Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you everyone for listening, i needed to vent but feel better. Im grateful that im healthy enough and able to take care of DD on my own and will keep it moving, knowing I can only rely on myself and keep doing what I was doing!
^This statement shows you are NOT healthy. Your daughter has a father yet you are mentally in a state where you intend to highlight his flaws and look for reasons to get him out of your daughter's life. I believe you need therapy. Seriously. Read up about parental alienation and you will find you may be practicing it without even being aware.
The most important thing you can do as a mother is foster and support your child's relationship with her father.
This is such a horrible take. Absolute horsesh*t. OP, ignore this. Bitter crappy dad troll strikes again.
OP, you are a good mom and you're doing a good job while also dealing with the issue that DD's dad is a deadbeat.
Disagree. OP, suggest you read up on the importance of father-daughter relationships. There are plenty of scientific studies which you will find informative. Then seek out a therapist that will help both your daughter and YOU navigate her relationship with her father.
Instead of being defensive be proactive. Your daughter will never fault you if she sees you've done everything you can to help her connect with her father in a positive way no matter his faults.
It's her father's job to connect with his child.
Furthermore, whoever said "but it's her child's half-sibling" is crazy. A vast majority of second wives would have preferred that their husbands had no older children since children compete for limited resources. Particularly if the older child lives elsewhere, the second wife's preferred MO is to pretend that child does not exist.
The father cannot do it without her support given she has custody. You make huge generalizations about wives. OP is clearly not very nice to the Dad's wife which may play a factor in it.
OP doesn't want the kid to have a relationship or she'd make more of an effort and help make it work.
She needs to go file with the child support office for a modification vs. negotiating and sending it back every month. Its free to file.
You are a moron. Why would she go back for a modification? If the father can't afford it, he needs to petition the court. All you can say is what the woman needs to do in this situation and lie about her motivations and feelings towards his new wife. What about the MAN? I think you are some bitter man that lives in a dark basement apartment because your wife left you and took your money and kids. All you have to do is troll DCUM looking for posts by divorced women so you can dump all over them.
We don't know the entire situation. You always want to blame Dad and make the mom look wonderful. Why do you hate men so much? Maybe you are the reason why Dad's give up as you are so mean and nasty.
Someone needs to file as she should not be sending money back and if its a hardship for him it makes more sense to change the order. Its easy for her to do online. No so easy for him as he'd have to file in court which costs money and attorney fees.
Maybe if she tried to work with Dad's wife, things would be better overall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you everyone for listening, i needed to vent but feel better. Im grateful that im healthy enough and able to take care of DD on my own and will keep it moving, knowing I can only rely on myself and keep doing what I was doing!
^This statement shows you are NOT healthy. Your daughter has a father yet you are mentally in a state where you intend to highlight his flaws and look for reasons to get him out of your daughter's life. I believe you need therapy. Seriously. Read up about parental alienation and you will find you may be practicing it without even being aware.
The most important thing you can do as a mother is foster and support your child's relationship with her father.
This is such a horrible take. Absolute horsesh*t. OP, ignore this. Bitter crappy dad troll strikes again.
OP, you are a good mom and you're doing a good job while also dealing with the issue that DD's dad is a deadbeat.
Disagree. OP, suggest you read up on the importance of father-daughter relationships. There are plenty of scientific studies which you will find informative. Then seek out a therapist that will help both your daughter and YOU navigate her relationship with her father.
Instead of being defensive be proactive. Your daughter will never fault you if she sees you've done everything you can to help her connect with her father in a positive way no matter his faults.
It's her father's job to connect with his child.
Furthermore, whoever said "but it's her child's half-sibling" is crazy. A vast majority of second wives would have preferred that their husbands had no older children since children compete for limited resources. Particularly if the older child lives elsewhere, the second wife's preferred MO is to pretend that child does not exist.
The father cannot do it without her support given she has custody. You make huge generalizations about wives. OP is clearly not very nice to the Dad's wife which may play a factor in it.
OP doesn't want the kid to have a relationship or she'd make more of an effort and help make it work.
She needs to go file with the child support office for a modification vs. negotiating and sending it back every month. Its free to file.
You are a moron. Why would she go back for a modification? If the father can't afford it, he needs to petition the court. All you can say is what the woman needs to do in this situation and lie about her motivations and feelings towards his new wife. What about the MAN? I think you are some bitter man that lives in a dark basement apartment because your wife left you and took your money and kids. All you have to do is troll DCUM looking for posts by divorced women so you can dump all over them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you everyone for listening, i needed to vent but feel better. Im grateful that im healthy enough and able to take care of DD on my own and will keep it moving, knowing I can only rely on myself and keep doing what I was doing!
^This statement shows you are NOT healthy. Your daughter has a father yet you are mentally in a state where you intend to highlight his flaws and look for reasons to get him out of your daughter's life. I believe you need therapy. Seriously. Read up about parental alienation and you will find you may be practicing it without even being aware.
The most important thing you can do as a mother is foster and support your child's relationship with her father.
This is such a horrible take. Absolute horsesh*t. OP, ignore this. Bitter crappy dad troll strikes again.
