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Conference quark::human_relations-v1

Title:What's all this fuss about 'sax and violins'?
Notice:Archived V1 - Current conference is QUARK::HUMAN_RELATIONS
Moderator:ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI
Created:Fri May 09 1986
Last Modified:Wed Jun 26 1996
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1327
Total number of notes:28298

295.0. "How to handle a delicate situation..." by FELIX::KLEINBERGER (misery IS optional) Mon Apr 27 1987 17:48

    I was thinking of putting this in Parenting, but decided I wanted
    to get an overview beyond that readership.  Please this is a serious
    question in my mind, and I would rather have only serious well thought
    out answers (is it possible to ask that in advance???)
    
    My EX had the kids for the last 8 days.  When the kids got back
    yesterday, I found he had out-and-out lied to them, which is no
    surprise to me, but to quote my 10 year old: "Mom, I'm so confused
    right now, I don't know who to believe".  She knows I have never
    lied to her, and "thinks" her father hasn't, but knows now he has,
    although she doesn't want to openly admit it.
    
    I found he had taken some of the rules I had laid down for the kids
    (and rules of a person I have been dating laid down), and said, "He
    didn't care, they could say anything they wanted to in his house".
    (we have told the kids not to say "Shut-up", so when he told them
    shut-up, they all three told him "Bob said not to say 'Shut-up'")...
    manners have went out the window, sassing is back in style (coming
    to a quick halt at my house)...
    
    He did not feed the kids dinner until 9:15 at night, seemed to pass
    the evenings by with a large bottle of wine and VCR movies (luckily
    not EVERY night), and complained that I was turning them into Yuppies,
    by feeding them too expensive food, and in the next breath complained
    to them that I was not feeding them properly. He told the girls
    they had ate over $200.00 of food in one week (hard to believe when
    they told me exactly WHAT they ate, I would guess-ti-mate maybe
    50 to 60 dollars worth....
    
    I'm not sure how to handle his lying, his belittling, and other
    things.  I would hate to limit the all-too-few visits he does so
    high-and-mightly grant to the kids, but I'm wondering what good they
    are really doing?
    
    What would you do in this situation????
    
    
    Gale
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
295.1 He abuses his privilegesARMORY::CHARBONNDMon Apr 27 1987 18:022
    Talk to my lawyer and maybe the appropriate gov't. office
    re. childrens wellfare. 
295.3CSC32::WOLBACHMon Apr 27 1987 18:3844
    This can be a frustrating situation.
    
    Perhaps this is a good place to put in a plug for
    one of my favorite "experts" on child-rearing:
    Jim Fay (author of "Helicopters, Drill Sargents
    and Consultants").  He advocates allowing children
    to be responsible for their own behavior.  Consulting
    with them.
    
    I often have a similar experience-a difference between
    my methods of child rearing and my ex-husbands.  I simply
    explain to my youngster that "This is the way we do it in
    my house."  I try very hard not undermine his father's ef-
    forts, although they may differ from my own.  If Jamey has
    a problem, I suggest that he talk to his father.  On rare
    occasions, I will discuss the "problem" with is father.
    
    Don't be overly concerned about their father being dishonest
    with them.  Set a good example and they will realize soon
    enough that, painful as it may be to admit it, their father
    is not always honest.  Kid's a real sharp about picking up
    those things.  Your responsibility will be to help them deal
    with the negative feelings this realizatio may produce.  Please
    be non-judgemental and tactful.
    
    It's great to have high standards for child rearing.  However,
    don't forget to relax and ask yourself how important a "situation"
    really is.  Few children die from malnutrition from eating a few
    poorly balanced meals.  Again, set a good example n your own home.
    Even a 2 year old can pull a carton of yogurt out of the refridger-
    ator, if the hunger is compelling enough.
    
    I admit that my 7 year old occasionally eats dinner at 8:00.  He
    does help himself to healthy snacks to tide him over, and he does
    ask when we're having dinner; if he's hungry, he takes care of it.
    And he watches movies on the VCR frequently.  My home offers him
    an opportunity for "quiet time" and imagination and relaxation and
    fantasy.  I haven't seen a signs of lasting brain damage.  
    
