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AIBU?

To want her ex out of our lives

32 replies

ShesYourDaughter · 18/12/2013 09:41

My thread about my teenage dss turned into a bit if a rant about this soi thought I'd separate the two issues. Although they always seem to come together.

Short story, her ex is an arse as a parent and a manipulative controller as a human being. She has to have some form of contact with him over the children so we will never be completely free of him.

She left him, so I accept its possible he still has feelings for her, although after 6 years and relationships of his own I think that's probably not the case.

But we can't get him to stay out of our lives. He wanted 50/50 child and that's we have had. And we've rearranged that several times to suit his working arrangements. But he's forever arranging things for the kids to do in our time or asking us to help him out with stuff he's arranged in his time.

More often than not that's so he can do something by himself, but he usually lies about that. I've loads of examples I won't repeat here. Typically we suggest he puts the kids first and this is responded to with abusive texts and phone calls to my partner. Then apologies, then a subsequent request, often implying the kids don't understand why she doesn't want them or that grandma will have to look after them and she's not well. Etc

He also decides to share his opinion on our arrangements and how we're dealing with the kids. It's a difficult time with a stressful teenager in the house and he wades in whenever she tells him how horrible we have been to her. Bit rich as he is the biggest Disney Dad.

My ex wrote me a letter telling me exactly how little she wanted to see of me and how our parenting arrangements would work. It's worked fine ever since, and we communicate politely and about the children only.

I have asked on many occasions if we can get her ex to work the same way. That would mean unless there's a problem with the children we wouldn't hear from him at all. And certainly not in the week we have them.

But he seems to believe that because they're sharing parenting that means she should still provide all the support services to him that she did as a wife. Friend, adviser, relationship counsellor and most of all baby sitter!

I came home yesterday to find flowers on the doorstep, apologies for his behaviour, x's. This goes back to another teen issue at the weekend which we dealt with at the time and not one he was inheriting. I know I shouldn't have looked but I checked her phone and there were more texts on it apologising again. Seems he's after some baby sitting again this weekend. But on top of that there was one telling her now much he loved her and respected her. More x's.

Now I know it's not entirely true, you only need to know how he treated her to know that and this is part of the controlling thing he has. And I know she takes no notice of it, although her maternal instinct to take the kids instead of them being dumped somewhere will kick in again now he's apologised.

We have had conversations over the years about keeping him out of our lives. Making clear what is acceptable and not acceptable, how the only thing they have in common is the kids and if there's something to discuss then a discussion will be arranged. She says she's told him all that but you know he is etc and to some extent she has in the last told him his behaviour is not acceptable, that usually brings the wrath of the gods down on her though, more greats, usually a pile of crap about me and my influence on her, he doesn't recognise her any more, what are we doing to the kids blaa blaa

And yes I do know how he is, and I don't like it. I don't like him.

I want to push this point now, I don't want to go into another new year hoping it will be different. I want it finished once and for good.

Is it unfair to ask?

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Mrdilf123 · 18/12/2013 12:53

Ite, if you was a library book I would check you out first ??

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ShesYourDaughter · 18/12/2013 14:07

Mrdilf123 I have no idea what that means?

If its helpful can you explain?

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TheNightIsDark · 18/12/2013 14:10

Repost as female and you will get more helpful answers.

I don't think YABU. His week, he deals with all arrangements. Your DWs week and she does. Is that not the point of 50:50?

Big issues are resolved between ex and your wife.

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TheNightIsDark · 18/12/2013 14:11

Does she get annoyed with him? If not you are coming across as a bit controlling but that might be how it's worded IYSWIM.

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HankyScore · 18/12/2013 14:11

Sorry, I've read this through several times and I'm still confused.

Is this your adult daughter's ex? I don't understand why you are so involved? Why on earth are you reading her texts?

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HankyScore · 18/12/2013 14:14

Ah no, I get it now.

The bit about teenager dss and then 'her ex' threw me.

I still think you're too involved.

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ShesYourDaughter · 18/12/2013 14:25

She gets annoyed but takes the attitude she can't change him.

Which I don't care about. He can be like this with his current on/off girlfriend instead.

I just care about having some peace and quiet. This goes way back now to some pretty nasty times she is prepared to put behind her but I'm not so quick to let go.

Just one week, one weekend uninterrupted by him.

We have talked about this before and she's said she'll sort it out. But where I would say 'stop' and 'don't' she uses 'try not to' and 'it would be appreciated'

If I'm appearing controlling, I'll not press the matter any further. I can only let her know I'm unhappy about it and she can take it from there.

Or we get married and see what happens! Bit drastic though.

