All I can offer is a hug {{{{{{{{{{Dar}}}}}}}}}} and my best wishes for a healthy resolution to this for you!
Hugs and butterflies,
~T~
All I can offer is a hug {{{{{{{{{{Dar}}}}}}}}}} and my best wishes for a healthy resolution to this for you!
Hugs and butterflies,
~T~
The butterflies are within you.
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Ugh. Dar I am so sorry you and your son have to go through this. It is so destructive. Definitely go to a women's resource center. You can start by contacting women's shelters if you can't find anything else. Hopefully they can hook you up with a low cost but very knowledgable attorney. Definitely don't try to do this without professional help.
Good luck and I hope this works itself out soon
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Dar, I think the advice for a lawyer is right on track. But I have another perspective that hasn't been addressed. First let me say that I divorced my first husband after 4 years and 2 kids. Those two are now grown, and they have shared with me some of their perspective of their growing up years. Second, if your son is in anyway vulnerable to abuse or neglect by being with his dad, adjust this advice accordingly.
I was adamant to make our divorce and custody issues as nondisruptive to their lives as possible. I don't have any problems with him. He paid child support and took the kids when it was his turn and was flexible with the arrangements. We didn't argue. It truly worked out quite well. BUT...
My kids still suffered. I eventually remarried and moved with them 6 hours away. They had a much better life and opportunity as a blended family than with me a poor single mother, and they love their stepdad, so I don't regret getting remarried. However, every 3rd week we drove them back home to see their dad, and it was brutal. Fortunately we only did that for a couple of years, but we were still 150 mies away after that.
My kids have said that they wish we had lived closer to their dad all through their childhoods. Not being able to go see him whenever they wanted was hardest when they were 8 and 9. I wish I had known this. There are lots of other things I wish I had known. We eventually did move back near their dad, and they were so grateful! But by then they were teens and the distance they naturally craved as teenagers was intensified. They needed their dad then more than ever, but they didn't feel so connected, you know? It breaks my heart to hear them reveal their perspective on that time. I didn't know. I couldn't know. I wish I'd known.
I'm sorry your son's dad is such a jerk. But he is your son's dad, and for your son's sake, do everything you can to facilitate the relationship while you still have the power to do so. If there is any way possible to live closer to him, I'd advise you to find that way. Your son will only be a child for a short time. If you blink you will miss it. Far be it for me to suggest you don't sacrifice for him, but maybe you can do a little more, by moving closer. Just for a time.
Good luck with the legal aspects.
Karen
gee, Karen
such wise words. My parents divorced when I was 6. I won't go into all my sad story, but you are absolutely right. The children always suffer.
Karen, I appreciate your perspective and believe me - I've thought of that and often. I hate to admit this, but my biggest fear is MY safety. An alcoholic always has one person they feel the need to dump on and with him it's me. The police by him really don't care to deal with this domestic stuff, even though it's their job, but it's a bigger city and they have bigger fish to fry. They refused to deal with the harrassing phone calls - I had the department by me deal with it. If he wasn't an alcoholic, I never would have moved up here in the first place.
I am SO much happier up here! I have moved a half hour closer to him and asked him to move a half hour closer as well when he sold the house (which puts him closer to his work and in a cheaper to live county) and he refused. Up here he's close to my family and my ex's family so he gets to see them often, which he wouldn't get to do if we lived in Madison. For now we will stay here. Maybe in the next couple years, after my doggies are gone, I will consider moving closer. For now, we're doing the best we can with what we have.
Dar
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“Minds are like parachutes...they only function when they are open. - Thomas Dewar"
The sad part of this is that in these situations, the person who usually wins is the lawyer. And you need one. I hope you find a big protective boyfriend soon too. This is really scary stuff. Hey, maybe a big protective LAWYER boyfriend?
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Actually, that's not true. There's no money to be made in handling cases like this. In many situations, the lawyers are lucky to get paid in full. Usually, neither party has a lot of money. I handled many such cases and frequently did not break even, particularly when I represented the woman. Sometimes, I took a case knowing that I would likely not get paid for the time I put into it because the woman needed help and she could not afford to pay what a lawyer would normally charge. There ARE lawyers out there who care and who are not just in it for the money.
I've never been married, never had children, but I did grow up in a home with a parent who was an alcoholic and drug abuser. I can't give you any specific advice about the legal aspect, but the idea of someone that young living (alone?) full time for such a long period with an alcoholic gives me cold chills. Right now, you may be the only person that your alcoholic ex dumps on, but sooner or later, it'll be your son, too. I think that kind of stuff hurts a young psyche far more than someone fully grown, you just may not hear about it until your son is older. I wish you all the best in protecting him from the brunt of that.
just because he's an alcoholic, does not mean he's evil, just that he has an addiction. That per se isn't grounds for bad parenting but driving and supervising under the influence, and neglect due to being under the influence are. So document incidences, and then look into support groups for people who have to deal with alcoholics, like al-anon - it's free, and it's a great program.
~I.