    Make sure you aren't "using" this situation as an excuse to vent
    frustration about something totally unrelated.  And try not to
    worry too much.  Your good example will make the difference!
    
    
295.4Finally smilingOWL::LANGILLMon Apr 27 1987 20:1458
    After three years of this garbage.......My ex. was very angry at
    me for "breaking up his happy home" and in the first couple of years
    he behaved in a similar manner.  There was little discipline at
    his house and the kids became very manipulative with him.  We would
    spend the first two or so days after a visit with him undoing the
    damage that he had done and getting the kids back on track.
    
    He was very manipulative of the kids also....to get to me it seems
    now.  Example....last year when we were about three days away from 
    leaving on vacation, he (on his weekly visitation night) told them
    that the upcoming weekend was "his" and that they would not be going
    away, that he knew nothing about it.  He had been told two months in 
    advance that this would be happening, both by letter and orally
    through the kids.  As you can imagine, this served to upset the kids
    and me also. 
    
    As this type of behavior (an every other negative one that you can
    associate with exs) had been repeated over and over, I decided that
    something had to be done to put a stop to it.  We were all living
    in a constant state of stress waiting for "what he would do next"
    and it was a miserable way to exist.  I tried to think about the
    situation as a person who was not emotionally involved, but rather as
    an outsider looking in would do (not easy).  This is what I came to:  
    
    I cannot control behavior that is not in my home. (I cannot control
    him or what he says as long as he doesn't abuse the kids.  The kids
    are smart enough to see through his behavior and recognize what
    is right and wrong for themselves.  If he lies and is caught they
    will see that etc.  Granted this is confusing.....grownups aren't
    supposed to behave badly.)
    
    I can control behavior that is in my home.  (I will not allow my
    kids to use manipulative behavior on me...I will stand by and matter
    of factly pick them up when he has knocked them down emotionally...I
    will not feed into his manipulation by allowing the kids to see
    me get angry or upset when they relay something he has said about
    me, or us, or our home, or the way we live...I will explain to them
    that he is angry...I will not continue to communicate with him orally
    as long as he feels he needs to verbally abuse me...When I needed
    to communicate with him it would be by certified letter to that
    I would know that he had received it, etc.)
    
    After I set up the new "rules" to the game I sat down and wrote
    a letter to him outlining what I would and would not accept from
    him in the way of behavior.  At the time, I really didn't think
    that it would do any good...but low and behold...we have had almost
    a year relatively free from stress.  There may also have been some
    other factors working in my favor at the time...such as his family
    getting tired of hearing him moan and groan about his situation...but
    something clicked.
    
    This is long and I'm sorry, but I guess what I'm trying to say is
    the courts won't do anything about this unless there is out and
    out abuse going on (emotional doesn't count), so it's up to you
    to work it out for yourself.  Try to examine your own behavior to
    see if you are playing into what he is doing.  If you are STOP.
    When the whole thing is over (the kids are grown) they will be the
    ones to decide who is the good guy and who is the bad.
295.6Kid's Side Of ThisGCANYN::TATISTCHEFFTue Apr 28 1987 04:0677
    Well, my mom never got visitation rights (my family was among the
    weirdos who lived with Dad instead of Mom...), but she moved right
    across the street and was always very accessible.
    
    While she is a teriffic woman, my mom has never been very disciplined,
    and my brothers and I grew up without any real sense of order in
    our home: dirty dishes all over the place even though we ate off
    paper when we ate home, never made a bed in my life before she moved
    out and I doubt she made 'em more than two or three times a year,
    general pigsty of a home, etc, etc.  While this was at least as
    much my dad's fault as it was hers, after the divorce we started
    a very new life: we made our beds, we ate off china and drank out
    of glass, daily and weekly chores, a tidy home, rules (with lots
    of discussion -- Dad was a bit uncomfortable with watching his only
    girl hit adolescence so he listened a lot to what I said).  He married
    two years later a woman that I wish had had more influence on
    my more formative years.
    