OP, you are a good mom and you're doing a good job while also dealing with the issue that DD's dad is a deadbeat.
Disagree. OP, suggest you read up on the importance of father-daughter relationships. There are plenty of scientific studies which you will find informative. Then seek out a therapist that will help both your daughter and YOU navigate her relationship with her father.
Instead of being defensive be proactive. Your daughter will never fault you if she sees you've done everything you can to help her connect with her father in a positive way no matter his faults.
It's her father's job to connect with his child.
Furthermore, whoever said "but it's her child's half-sibling" is crazy. A vast majority of second wives would have preferred that their husbands had no older children since children compete for limited resources. Particularly if the older child lives elsewhere, the second wife's preferred MO is to pretend that child does not exist.
The father cannot do it without her support given she has custody. You make huge generalizations about wives. OP is clearly not very nice to the Dad's wife which may play a factor in it.
OP doesn't want the kid to have a relationship or she'd make more of an effort and help make it work.
She needs to go file with the child support office for a modification vs. negotiating and sending it back every month. Its free to file.
Agree with the above. If OP has a beef with father then take it up via the court. This goes with father, too. If OP is creating problems with father trying to maintain his relationship with daughter then he should bring evidence and bring it up in court. Many judges/court systems are becoming more aware of parental alienation and its damaging effects on children and will take that into consideration.
It's not crazy to include other factors like the child's relationship with half-siblings either. If a judge is presented evidence that a parent is obstructing a young child's visitation with a parent, or obstructing the healthy development of sibling relationships (without valid reason) I'm sure that will be considered. It won't be in OPs favor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you everyone for listening, i needed to vent but feel better. Im grateful that im healthy enough and able to take care of DD on my own and will keep it moving, knowing I can only rely on myself and keep doing what I was doing!
^This statement shows you are NOT healthy. Your daughter has a father yet you are mentally in a state where you intend to highlight his flaws and look for reasons to get him out of your daughter's life. I believe you need therapy. Seriously. Read up about parental alienation and you will find you may be practicing it without even being aware.
The most important thing you can do as a mother is foster and support your child's relationship with her father.
Don't be ridiculous. The most important? You mean more important than putting food on the table? How about shelter? More important than that? What about education and supporting her development? That's less important too?
Let's acknowledge one obvious thing: it's the adult's job to foster and support their relationship with their own child. Not another adult's.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you everyone for listening, i needed to vent but feel better. Im grateful that im healthy enough and able to take care of DD on my own and will keep it moving, knowing I can only rely on myself and keep doing what I was doing!
^This statement shows you are NOT healthy. Your daughter has a father yet you are mentally in a state where you intend to highlight his flaws and look for reasons to get him out of your daughter's life. I believe you need therapy. Seriously. Read up about parental alienation and you will find you may be practicing it without even being aware.
The most important thing you can do as a mother is foster and support your child's relationship with her father.
Anonymous wrote:
We don't know the entire situation. You always want to blame Dad and make the mom look wonderful. Why do you hate men so much? Maybe you are the reason why Dad's give up as you are so mean and nasty.
Someone needs to file as she should not be sending money back and if its a hardship for him it makes more sense to change the order. Its easy for her to do online. No so easy for him as he'd have to file in court which costs money and attorney fees.
Maybe if she tried to work with Dad's wife, things would be better overall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How many jobs is the new wife working?
The new wife and her working has nothing to do with anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you everyone for listening, i needed to vent but feel better. Im grateful that im healthy enough and able to take care of DD on my own and will keep it moving, knowing I can only rely on myself and keep doing what I was doing!
^This statement shows you are NOT healthy. Your daughter has a father yet you are mentally in a state where you intend to highlight his flaws and look for reasons to get him out of your daughter's life. I believe you need therapy. Seriously. Read up about parental alienation and you will find you may be practicing it without even being aware.
The most important thing you can do as a mother is foster and support your child's relationship with her father.
This is such a horrible take. Absolute horsesh*t. OP, ignore this. Bitter crappy dad troll strikes again.
OP, you are a good mom and you're doing a good job while also dealing with the issue that DD's dad is a deadbeat.
Disagree. OP, suggest you read up on the importance of father-daughter relationships. There are plenty of scientific studies which you will find informative. Then seek out a therapist that will help both your daughter and YOU navigate her relationship with her father.
Instead of being defensive be proactive. Your daughter will never fault you if she sees you've done everything you can to help her connect with her father in a positive way no matter his faults.
It's her father's job to connect with his child.
Furthermore, whoever said "but it's her child's half-sibling" is crazy. A vast majority of second wives would have preferred that their husbands had no older children since children compete for limited resources. Particularly if the older child lives elsewhere, the second wife's preferred MO is to pretend that child does not exist.
The father cannot do it without her support given she has custody. You make huge generalizations about wives. OP is clearly not very nice to the Dad's wife which may play a factor in it.
OP doesn't want the kid to have a relationship or she'd make more of an effort and help make it work.
