Am I being unreasonable
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() I have been seeing my BF for about 18 months now. We have always been long distance. He went thru a really nasty divorce and currentlyhis 18 year old son lives with him by choice. The 18 year old HATES his mother and not without good reason but its fairly ugly. He also has 12 year old the ex has custody of and my BF is supposed to get him every wedsnesday and every other weekend but that usually gets screwed up at the whims of his ex and her desire to manipulate the schedule. We really can make no plans and when we do we just have to pray that she does't screw things up 11th hour. Currently my BF has 5 weeks off work for the holidays but because he has no custody/holiday visit plan we cannot make any plans. I am very tired of fielding questions from my frineds and my family about why have I not met his kids and when am I meeting his kids etc etc. I asked him last night about when I could meet the kids and he went on about how the judge completed screwed him over (and she did but I can't fix this and its not my fault and he is not willing tostick up forhimslef or fight for his or his kids rights) and how the ex is feeding the 12 year old vicious lies that he left them for another family (she actually had my BF thrown out of the house in a manuever to keep the house) and the 12 year old knows full well and good that he is living in an apt with the older son right now and has been for a long time. Also not my fault So am I being unreasonable 18 months into a relationship for asking to meet the children of my BF who professes he wants to spend the rest of his life with me and marry him? I think his reaction was really unfair and if he thinks the kids are not ready he could have said "the kids are not ready" not throw in my face how he has been screwed over and has to do damage control with his 12 year old because his ex is toxic. I am really devastated about his reaction. I thought I found my soul mate and now I feel like I am just his dirty little secret. Thanks COJ!!!
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Sensei ![]() | ![]() Though I feel it a little odd, I think I would have made the introduction ealier if I were him. BUT, they are HIS kids. For whatever reason he may have to not introduce you to them, it's his reason and it's important to him. You need to respect that, IMO. I think you express your concerns and your desire to meet them. But if he says no and has his reasons? You have to respect that. At least you know where he stands. It's hard to say you are beingn unreasonable. You feel the way you feel. Of course if that's a deal breaker, then tell him and go from there and deal with the repercussions. |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Kido - 2012-12-17 12:27 PM Though I feel it a little odd, I think I would have made the introduction ealier if I were him. BUT, they are HIS kids. For whatever reason he may have to not introduce you to them, it's his reason and it's important to him. You need to respect that, IMO. I think you express your concerns and your desire to meet them. But if he says no and has his reasons? You have to respect that. At least you know where he stands. It's hard to say you are beingn unreasonable. You feel the way you feel. Of course if that's a deal breaker, then tell him and go from there and deal with the repercussions. If he doesn't think they are ready I am fine with that but he did not say that. Instead he told me again for the millionth time how the judge screwed him over and how the 18 year old hates his mother and calls her a slut and how the 12 year is responding to the lies his ex is telling him. I can't fix any of that. If I am going to be a part of his life I want to be a part of his whole life and his kids are a big piece of that. Edited by Socks 2012-12-17 12:33 PM |
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Master![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Having just gone through a child custody case and seeing all the options available to charge the other with and ways to limit visits and etc...... It's quite possible he is telling the truth and that THAT is his main concern. Hard to tell with the limited description you gave though. No real insight into the relationship as a whole. Not meeting the kids doesn't make you his dirty little secret. It just means he may not feel like it is time yet or he has more to lose than to gain by doing that. just my $.02 |
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Pro ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Well, I'd have to agree that 18 months is very much plenty of time and based on how you describe the relationship there needs to be a plan on the radar to integrate you with the kids. Think about it this way. You date for 2 or 3 years and then get married. Bam, we have a new step mom. Or, you get to know them over a period of 2 or 3 years and they get comfortable with you and then you get married. Much easier integration. Our neighbors went through a really ugly divorce several years ago and it sounds like it has some similar elements to your BF's. So, I don't know all the facts, but I think you have every right to put your foot down and let him know how it needs to be. Your situation could drag on for 10 more years for all you know and that's not going to be good for anyone. Good Luck |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() i'm not in your relationship but i have been in one like it and there are many more red flags than just the not meeting the younger son. long distance for 18 months -- when do you or he plan to move? a lot of long distance fall apart when they finally come together, maybe he is shielding his son from this risk? maybe he just wants to spend time with YOU during the limited time you have together? why isn't he fighting the courts when she violates their custody agreement? of course, he may not have a formal one which is why it is not getting enforced, why won't he get one? is he worried you being in the picture will affect his negotiations with his ex? (it will actually make him look better to the courts - but may give her reason to ask for more money/more custody/etc) just...be careful with this whole situation. it's far more complex than can be addressed here, i think. but don't think he is lying