    Mom's house across the street made the house we all used to live
    in look like a showcase for "House Beautiful": messy, dirty, dog
    hair EVERYWHERE.  I got into the habit of doing the dishes every
    time I walked in her door.  She had no rules, and was as angry as
    Dad was about ever having known each other, and on top of it all,
    she was pregnant and broke.  Sigh.
    
    There was little or no reason to visit her: her house smelled, she
    cried all the time... it was simply not a comfortable place for any of
    us.  The oldest of my little brothers liked to play at being Mom's
    knight in shining armor, I predictably spent a lot of time trying to be
    a mother-substitute for the family while Dad got his feet on the
    ground, and the youngest brother remained confused and manipulated by
    Mom [he was her baby family for far too long]; nevertheless at one time
    or another each of us has said out loud that we would prefer to live
    with Dad and his rules than with Mom. 
    
    I think I was the first to stop visiting her because: 1) I was older
    2) I sided (sort-of) with Dad from the beginning, and 3) Dad and
    his wife made their rules very clear and explained that these rules
    were always subject to discussion (with them holding the final word
    of course) but were put there to make life nicer for all of us.
    They were right; the discipline gave us a ... structure within
    which we could live more easily, not having to think about things
    which should be routine (washing clothes and dishes).
    
    Brother #1 came around recently (circa age 18 or 19, but starting
    earlier), and brother #2 is a basket case (clepto, lazy, flunked
    out of 2 schools so far, hoping he'll graduate from high school).
    *His* problems came before the divorce though.  We all still love
    our mother, but as we mature (who me??), we come to recognize EXACTLY
    how much we can depend on her.  She's great in many ways, but if
    I had to live with one of the parents, it wouldn't be her (toilet
    don't flush at her house :)).
    
    The point in all this Gale is that my brothers and I lived through this
    sort of "problem parent" thing and for the most part have come through
    okay.  It is said so often that it is a platitude, but your children
    REALLY DO APPRECIATE RULES.   Life must have some order, at least when
    you are still a child.  As an adult (sort of :)) you can decide whether
    or not to abide by the rules with which you grew up, but there must be
    something onto which you can fall back. 
    
    Point #2 is that I would be very leery of making ANY sort of judgements
    about your ex for your kids.  They can and do see for themselves
    the differences between your houses.  The "my house my rules" line
    works very well (at least it did on us) especially when backed up
    with "I'm doing this because I love you" and "would you *really*
    be happy living like that [ie: with the ex]".  The last is not to
    be confused with "my rules, you don't like 'em, move in with your
    [other parent]", which I wouldn't think could work at all.
    
    And if they go through a time when they choose not to see their
    dad for a while, don't worry, they will see him as much as they
    want to when they can handle it a little better.

    Gaaahhhh this is still too long.
    
    Hang in there--           Lee
295.7Another Kid's View...CSSE::HIGGINSParty GirlTue Apr 28 1987 15:1825
    	Re: .0>	  
    
    		I would have a talk with their father and ask him not
    		to discuss your relationship with them.  It gets real
    		confusing to hear all the nasty things dad has to say
    		about mom and then go back to mom and have her say 
    		all nasty things about dad.  Keep it between the two
    		of you.  They will be able to figure out who is being
    		honest if that is the case.
    
    		There has to be rules in both homes.  If they are 
    		different then that's the way it will be.  They will
    		get used to it.  
    
    		There is nothing worse than having to listen to either
    		mom or dad lie about each other and try to win your
    		affection.  As the kids get older they will know what
    		is going on.  It happened to me.  I wish it could have
    		all been settled ten+ years ago when they got divorced
    		but one of them insists on lying and being a real jerk.
    		I don't speak to him anymore.
    
    		Talk to him now and clear it up - for their sake!
    
