Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ll be honest - I remember your other thread, you seem very paranoid. He isn’t going to fall back in love with someone he divorced. She clearly is in a bad situation. If she dies in a year that will be a good memory she and her kids had. Large family vacations are stressful and miserable. They won’t be hooking up. You are too early in the complex relationship to attend. I also would have some real conversations with him about what you want long term.
My ex fell in love with his ex again after a family trip or at least fell in love with the idea of the family unit. It happens. Vacations are easy, real life is hard. I would not be cool with this. Was once and it burned me - or maybe I dodged a bullet but regardless, it happens.
Anonymous wrote:I’ll be honest - I remember your other thread, you seem very paranoid. He isn’t going to fall back in love with someone he divorced. She clearly is in a bad situation. If she dies in a year that will be a good memory she and her kids had. Large family vacations are stressful and miserable. They won’t be hooking up. You are too early in the complex relationship to attend. I also would have some real conversations with him about what you want long term.
Anonymous wrote:OP, your BF sounds like kind, compassionate and is able to think of the kids bs the crazy ex drama we see from so many. In the situation you describe, I would be 100% fine with it. The only way I would ever date someone who is divorced with minor children is if they had a mature, amiable relationship with their ex and are able to co-parent their kids in a healthy manner. Sounds like that’s the kind your BF has.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think she mean the Peanut Gallery, which I learned on TikTok is not quite polite language. Apparently its original usage was to where Blacks sat in segregated theaters.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there a chance he would allow you to pose as an Uber eats driver, name of Cathy, who delivers a couple of meals and sort of "gets to know" the family in a very friendly, informal way. That way you can get a looksee at what's going on, what the overall dynamic is, etc, etc etc. Thoughts?
NP. I hope this is meant as a joke. It's...a joke, right? Right?
If not, it's a horrible idea. Pure immature game-playing.
And in the event the OP and this boyfriend stay together, well, at some point OP is likely to meet his ex at a kid pickup or whatever, just crossing paths...and if the ex recognizes OP as "Cathy"? That's going to sour a decent relationship between the two exes, who do still have to co-parent. And if OP ever meets the BF's parents later and they also recognize "Cathy"? Hey, son, that was deceptive of you, and your GF seems possessive if she'd pretend like that....
Just, no.
PP, try to think away from the box. We think this idea has a lot of potential. When Cathy/Kathy shows up to deliver the Uber Eats yummies, why couldn't the boyfriend something along the lines of "Well, she was kind of cute... and nice, too" and just leave it at that.
And then when she brings another meals (something "ethnic" and tasty) he says "I know it sounds crazy, but... I think she's remarkable." Or something like that.
As far as the name, OP could use her own name, but Cathy/Kathy may be more believable. k?
Love this for you, OP.
And if you do decide to go along with this plan may I come and disguise myself as a long-lost uncle so I can witness the whole thing? I’ll wear a fake mustache and bring a newspaper so it’s not obvious that I’m there to spy.
[Am only trying to help. But I see the Peanut Factory disagrees!
What?
That person really struggles with communicating. Their follow up post was bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP you need to proceed very carefully here. You are seven months into a relationship with a man who is not setting boundaries with an ex. If your ex partner has cancer you offered to take the kids more often. Or you are generous with child support. You don’t bring them on your family vacation. This is all wrong. People who are labeling you as somehow not having compassion don’t understand healthy boundaries. If you both have a small kids you need to really watch it here. This will not end well. I’m sorry, bc it sounds like you like him. But this has red flags all over it.
Those are arbitrary boundaries though. Fine if you don’t like it, but very emotionally immature to act like there are universally objective boundaries about this kind of thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This wouldn’t work for me unless bf invited me to join. Keeping such traditions alive so close to their divorce is a bit of a red flag (and he can show her support and compassion on other ways.)
+1, I would not be comfortable with this. This goes beyond coparenting and back to being a family unit. Being a family unit is totally fine, but I am not going to be the outside GF.
Anonymous wrote:I’ll be honest - I remember your other thread, you seem very paranoid. He isn’t going to fall back in love with someone he divorced. She clearly is in a bad situation. If she dies in a year that will be a good memory she and her kids had. Large family vacations are stressful and miserable. They won’t be hooking up. You are too early in the complex relationship to attend. I also would have some real conversations with him about what you want long term.
Anonymous wrote:This wouldn’t work for me unless bf invited me to join. Keeping such traditions alive so close to their divorce is a bit of a red flag (and he can show her support and compassion on other ways.)
Anonymous wrote:Love the Uber Eats driver move. You miss 100% of the shots you don't take.