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TheNightIsDark · 18/12/2013 14:28

I think you have to bite your tongue. I do with DPs ex and she phones me screeching obscenities.

It's tough but once the DCs hit 18 contact with exes is minimal if at all.

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ShesYourDaughter · 18/12/2013 14:29

Seven years to go then, there are three kids. Youngest 11.

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gertrudetrain · 18/12/2013 14:30

I don't think YABU actually. He is overstepping boundaries of the normal ex relationship IMHO. I know they are tied with the dc's but the flowers, the texts and the kisses etc is not acceptable. DS1's dad and I have no relationship at all, we communicate via text in short to the point texts. He picks up ds1 every other weekend, we say hello, ds has done/needs to do x & x and has/hasn't had his tea and then they go on there way. There's no reason for it to be anything else.

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Curlyweasel · 18/12/2013 14:45

family group conferencing may be a way forward? he sounds like a right twunt to me. feel for you.

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ShesYourDaughter · 18/12/2013 14:53

Nice phrase curly, mind if I borrow that?

I have booked counselling just so I can talk this through independently. If my loved one wants to come too, that's great. I couldn't sit in the same room as him though.

But that's it til well after Xmas and this is the worst time of year for it.

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Curlyweasel · 18/12/2013 15:00

sure. go right ahead. from what you've said, fgc won't work for you then (i.e. if you won't even sit in the same room as him).

i think you need to think about what your problem with this is - is it about your partner's relationship with him? is it about how this is all impacting on the children? is it about you feeling insecure? what? once you've unpacked that - you can have a look at some possible solutions.

it's a tough thing to come to terms with, but he will always be part of your family because of his link with the children - and you will never EVER be able to control his behaviour purely through being pissed off about it.

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ShesYourDaughter · 18/12/2013 15:11

I like your last sentence, I'll hold on to that too.

If I felt we had tried everything I'd reconcile myself to it being just the way it is. But I don't think we have.

We have one more chance to talk about it tonight, there's every chance we'll be back to square one if she tells him the flowers were not a good idea. In my head that's th perfect time to nail this, but I know she'll want to leave it.

We shall see.....

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ShesYourDaughter · 18/12/2013 15:17

Oh and yes it is a security thing. Or maybe even a safety one.

When we first bought a house together a lot of stress left our lives because he didn't know where we lived and he couldn't just turn up on the doorstep.

That didn't last long.

If I mention one conviction for assault and being drive off the road by him, you might understand why I said safety.

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Hissy · 18/12/2013 15:53

I think you are not being controlling at all, this would drive me doolally!

He's screwing up your weekends AND making out that you/your GF are the ones in the wrong.

Sod that for a game of soldiers!

TBH, this ought to have been something that you should have sat down about a long time ago, now that you are wound up by it, it's going to be harder for you to find the calm and detached manner you will need to navigate this.

You need to find a way of tapping into so seriously Ice Cool Calm. Family Conference is the right way to go. If you are going to marry this woman, these arrangements need to be sorted out now.

Shared care will need to be planned care, He will need to agree what days he can have them within the month and stick to it. There has to be some kind of time that is sacrosanct.

You and she need somehow to be unavailable when it's HIS weekend to have DSS. He has to learn that he has to be responsible and not constantly bail on sorting himself/alternative care out when things crop up.

The only way that he will learn is by her saying, "No, sorry, can't do that" a few times and eventually he will have to learn to make alternative plans.

the main thing he's guilt tripping her with is the 'you've changed since you got involved with him'

Well, she ought to have resolved this before she met you, but understandably, kids do always come first before secondary relationships, but they can't keep doing that, there does have to be some degree of boundary.

she has changed, and with good reason. she has grown up a bit, moved on and has a serious relationship, with someone she loves that is not the father of her son. She owes herself, her son and you more than she owes him. It's perhaps this point that twuntface is resisting. He has NO business texting her ILY, any more than he has sending flowers, he is not her frigging BF, and that ship has sailed. That behaviour from my Ex would send me batshit, too little, too late and he has no reason to crawl around me for picking up the pieces because he can't get his shit together.

Overall, the fluidity of care is laudable, but it's too unstructured. If all parties were happy, all good, but they are not. he is taking the proverbial at worst, or at best making it work solely to his advantage.

When relationships breakdown, there needs to be an understanding of what is acceptable to each party, and a degree of compromise.

Too much on either of these ends of the see-saw and it all goes wonky.

bottom line, your GF has to woman up a bit and if you are there to support her to make sure she doesn't fall for his BS guilt-trips, and calls him out on any Disney Dad/big Bad Mum business, then you can make it work.