    						Carol
295.8A moderator's voice is heard in the landRTVAX::CANNOYGo where your heart leads you.Tue Apr 28 1987 15:418
    I would like to remind everyone to please be very careful in what
    they say here. I realize this is a very touchy subject on many levels
    for a lot of people. I would suggest that before you reply to this
    topic, you go back and re-read note 1.4 and other relevant material
    in that introductory note.
    
    Tamzen, moderator
    
295.9Reply from an anonymous noter.VAXRT::CANNOYGo where your heart leads you.Fri May 01 1987 19:05170
    I am posting this for a noter who wishes to remain anonymous.
    
    *************************************************************************
    
    Right now I am finding out just exactly how painful one parent can
    make it for the other parent to be a parent. 

    My soon-to-be-ex-wife returned from out of state April 13th with our
    two sons. She returned to take care of the legal arrangements, and
    because she had a job waiting for her. She was supposed to return to
    her parents in the fall to finish college. I filed for divorce last
    November, and supposedly we both have joint custody. 

    I thought it would be good for the children if we could share an
    apartment with separate bedrooms; that way the children could be with
    both of us as much as possible.  Also we cannot afford two separate
    apartments. 

    Unfortunately she is making the situation intolerable.  I am verbally
    abused for several hours a day, including up until 2am, making it very
    difficult to get enough sleep while she is demanding that I listen to
    her. 

    By the weekend I was a wreck.  Normally I am a good driver, a bit fast,
    but careful and under normal circumstances safe.  That weekend I
    rear-ended a car in city traffic with one car, and then missed a
    driveway and slammed into a NE stone curb, ruining the front end on
    another car.  In neither accident was I traveling at any great speed or
    speeding. 

    I have constant headaches, I can't get any sleep.  Nothing that I work
    on turns out well. 

    A couple of days ago I wanted to get some sleep at about 11:30.  She
    came in and said that she wanted a desk moved to her room.  I told her
    to shutup and go away, I was trying to sleep.  She persisted.  I told
    her that if she did not let me get some sleep that I was going to move
    her out of the apartment.  She continued yelling, telling me what a
    terrible person I was. 
    
    I finally got out of bed, pushed her back into the hallway and shut the
    door in her face, and turned back toward bed.  She physically attacked
    me. I pushed her away from me; she is large, but she is not very
    strong.  In any case I was very shaken by the deliberate attack; what
    was most upsetting was being attacked. 

    She had always been an emotional person, prone to throwing things,
    screaming, and hitting things, and in the fall had almost pushed me
    through a window. Lately, she has become even more abusive, and throws
    things around without regard for the safety of me, or the children. 

    I do not want to go to court.  I filed Assault complaints both times to
    cover my ass.  Now I just want to get away from her, and have the
    children half the time.  This time I am afraid.  Where will it end?  I
    went to the courthouse and got an Order to keep her from "interfering
    with my liberty", and an Order to keep her from leaving the state with
    the children.  I could not get an Order to get her out of my apartment,
    or keep her away from the children until she has had counseling.  As
    luck would have it, my 'lawyer' is out for the week. 

    Supposedly, I could leave the apartment, but I still would not be able
    to be with my children without the abuse.  I can even take the children
    with me for half the time.  But she would come after them (and me) and
    when what would she do then?  Would she attack me again?  Would she
    take off with the children? In any case, I cannot afford two
    apartments, and I would have to keep where I, or the children are,
    secret, which I do not want to do. 

    I do *not* want to take the children away from her.  I want her to be
    able to continue being their mother.  I want to continue being their
    father. I want her to stop fighting me. 

    What makes it worse, is that I know that she loves me, and the children
    very much.  And I still love her, as well, and the children I love very
    much. Before and after our first child was born, I was very confused
    about whether I was miserable being around her, or whether I did not
    want to be a father, but I want to have them with me half the time.  I
    just cannot be her husband, and she cannot be my wife. 