She needs to go file with the child support office for a modification vs. negotiating and sending it back every month. Its free to file.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you everyone for listening, i needed to vent but feel better. Im grateful that im healthy enough and able to take care of DD on my own and will keep it moving, knowing I can only rely on myself and keep doing what I was doing!
^This statement shows you are NOT healthy. Your daughter has a father yet you are mentally in a state where you intend to highlight his flaws and look for reasons to get him out of your daughter's life. I believe you need therapy. Seriously. Read up about parental alienation and you will find you may be practicing it without even being aware.
The most important thing you can do as a mother is foster and support your child's relationship with her father.
This is such a horrible take. Absolute horsesh*t. OP, ignore this. Bitter crappy dad troll strikes again.
OP, you are a good mom and you're doing a good job while also dealing with the issue that DD's dad is a deadbeat.
Disagree. OP, suggest you read up on the importance of father-daughter relationships. There are plenty of scientific studies which you will find informative. Then seek out a therapist that will help both your daughter and YOU navigate her relationship with her father.
Instead of being defensive be proactive. Your daughter will never fault you if she sees you've done everything you can to help her connect with her father in a positive way no matter his faults.
It's her father's job to connect with his child.
Furthermore, whoever said "but it's her child's half-sibling" is crazy. A vast majority of second wives would have preferred that their husbands had no older children since children compete for limited resources. Particularly if the older child lives elsewhere, the second wife's preferred MO is to pretend that child does not exist.
The father cannot do it without her support given she has custody. You make huge generalizations about wives. OP is clearly not very nice to the Dad's wife which may play a factor in it.
OP doesn't want the kid to have a relationship or she'd make more of an effort and help make it work.
She needs to go file with the child support office for a modification vs. negotiating and sending it back every month. Its free to file.
You are a moron. Why would she go back for a modification? If the father can't afford it, he needs to petition the court. All you can say is what the woman needs to do in this situation and lie about her motivations and feelings towards his new wife. What about the MAN? I think you are some bitter man that lives in a dark basement apartment because your wife left you and took your money and kids. All you have to do is troll DCUM looking for posts by divorced women so you can dump all over them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you everyone for listening, i needed to vent but feel better. Im grateful that im healthy enough and able to take care of DD on my own and will keep it moving, knowing I can only rely on myself and keep doing what I was doing!
^This statement shows you are NOT healthy. Your daughter has a father yet you are mentally in a state where you intend to highlight his flaws and look for reasons to get him out of your daughter's life. I believe you need therapy. Seriously. Read up about parental alienation and you will find you may be practicing it without even being aware.
The most important thing you can do as a mother is foster and support your child's relationship with her father.
This is such a horrible take. Absolute horsesh*t. OP, ignore this. Bitter crappy dad troll strikes again.
OP, you are a good mom and you're doing a good job while also dealing with the issue that DD's dad is a deadbeat.
Disagree. OP, suggest you read up on the importance of father-daughter relationships. There are plenty of scientific studies which you will find informative. Then seek out a therapist that will help both your daughter and YOU navigate her relationship with her father.
Instead of being defensive be proactive. Your daughter will never fault you if she sees you've done everything you can to help her connect with her father in a positive way no matter his faults.
It's her father's job to connect with his child.
Furthermore, whoever said "but it's her child's half-sibling" is crazy. A vast majority of second wives would have preferred that their husbands had no older children since children compete for limited resources. Particularly if the older child lives elsewhere, the second wife's preferred MO is to pretend that child does not exist.
The father cannot do it without her support given she has custody. You make huge generalizations about wives. OP is clearly not very nice to the Dad's wife which may play a factor in it.
OP doesn't want the kid to have a relationship or she'd make more of an effort and help make it work.
She needs to go file with the child support office for a modification vs. negotiating and sending it back every month. Its free to file.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you everyone for listening, i needed to vent but feel better. Im grateful that im healthy enough and able to take care of DD on my own and will keep it moving, knowing I can only rely on myself and keep doing what I was doing!
^This statement shows you are NOT healthy. Your daughter has a father yet you are mentally in a state where you intend to highlight his flaws and look for reasons to get him out of your daughter's life. I believe you need therapy. Seriously. Read up about parental alienation and you will find you may be practicing it without even being aware.
The most important thing you can do as a mother is foster and support your child's relationship with her father.
This is such a horrible take. Absolute horsesh*t. OP, ignore this. Bitter crappy dad troll strikes again.
OP, you are a good mom and you're doing a good job while also dealing with the issue that DD's dad is a deadbeat.
Disagree. OP, suggest you read up on the importance of father-daughter relationships. There are plenty of scientific studies which you will find informative. Then seek out a therapist that will help both your daughter and YOU navigate her relationship with her father.
Instead of being defensive be proactive. Your daughter will never fault you if she sees you've done everything you can to help her connect with her father in a positive way no matter his faults.
It's her father's job to connect with his child.
Furthermore, whoever said "but it's her child's half-sibling" is crazy. A vast majority of second wives would have preferred that their husbands had no older children since children compete for limited resources. Particularly if the older child lives elsewhere, the second wife's preferred MO is to pretend that child does not exist.