to you, plenty of exes use new boyfriends/girlfriends to fuel their custody battle fire... |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() mehaner - 2012-12-17 12:47 PM i'm not in your relationship but i have been in one like it and there are many more red flags than just the not meeting the younger son. long distance for 18 months -- when do you or he plan to move? a lot of long distance fall apart when they finally come together, maybe he is shielding his son from this risk? maybe he just wants to spend time with YOU during the limited time you have together? why isn't he fighting the courts when she violates their custody agreement? of course, he may not have a formal one which is why it is not getting enforced, why won't he get one? is he worried you being in the picture will affect his negotiations with his ex? (it will actually make him look better to the courts - but may give her reason to ask for more money/more custody/etc) just...be careful with this whole situation. it's far more complex than can be addressed here, i think. but don't think he is lying to you, plenty of exes use new boyfriends/girlfriends to fuel their custody battle fire... Well I can't move there because 1-there is no job for me where he lives and even if I did 2-his ex has behaved so badly I would be afraid for my safety and she would slander me thus making professiona pursuits impossible. Already I have had to file a police report against her for harassment and get a lawyer so she would leave me alone. He is locked in place for the kids but has a very flexible work schedule plus he hates where he lives and would rather visit me in FL Also FWIW I have told have told him a million times to put his kids first. I also have usgggested counseling MANY times however that suggestion has been dismissed According to him family court in his state is all he said she said. No evidence. Because his ex told lies and the court believed her he says he has little to no recourse and she can do what ever she wants and get away with it. They do have a formal agreementbut she violates it all the time and his stance is that the court doesn't care because at the end of the day his kid has enough to eat, clothes to wear, is not being beaten (at least physically) and a roof over his head and there are many kids who do not |
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Pro ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() His divorce is final...you've been with him 18-months...he hasn't introduced you to his kids. He says they are not ready? This is odd...I don't care how screwed over he is by the ex. I am surprised he would even date someone seriously without introducing the person to the kids. No, you are not being unreasonable. He is! |
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Sensei ![]() | ![]() Socks - 2012-12-17 10:32 AM Kido - 2012-12-17 12:27 PM Though I feel it a little odd, I think I would have made the introduction ealier if I were him. BUT, they are HIS kids. For whatever reason he may have to not introduce you to them, it's his reason and it's important to him. You need to respect that, IMO. I think you express your concerns and your desire to meet them. But if he says no and has his reasons? You have to respect that. At least you know where he stands. It's hard to say you are beingn unreasonable. You feel the way you feel. Of course if that's a deal breaker, then tell him and go from there and deal with the repercussions. If he doesn't think they are ready I am fine with that but he did not say that. Instead he told me again for the millionth time how the judge screwed him over and how the 18 year old hates his mother and calls her a slut and how the 12 year is responding to the lies his ex is telling him. I can't fix any of that. If I am going to be a part of his life I want to be a part of his whole life and his kids are a big piece of that. Well, then it's a difference between what you want and what he wants. THAT is the issue, not the kids per say. It's a difference in wants/needs. If it's a deal breaker and he wont budge on what you feel YOU want/need, then move on. Again, it sounds odd to me that he won't introduce you, but they are HIS kids and if you can't live with his wishes on the matter of his kids, then you are out of luck. Sound like it's a YOU issue. You want to be a part of his whole life including his kids because that would be nice for YOU and it's what YOU want. If he doesn't feel the same (write or wrong)? That's his choice. He has told you a million times and just because his reasons don't seem logical to YOU doesn't mean they are not significant to HIM. All you can do is express your thoughts and go from there. |
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Extreme Veteran ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Not sure what state he is in, but most family courts won't tolerate violations of scheduled parenting time (like tuwood's friend) Not having a very specific parenting plan (including a regular and holiday schedule down to the specific time/method/location of transitions in a high conflict divorce is a recipe for disaster. He should document his ex's violations of the parenting schedule (emails, voice mails, video) and hire a lawyer (probably a better one that he had the first go around) and ask the court to require her to follow the current agreement and implement a better defined schedule. Sounds like they could probably benefit from a child advocate or guardian ad litem might be in order too. I don't see how any of the issues with his ex have an impact the kids meeting you at this point. Unless you have some really bad criminal history or are a threat to the kids, anything his ex could have used against him in the divorce has long since passed. Sure, she'll probably blow a gasket, but it sounds like that is a common occurrence, what's one more? |
