahead and had my girlfriend swing by when I had the kids, and then we had her over for a bbq. She bought my younger kid an XBox game and recorded TikTok videos with my older one. They love her.
My ex fumes, but who cares. She can’t demonize my girlfriend and I if we define ourselves first. We take the kids on trips my ex can’t afford, and treat them much more lavishly than her.
Ideally my ex will accept being friends with us for the good of the kids. I hope she can stop being petty about it. But if not, the kids recognize how much more successful we are, and how much more interesting than my ex. They know they are better off with us, and that the smart play is to ignore my ex’s tired emotions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I told my wife we were divorcing when my kids were finishing 6th and 3rd grades. We do the 2-2-5-5 thing, and the kids are thriving.
My ex dragged her feet on some things which has made reaching a settlement difficult. But that doesn’t affect the kids. When my ex tried to tell me that I needed to wait a while before introducing them to my girlfriend, I realized I had to assert my rights.
So I went ahead and had my girlfriend swing by when I had the kids, and then we had her over for a bbq. She bought my younger kid an XBox game and recorded TikTok videos with my older one. They love her.
My ex fumes, but who cares. She can’t demonize my girlfriend and I if we define ourselves first. We take the kids on trips my ex can’t afford, and treat them much more lavishly than her.
Ideally my ex will accept being friends with us for the good of the kids. I hope she can stop being petty about it. But if not, the kids recognize how much more successful we are, and how much more interesting than my ex. They know they are better off with us, and that the smart play is to ignore my ex’s tired emotions.
Wow, you’re a piece of work. And your kids will realize it one day if they haven’t already.
Anonymous wrote:I told my wife we were divorcing when my kids were finishing 6th and 3rd grades. We do the 2-2-5-5 thing, and the kids are thriving.
My ex dragged her feet on some things which has made reaching a settlement difficult. But that doesn’t affect the kids. When my ex tried to tell me that I needed to wait a while before introducing them to my girlfriend, I realized I had to assert my rights.
So I went ahead and had my girlfriend swing by when I had the kids, and then we had her over for a bbq. She bought my younger kid an XBox game and recorded TikTok videos with my older one. They love her.
My ex fumes, but who cares. She can’t demonize my girlfriend and I if we define ourselves first. We take the kids on trips my ex can’t afford, and treat them much more lavishly than her.
Ideally my ex will accept being friends with us for the good of the kids. I hope she can stop being petty about it. But if not, the kids recognize how much more successful we are, and how much more interesting than my ex. They know they are better off with us, and that the smart play is to ignore my ex’s tired emotions.
Anonymous wrote:4 and 6 and it went soooo much better than I expected. I wish I would have done it years earlier instead of being miserable.
If you divorced with a 4 year old how many years earlier could you have actually wanted to do it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They say under 2 and over 22 are the best times to divorce
They don’t know. Youngest was 2 and he has been most affected. Very anxious and I think some of this is because older siblings get all the attention. Plus just has back fourth between houses at very young age. I still remember him bawling because he wanted his mother.
Anonymous wrote:They say under 2 and over 22 are the best times to divorce