    I know that she is hurt, and fearful, and lonely, and wants to be
    loved, especially by me, and the children.  And I want to be able to
    show her that I do love her, and the children love her, and that she
    has nothing to fear from me, or from anyone.  And that she will never
    be alone, God will always be there for her.  I would like to be able
    to soothe her hurts, and love her, but I can't. 

    Nothing that I do helps to stop this escalation.  She feels abandoned,
    and strikes out at me.  All I can do is move away, and she feels even
    more hurt and fear;  She did not want me to move away!  She wanted me
    to move toward her! But I cannot; I cannot be a martyr for her.  Each
    step I must but more distance between us, and narrow the communication
    channel more to shut out her pain, because it hurts me too, and to keep
    her from hurting me.  That is not what she hoped for, she wants to know
    all of me, yet she strikes out. 

    I tell her again and again, that this will not gain her what she wants,
    me, and my love and respect for her; that this is the wrong way to go
    about getting love and respect from someone.  She just screams at me
    and tells me what a cruel person I am to leave her, and that I want to
    destroy her life, take away her dreams of teaching, and her children,
    when I want to do none of those things.   She tells me I am a horrible
    husband, and a terrible father, and that my children will be better off
    never knowing me, that it would be better for them if I were dead. 

    And yet through all this, I *do* still love her, and care about her,
    and I do respect her.  She has a lot of talents, and she is a
    beautiful person. I do appreciate her good points and her talents.
    All she sees is her failures, and blames them on me so that she does
    not have to deal with them.  I try to love her, tell her that it's all
    right, that no matter what, we will both survive. I try to hug her and
    she turns away. 

    I don't believe that divorce has to be like this.  Divorce is a bad
    thing, yes, but sometimes no amount of effort can correct a past
    mistake.  But you can admit to that mistake, and move past it, instead
    of telling yourself that a divorce will destroy you, and then
    destroying yourself to make it true. 

    There are some, including her, that say that I am an ogre, that I am
    controlling, and orchestrating this very scene. No, I just try to move
    away from the pain. I, like everyone else, need to love, and be loved,
    and this pain is not love, it's even worse because it would be easier
    if I or her did not love, it would not matter so much, it would not
    hurt so badly. 

    So how can I stop this vicious circle?  Leave, go away, 'die' to them?
    I can't do that either; that's a kind of martyrdom too, to die inside.
    Especially for the children... they did not ask their father to die. 

    
    
    Several days later... 

    The course I'm taking has helped a great deal. When I went I was full
    of pain, all I could sense was pain; I was cut off from everything
    else, trying to escape the pain; cutting myself off from the rest of
    the world, but still not being able to escape my pain, and her pain. 

    When the person next to me ruffled my hair I could feel *immediate*
    relief inside of me.  When I got a hug from a friend about half my
    walls collapsed allowing half the pain to leave me.  You would not have
    believed the effect of a mere touch. 

    The lesson happened to have been on the subject of Empathy; how being
    empathic by taking on someone's pain and fear and hurt was the wrong
    way to be empathic because it makes the pain and fear and hurt more
    real, instead of realizing that all this comes from the Ego of our own
    mind declaring it's independence, dominance, and responsibility for the
    world it creates, rather then accepting God. 

    Do matter what she did, what I have to do, is continue loving her,
    because I do love her.  Just as I love my 2 year son, even when he is
    throwing a tantrum. That is what part of the pain was; telling myself
    that I could not and did not love her with what was going on.  Even if
    I have to upset my son, I do it because I love him.  I don't punish him
    for doing something wrong, and I don't let him get away with doing it
    either.  I simply show him what he can and cannot do, letting him have
    the greatest possible freedom, but protecting him and other things when
    necessary.  And I keep loving him. 

    Is long as I keep a loving frame of mind about she, I have no pain.
    She may throw a tantrum, and I still love her, even if I have to
    threaten to call the police to get some needed peace and quiet. 