If she is unwilling to put herself (and your relationship) first sometimes then ultimately it'll breed resentment and reduce the probability of your relationship lasting.

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Curlyweasel · 18/12/2013 16:05

yougogirl Hissy!

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Hissy · 18/12/2013 16:12

If he's abusive OP, then the LESS time DSS spends with him the better, so he either plays by the rules or there is no access.

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TensionWheelsCoolHeels · 18/12/2013 16:25

The only thing you can change about this situation is how you react to it. And the only way your DP will be able to change things is in how she reacts to/deals with her ex. If his involvement in your day to day life is as insidious as you feel it is, both of you need to change how you deal with him. He can only have that much input if he's allowed it. Sticking rigidly to agreed schedules, getting tough on his expectation of constant flexibility/changes and embracing the MN mantra 'no' is a complete sentence is a start. He's being enabled to be that involved in your lives.

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ShesYourDaughter · 18/12/2013 16:41

This will be interesting.

Historically saying 'no' is the trigger point for all the shit stuff. But should anyone be allowed to vent their feelings just because they have your phone number?

And although she doesn't mention it at the time, and i think shes just ignoring it cos theres no point in trying to fight it when work or the kids, or me, get too much for her it is always one of the things she mentions.

I do actually think that he's just not very bright at relationships with people. He comes from a very patriarchal family, where mum did everything and the children could do no wrong. Parents had lots of cash and the kids wanted for nothing, and equally had to do nothing for it.

He certainly created his married life in the same mould, which is why she left. I don't think he ever understood why, he saw nothing wrong with their relationship and is trying to continue it to this day. There was never a partnership of equals, and I don't think he understands there has to be one now.

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WooWooOwl · 18/12/2013 17:00

It sounds to me like you are the one that's causing the stress.

Your DP sounds like she is just trying to have as flexible and amicable a relationship as possible with the father of her children, and you are the only one that has a problem.

You cannot expect her to be able to control the way her ex is. She can't. And by you making her say no about things she is happy to go along with, you are making it difficult for her and the children.

I may be projecting from my own experience a bit, because I am the wife in your situation. My ex can be difficult sometimes, but he's also a good dad, and the way I see it is that I chose to have children with him so I have to put up with the difficult stuff sometimes. I am also good friends with my ex, and so sometimes we talk more as friends than we do as co parents.

It is not right for you to expect another set of parents to do what you do in your parenting set up just because it works for you. Something that works for you and your ex works for you, it doesn't automatically become the one single best way to have a co parenting relationship.

You need to let your DP and her ex parent in their own way. Your role is just to support her.

My DH would have had a lot of sympathy with you a few years ago as he felt the same as you seem to. But now he gets on well with my ex, as he accepted that it was up to me and my ex to parent in our own way, and he could either support that or go elsewhere. It was hard for him at first, especially when one day he'd see me annoyed with my ex for valid reason, and then the next it was forgotten about but this way is better for everyone, most importantly the children.

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Hissy · 18/12/2013 17:07

No, she is capitulating to a manipulative bully.

"Historically saying 'no' is the trigger point for all the shit stuff."

Well, Tough tits bully boy. We all have the right to say NO, whenever we want to and if he triggers shit stuff, then the police etc are there to deal with it. Support her in this and enable her to reclaim control over her life, and regain control over your time together

change numbers, emails and get non-mol orders if he can't behave like a human being.

He's gone from terrorising one person to both his Ex, AND you.

Enough.

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Hissy · 18/12/2013 17:09

WooWooOwl "I chose to have children with him so I have to put up with the difficult stuff sometimes."

You chose to END it as a result of difficult stuff too! You don't HAVE to put up with any of this shit.

that's why these people are EXES.

A reasonable man will take no for an answer, it's give and take, but this doesn't appear to be the case here.

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WooWooOwl · 18/12/2013 17:13

My is is still just as much a parent to my children as he was before though. He's my ex, but still just as much their dad.

People do have a commitment to each other when they have children, and unless one partner was abused by the other, I think it's just plain selfish to cut your co parent out of your life as much as possible just to suit your new relationship.

I would hate to be in the situation where I was only a 50% parent because my ex and I were so rigid that we could never swop times and dates that he has the dc. It would be horrible for both me and my children.

The point is that the OPs DP is happy with the situation until OP starts complaining about it. Even if her ex is difficult sometimes.

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Hissy · 18/12/2013 17:17

By the sounds of it, OPs DP is being WAY more than flexible, if Ex is having to apologise, creep,crawl and fling fecking flowers.

She has the right to say No. sounds like he has bullied her into thinking she can't.

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