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Sensei ![]() | ![]() I'm a little confused what you want to get out of this thread. Everyone here on BT can say you are reasonable and HE is the one unreasonable. What does that change? Nothing. Going to print out the thread and show him how unreasonable he is? Knowing you are "right" will that make him change or will you just feel better knowing you are right (and still not meeting he kids). If everyone here said you were the one being unreasonable, seems you feel pretty strong about it, would you change your mind and not persue it anymore? |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() mehaner - 2012-12-17 1:47 PM i'm not in your relationship but i have been in one like it and there are many more red flags than just the not meeting the younger son. long distance for 18 months -- when do you or he plan to move? a lot of long distance fall apart when they finally come together, maybe he is shielding his son from this risk? maybe he just wants to spend time with YOU during the limited time you have together? why isn't he fighting the courts when she violates their custody agreement? of course, he may not have a formal one which is why it is not getting enforced, why won't he get one? is he worried you being in the picture will affect his negotiations with his ex? (it will actually make him look better to the courts - but may give her reason to ask for more money/more custody/etc) just...be careful with this whole situation. it's far more complex than can be addressed here, i think. but don't think he is lying to you, plenty of exes use new boyfriends/girlfriends to fuel their custody battle fire... I agree with this. You don't need to get sucked into someone else's mess, it's not fair to you and a no-win situation. Your BF's carrying a lot of baggage right now. IMHO it sounds like he needs to get his life sorted out before he asks you to make a commitment. You deserve to a have happy and loving relationship unburdened by this kind of stuff. Mark |
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Master ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() I can identify with both sides of this. I had a horrible divorce and a nasty custody battle. I was also dating someone through my entire divorce proceeding, and she and I both were friendly with each others kids. However, now that I am divorced officially (and have been for 18 months) I'm a lot more sheltering of my kids. Mine are a lot younger than 18 and 12, though. It sounds to me like he may have some residual feelings for his ex-wife, or more appropriately he's still mourning the change in lifestyle brought about by the divorce. He's probably hurting because his kids are clearly hurting. Trying to shelter them is a natural emotion. All that being said~ 18 months and the kids are 18 and 12???? I don't think you're being unreasonable, I think you're displaying an incredible amount of patience. I wouldn't wait around personally (life is too short) but if he means that much to you, you're going to need to live like this until he can see a counselor and get his kids help, as well. |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() You're right. He's unreasonable. You're the "dirty secret". Get out. Dump his a$$. Feel better? |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Sue,
big red flags to me.....speaking from my own experience both going through divorce and dating post divorce. something is not right you deserve better..... |
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Champion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Socks - 2012-12-17 2:10 PM mehaner - 2012-12-17 12:47 PM i'm not in your relationship but i have been in one like it and there are many more red flags than just the not meeting the younger son. long distance for 18 months -- when do you or he plan to move? a lot of long distance fall apart when they finally come together, maybe he is shielding his son from this risk? maybe he just wants to spend time with YOU during the limited time you have together? why isn't he fighting the courts when she violates their custody agreement? of course, he may not have a formal one which is why it is not getting enforced, why won't he get one? is he worried you being in the picture will affect his negotiations with his ex? (it will actually make him look better to the courts - but may give her reason to ask for more money/more custody/etc) just...be careful with this whole situation. it's far more complex than can be addressed here, i think. but don't think he is lying to you, plenty of exes use new boyfriends/girlfriends to fuel their custody battle fire... Well I can't move there because 1-there is no job for me where he lives and even if I did 2-his ex has behaved so badly I would be afraid for my safety and she would slander me thus making professiona pursuits impossible. Already I have had to file a police report against her for harassment and get a lawyer so she would leave me alone. He is locked in place for the kids but has a very flexible work schedule plus he hates where he lives and would rather visit me in FL so how do you envision this working out in the long run? he is stuck near his ex for 6 more years for his son's sake. you want a long distance relationship for 6 more years? you want to deal with restraining orders and ruining your career for 6 more years? it's great that he likes to visit you, but he can't LIVE with you....is that ok with YOU? |
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Champion![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Kido - 2012-12-17 2:06 PM the question is after 18 months of dating someone is it unreasonable to ask when can I meet your kids? I am Ok with the answer "They are not ready" or " I am not ready" but what "I got was the judge screwed me over and my 18 year old is angry and hates his mother and my 12 year old is asking me hard questions because his mother is lying to him. " I'm a little confused what you want to get out of this thread. Everyone here on BT can say you are reasonable and HE is the one unreasonable. What does that change? Nothing. Going to print out the thread and show him how unreasonable he is? Knowing you are "right" will that make him change or will you just feel better knowing you are right (and still not meeting he kids). If everyone here said you were the one being unreasonable, seems you feel pretty strong about it, would you change your mind and not persue it anymore? |
