Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is pretty nice of your ex and his wife to offer OP. My DH and his ex make their poor kid have 2 seperate birthday celebrations so they don't have to be in the same room together.
LOL Yes I'll bet the kid is suffering having to have two parties.
She's not having two parties, nor has she ever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Absolutely do not go, even if you get a invitation from the adults who are throwing it. This is so simple, you merely celebrate another weekend by having your own party with your side of the family or go out to eat..what have you. A non-issue. Sorry but like everything else in life kids don't get to rule, nor do they always get their way.
I think kids who have had a parent lie to the family and destroy the child's nuclear family are pretty well aware that they don't always get their way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is pretty nice of your ex and his wife to offer OP. My DH and his ex make their poor kid have 2 seperate birthday celebrations so they don't have to be in the same room together.
LOL Yes I'll bet the kid is suffering having to have two parties.
Anonymous wrote:Absolutely do not go, even if you get a invitation from the adults who are throwing it. This is so simple, you merely celebrate another weekend by having your own party with your side of the family or go out to eat..what have you. A non-issue. Sorry but like everything else in life kids don't get to rule, nor do they always get their way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ ok, or a personal invitation directly from the ex. But you'll have to ask firmly if step-mom is in agreement with him on inviting you.
If the ex invited the OP without his new wife's approval isn't that between the couple? Wouldn't the OP going directly to the new wife to question the actions of the ex husband be meddling?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless you get a personal invitation directly from step-mom, you have not been invited. What your DD wants, thinks should happen is not important - not even on her birthday. If you get the above invitation, I do think you should suck-it-up and go - then it's about your DD's happiness, not yours.
WTF are you talking about? OF COURSE what DD wants - particularly on her birthday - matters and is important.
Not in this case. She doesn't get what she wants when it forces her mother and step-mother and father into a very awkward, unhappy situation.
She can have a Mother/Daughter spa day or something instead of having her mom at her party.
Of FFS, the girl can't really have two parties with friends and really shouldn't have to choose between parents. Hard as it may be, this is the price you pay for marring someone and having a child with that person. Whether OP was terribly wronged by her Ex-Husband is irrelevant. As a parent, you co-parent, and you show up. It's not about the OP, as she well knows. And the daughter here isn't forcing anyone int an awkward situation, that would have been Ex-Husband when he decided o cheat on his wife and family. And notice that HE is the only one who isn't on the receiving end of ill will here. OP is mad at new wide (not her ex it seems), other posters are frustrated with DD for allegedly being responsible for an uncomfortable situation, and the cheating spouse just goes about his business.
Doing something different with her mother isn't "choosing between parents." She is having a party with her friends at her Dad's house and doing something else with her Mom.
Missing a birthday party isn't really worth all that drama.
Anonymous wrote:I think this is pretty nice of your ex and his wife to offer OP. My DH and his ex make their poor kid have 2 seperate birthday celebrations so they don't have to be in the same room together.
Anonymous wrote:Do you have a close friend or relative close to your DD whom you could bring along for moral support?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hire a male escort and show up with him as your new boyfriend.
Yes because the mature thing is to turn your daughter's birthday into a way to score points against your ex.
Anonymous wrote:Hire a male escort and show up with him as your new boyfriend.
Anonymous wrote:DD needs to learn to accept "no" in life. I see nothing wrong with telling her "no."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't go. It's weird. My divorced mother and father didn't attend parties/holidays together. It was fine. I am fine.
I'm divorced and remarried to a man who is also divorced. In our families, exes attend their children's birthday parties. It's not weird. (nobody cheated)