    Even though now she is going to take me to court, probably get custody
    of the children, and demand full child support from me, and move to MI,
    and I will not be able to see my children. If she does this, I cannot
    stop her, and I must continue to love her.  The decision is up to the
    court, and I will fight it, but it does not look good. 
    
295.10From the other side....RDGE00::LIDSTERFinally gettin' there...Fri May 01 1987 20:5822
    
        I haven't got time for too many rules... I only get 12 hours
    a month and in that time I have to laugh,hug,play,re-assure,love
    and generally make up for all the other hours when I can't be with
    the four year old daughter I love so much.
    
        Despite the fact that my ex always manages to have almost "trained"
    my daughter to dump some abuse on me or pass on some snide remark
    her family has made about me - I can't pull her up for it or go
    into a lengthy discussion about why Mummy and Daddy don't live together
    anymore and who's more right than wrong. I wont retaliate because
    I've got more self respect. I wish my ex could understand ?
    
        My only rules are be polite and have fun.
    
        Having said that - I note the previous replies and hopefully
    will get the chance to use them sometime in the future. For the
    moment, my daughter needs all the fun she can get.
    
    Steve

    ps... Good weekend coming up - I've finally got her for both days !
295.11RDGE00::LIDSTERFinally gettin' there...Sat May 02 1987 14:0912
    re: .10
    
        When I got home last night I received a letter from the ex saying
    that "due to previous plans....etc,etc" my daughter can't make it
    this weekend. It's funny, those previous plans weren't arranged
    two weeks ago ???. She hadn't even got the guts to phone me....
    
        I still won't retaliate..... BUT BY GOD !!!...SOMETIMES IT GETS
    HARD !!!!!!!. 
    
        
    Steve
295.12GENIE::CLARKstrange days have tracked us downSat May 02 1987 16:244
    re .11
    
    Hang in there Steve ... we're with you ....
    -dave
295.13My two centsHPSCAD::WALLI see the middle kingdom...Mon May 04 1987 16:3339
    
    re: .9
    
    I cannot offer anything but gut feelings here.
    
    It must be the hardest thing in the world to realize that you cannot
    live with someone you love, the mother of your children.  I cannot even
    conceive of it, myself.
    
    If I had to guess (again, it's entirely possible I don't know what
    I'm talking about) I would say that she is in need of some kind
    of help, more help than you would be able to give her as a husband.
    I suspect she is not exactly in a frame of mind to accept advice
    from you right now, but if some neutral party might be able to induce
    her to seek it out, you might ask them to try.  Yes, many people
    survive divorce, but there is the very real possibility that she
    is convinced she is not going to survive it.  You are hardly in
    a position to convince her otherwise, as your experience demonstrates.
    
    It seems like you have taken some steps towards your own
    self-preservation, and that is good.  You are going to be no good
    to her or your children if you're on the edge all the time.  Even
    the most versatile and flexible among us have a breaking point.
    If you have not gotten the hell out of that apartment, do so.  Sleep
    in your office if you have to.
    
    I fear you also have another hurdle coming up -- facing the possibility
    that what you fear may come to pass.  There are things in life where
    we have no other course but to recognize that that's the way it
    is.  All I can suggest is that you worry as little as possible about
    whether or not she is going to take the children and go.  You have
    no control over that decision.   Either she will do it or she won't.
    What you have to concentrate on is what you are going to do if it
    happens.
    
    If you manage to continue to love this woman, I salute you.  You
    are a better person than I am.
            
    DFW
295.14Keeping a cool head...SHIRE::SLIDSTERFinally gettin' there...Tue May 05 1987 11:5267
    re: .9
    
        I'm sorry I didn't take the time to read your reply in full
    the first time that I saw it. My own position is not that dissimilar
    apart from the fact that my "ex" cannot leave the area so I will
    continue to se my daughter - when allowed.
    
