Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Their parenting plan says she has a right to meet her, so meet.
I think it would be preferable if OP's BF came.
Otherwise, meet her for coffee and say "Hi. I am Larla. {BF's name} asked me to meet you, so here I am. What do you want to do at this meeting?"
In other words, to the extent possible, leave the ball in her court. You might have some questions you want to ask, but don't ask them unless the meeting ends up going much better than you anticipate. And those questions should not have anything to do with what went wrong in their marriage.
That clause is not enforceable. You can't bind third parties in your parenting agreement.
Anonymous wrote:Their parenting plan says she has a right to meet her, so meet.
I think it would be preferable if OP's BF came.
Otherwise, meet her for coffee and say "Hi. I am Larla. {BF's name} asked me to meet you, so here I am. What do you want to do at this meeting?"
In other words, to the extent possible, leave the ball in her court. You might have some questions you want to ask, but don't ask them unless the meeting ends up going much better than you anticipate. And those questions should not have anything to do with what went wrong in their marriage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you want to meet her, have coffee and an excuse to leave quickly if it's not going well. However, you are not obligated to meet her; she sounds a little crazy. DH and I have been married for 10 years. I've spent plenty of time with his kids (now all adults), but I've been in the same space as her maybe 5 times, and rarely conversed. DH did the graduations solo because we live on the other side of the country now and have young kids.
So you married a man who neglected and abandoned his first set of kids. Bravo!
No. His kids were already in or on their way to college in the NE - different states from both parents. And DH remains close with his older kids. They visited on school breaks, and now on work holidays. I haven't needed to have a relationship with his ex thus far; I suppose we may cross paths at a wedding someday.
The problem is not my reading comprehension. I have superior reading comprehension. Hence my ability to point out that she literally wrote "alluding to the fact that I'm a gold digger." That is stating she is a gold digger. It might not have been what she meant, but, again, my reading comprehension is not the problem here. I'm also obviously brighter than you if you need this explained.
Anonymous wrote:We had a “six months exclusive dating before meeting the kids” clause. My XH never followed it. He’d introduce DC to people he had dated for a week! Worse, he’d have these women contact me to ask me to drop the clause so they could move in.
It was a mess until he died.
Anonymous wrote:1st thing. Are you the AP?
I know he says you're not, and the marriage was "dead", etc- which is almost always a lie.
Was his divorce final (or at least separated for months before you met him?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi DCUM. I've been with my boyfriend for one year and we are starting to talk about me meeting his kids. His divorce parenting plan says the other parent has the option to meet a significant other before the kids do. I'm happy to do that, but I feel like his ex-wife has already laid an awkward foundation by doing things like driving by his house and asking repeatedly via text why my car is there (on his non-kid days) or making little jabs at him at extended family parties in front of everyone such as "well aren't you just such a great catch for OP" or alluding to the fact that I'm a young gold digger (I'm 3 years younger than him and own a business doing really well/we do not share finances at all).
Anyway, what would you suggest in this situation- coffee, lunch, a drink? I'm thinking it'd be best to meet her by myself without boyfriend, do you agree? What do we talk about? I know a lot about the kids even though I haven't met them, but boyfriend and I talk about parenting all the time, but is it inappropriate to make small talk about her kids? Obviously not going to discuss my relationship. I guess I can chit chat about work or hobbies. Is the right mindset that I'm not searching for her approval, but more so extending the courtesy of supporting their parenting plan?
I'm a really empathetic person and often find myself talking my boyfriend down and explaining what ex-wife's experience or POV must be like and I wish she could give me the benefit of the doubt, but it seems like my existence really bothers her already even though she is the one who left the marriage in a really crazy, publicly self-destructive way.
Anyone been through similar?
That is not in any way, shape or form an enforceable clause in court, just FYI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you want to meet her, have coffee and an excuse to leave quickly if it's not going well. However, you are not obligated to meet her; she sounds a little crazy. DH and I have been married for 10 years. I've spent plenty of time with his kids (now all adults), but I've been in the same space as her maybe 5 times, and rarely conversed. DH did the graduations solo because we live on the other side of the country now and have young kids.
The second family. Never understood why these men are appealing.