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Iron Donkey![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() Socks - 2012-12-17 12:32 PM Kido - 2012-12-17 12:27 PM Though I feel it a little odd, I think I would have made the introduction ealier if I were him. BUT, they are HIS kids. For whatever reason he may have to not introduce you to them, it's his reason and it's important to him. You need to respect that, IMO. I think you express your concerns and your desire to meet them. But if he says no and has his reasons? You have to respect that. At least you know where he stands. It's hard to say you are beingn unreasonable. You feel the way you feel. Of course if that's a deal breaker, then tell him and go from there and deal with the repercussions. If he doesn't think they are ready I am fine with that but he did not say that. Instead he told me again for the millionth time how the judge screwed him over and how the 18 year old hates his mother and calls her a slut and how the 12 year is responding to the lies his ex is telling him. I can't fix any of that. If I am going to be a part of his life I want to be a part of his whole life and his kids are a big piece of that. All I can suggest is having you both meet with a professional counselor and see if anything gets resolved. |
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Sensei![]() | ![]() Socks - 2012-12-17 12:52 PM Kido - 2012-12-17 2:06 PM the question is after 18 months of dating someone is it unreasonable to ask when can I meet your kids? I am Ok with the answer "They are not ready" or " I am not ready" but what "I got was the judge screwed me over and my 18 year old is angry and hates his mother and my 12 year old is asking me hard questions because his mother is lying to him. " I'm a little confused what you want to get out of this thread. Everyone here on BT can say you are reasonable and HE is the one unreasonable. What does that change? Nothing. Going to print out the thread and show him how unreasonable he is? Knowing you are "right" will that make him change or will you just feel better knowing you are right (and still not meeting he kids). If everyone here said you were the one being unreasonable, seems you feel pretty strong about it, would you change your mind and not persue it anymore? And you don't like that answer. Fair enough. It's a terrible answer, IMO (reasonable or not). And???? I still don't see the question. If your question is if your response/feelings to his answer are "reasonable" then I would say yes, there are VERY reasonable, but that doesn't make HIM change or modify his reasoning. There are a lot of things people believe/think (even my wife) that seem TO ME, unreasonable, but I have to respect that what's unreasonable to me, may seem very reasonable to them. You have talked about it so you can accept it or not and move on or deal with it. Like other said, (and I have as well), it's odd to me, and would throw up red flags. I guess knowing if his "answer" is reasonable or not to the general public may help you decide what to do next? |
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Expert![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() 18 months is a long time. Seems a little crazy to me, I mean his kids are 12 and 18. They have a little better understanding than a 4 or 5 year old. It did take me almost a year though before I introduced my 7 year old daughter after my divorce. I think this is something that should definitely take some time and not just a month or two after meeting someone but 18 months seems a bit off to me! Good luck, this is tough situation for you and him. Edited by skipg 2012-12-17 4:36 PM |
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Pro![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() If I was dating long distance they would not meet my kids. My husband did not meet my boys until there were plans to get engaged/married. They did not meet anybody I dated. If there are no plans to live in the same place why do you need to meet the kids. Seems to me when he has them he should be with them. Make whatever plans you want for yourself. |
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Elite![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() If the divorce wasn't final, I might be able to understand it.
But with it being finalized AND you dating for 18 months..... yeah, he's hiding something. Either you, or something from you.
Best of luck to you, trust your instincts - not your heart. |
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Master![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | ![]() TriToy - 2012-12-17 2:39 PM Sue,
big red flags to me.....speaking from my own experience both going through divorce and dating post divorce. something is not right you deserve better..... I have to also agree with TriToy, based on my experience as well. There's just something not right here, in my opinion. I don't think you're being unreasonable at all to ask about meeting his kids after 18 months. I understand that each situation is different, but I don't understand how his "screwed over" answer is really an answer... ? It may be true that he got screwed over, but why does that mean the kids can't meet you? I'm not getting it either. And honestly, for me, even if he had said that the kids weren't ready, I would really wonder why... I mean, they are not little tiny kids...and 18 months is decent chunk of time. It's not like you're asking to move in with them, for crying out loud. You just want to meet them. So, yeah, there are some red flags here. It seems to me that he is so afraid of alienating the 12 year old that he'll put up with whatever the ex dishes out. Either that has to change, or you have to accept that reality if your relationship is going to survive. No easy answer either way. Disclaimer: I realize that with two divorces under my belt I am hardly any type of relationship expert, but I do have some experience in the area of dating with kids. Feel free to PM me any time if it would help. |
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![]() Sorry to hear you are having to go through this, especially at this time of year. Having to deal with an Ex who is a control freak is draining. Based on what you've said and if I understand you've not met the 18 yr old either? After a year and a half the only suggestion I have would be to step back, take a look at what has transpired, how you feel about it and what you think the future looks like and what you want for the future and evaluate what is in your best interests. Good luck to you with whatever you decide and Happy Holidays. |
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