        I can't really impart any advice but maybe the thought that
    you have a fellow sufferer - perhaps a little further down the road
    may help           
    
        I left our house and moved in with a friend for a couple of
    months. He got me out of myself and started me in the process of
    being relaxed and being "free" (I use the word guardedly). Eventually,
    I moved out and got an Apartment of my own, close to work, in an
    area where I had few friends. I'm still in the process of making
    new friends and I have not found it as easy as I thought but the
    continuing challenge has made the situation with my "ex" fade into
    the past - today gives me enough challenges, yesterday's, I've given
    up trying to solve. One day, I woke up and thought "well, this is
    is, this is the rest of my life, so I'd better get off my ass and
    start working towards MY future -because I have one !" - which believe
    me is quite a revelation at 6:30 in the morning !
    
        But the process had started, every day gets easier and encouraged
    by a few close friends and supported by my family - I'm getting
    back to being a human being again, instead of an empty shell. It's
    still hard and I still get angry,frustrated and hurt (as some of
    my friends could tell you) but it's working. I'm stronger for the
    experience, I learned and I can now care again about others outside
    of myself.
    
        At some point in the future, your instincts for self preservation
    will take over and you'll find a little bit of sunshine peeping
    out from behind the clouds - hold on to it and don't let go. Sometime
    soon - you'll see a whole,clear blue sky. And life will start again,
    whether you are in the relationship you have now, working towards
    a long term solution or whether you part permanently and are getting
    on with the next stage of your life.
    
        I've parted permanently and I'm working to adjust - I have friends
    who I care about and they care about me. There is someone very special
    to me - who understands and cares and I can turn too when I'm in
    trouble and these things are my life now and I'm contented and happy.
     
        I've strayed slightly from the point however, where is my daughter
    in all of this ??. Well, my "ex" is making it very hard for my daughter
    and I to be together - I can't change that and I refuse to crawl.
    My daughter will always be in my thoughts and she will always receive
    letters and cards should I move away (it's my life... I can move
    if I want). One day, I firmly believe that my child will realise
    that there are two sides to every argument and when she asks for
    my side - she'll get the truth and the reasons behind. If she can't
    accept that - then there really is nothing more I can do. I have
    to live my life for ME - I can't live it any other way.
    
        Try and discover what it is you want to do and then just go
    and do it - it really is as easy as that. Or it's as hard as you
    choose to make it. Good luck and take care of yourself - don't try
    and solve it all in one go... as everyone in this conference says... 
    
           "One day at a time...."
    
    be lucky,
    
    Steve
    
295.15Be generous it is worth itMARCIE::JLAMOTTEI'm DifferentTue May 05 1987 15:5418
    .14
    
    Steve has some valid points and some good suggestions.
    
       .  Keep communications with your child in any way you can or
          are allowed to.  If you are not allowed to visit, deposit
          money in a savings account (money that you would have spent
          during the visit).  When the child is old enough to understand
          you can tell them...I couldn't visit but I was thinking of
          you.
    
        . Don't discredit your "ex" but do explain your actions.  If
          your explanation differs from the one the other parent gives
          be casual and indicate they may be mistaken, may not understand,
          etc.
    
    And it is strange, when they come to you and say I understand why
    you couldn't live with Dad/Mom it takes a real load of your shoulders.
295.16It doesn't have to be that badTBIT::TITLEFri Jun 05 1987 15:2358
    God, all these horrible divorce stories!
    
    My situation is a lot more pleasant, let me relate it and perhaps
    some of you can infer some advice from it.
    
    I and my (soon-to-be-ex) wife separated and filed for divorce in
    December. We agreed to joint (shared) custody. Our son goes back
    and forth a lot and my wife and I communicate almost daily to
    co-ordinate schedules, and to discuss how to raise our son.
    We talk about such things as education, discipline, schedules, 
    feeding, etc, to make sure we have a co-ordinated strategy for raising him,
    and to make sure we don't confuse him with radically different
    rules and schedules in each household. We try to re-inforce each
    other, e.g., if she's teaching him certain things (such as arithmetic
    or reading) she'll let me know so I can re-inforce the lessons
    when I have him.
    
    The result is that our son is happy, bright, and adjusting well
    to the divorce. Kids handle divorce best when they see a lot of
    both parents and the parents remain amicable; kids do worst when
    either they lose touch with one parent or they see their parents
    fighting or quarelling. My wife and I agreed to be amicable (difficult
    though it may be at times) because we both love our son and want
    to do what's best for him.
    
    We discovered early on that the best strategy for remaining amicable
    is to only talk about our son when we talk to each other. Other
    subjects - e.g., talking about money, talking about new boyfriends/
    girlfriends, etc - are not discussed. Money issues are always
    handled through lawyers. If we try to negotiate alimony and property 
    settlement issues directly, we end up shouting at each other. Using
    the lawyers as middle-men preserves the peace, and is well worth the cost.

    I think it's incredibly childish for two adults to let their bitterness
    toward each other interfere with raising their kids. 
    
    My advice to .0 is therefore to see if there is some way you can
    cut through the bitterness and hostility, and discuss with your
    ex the strategy for raising the kids. You don't have to be best
    friends with him; perhaps you two can just be adult enough to talk
    cordially for a few minutes about rules and discipline and so on
    during visitation periods. Maybe you can bend a bit (I'm not big
    on "rules" and "rigid schedules" myself and I don't see anything
    wrong with dinner at 9:00 and VCR movies), in return for him agreeing
    to stop lying or belittling you in front of the kids. Make it
    clear that this is being done for the kids, not for you.
    
    Hope the above advice is useful,
    
    	Rich
    
    P.S. to .9 - I'm sorry, sharing an apartment while in the process
    of getting a divorce is just plain stupid. You sound very confused
    about your feelings. You and your wife should both see (different)
    psychologists. That last sentence is meant as sincere advice, not
    as an insult. There's nothing wrong with seeing a psychologist
    to work out your feelings during a divorce, my wife and I are both
    doing so and I believe it can help if you find a good one.
295.17way to grow, rich!SKYLIT::SAWYERi'll take 2 myths and 3 traditions...to go..Mon Jun 08 1987 14:0843
    
    re: 16
    	Excellent!
    	you get 2 stars for effort and achievement!
    	also, i believe you'll find that, in time, you and your
    ex-(husband/wife/s.o./b.f./g.f.) stand a good chance of actually
    adjusting to the point of real friendship with no animosity!
    	there's a growing number of ex's who share responsibility
    for their children who choose to use your plan of action and they,
    invariably almost, end up being quite genuinely friendly
	me current s.o. had typical problems with her ex when they
    first split up. Teh first 3 months were terrible. The next 3
    months were better but still plagued with problems. after 7-9
    months they forgot all the bad past, chose to remember just the
    good past and have become very good friends.
    	
    	a lot of the troubles people have when they seperate is
    because they've been lied to by...society...t.v...books...parents...
    religions...teachers...each other
    	people feel cheated
    	lied to...."you promised to love me forever!"
    		"you're nobody unless somebody loves you!"
    		"love is forever"
    		"marriage is forever"
    	they feel angry
    	and label the marriage as a "bad" one....even though the
    first 6 or 8 or 10 years were wonderful and full of love and joy...
    
    silly people...
    	they feel disgraced....
    	lonely..."will i ever find someone who loves me again?"
    
    	all of these are feelings that we need not weigh our selves
    down with.
    	it's ok for love to stop....
    	it's ok for people to want to move on...
    	it's ok for people to change...and grow....adjust their
    opinions and desires with experience and age and need....
    	it's not important how long you experience love and/or how
    many different loves you experience...
    	it IS important that we all try to live happy lives and help
    those involved in our lives to be happy, too.
    
295.18be nice to those less fortunate...YODA::BARANSKI1's & 0's, what could be simpler?!Mon Jun 08 1987 18:249
RE: .16

You are fortunate in that your opposite is being reasonable.  Sometimes however,
there is nothing that you can go to get the other person to be reasonable.

True, divorce does not have to be terrible, but you can't always prevent
it from being so...

Jim Baranski