ambivalentmom
Offline
Gender:
What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Ex-romantic partner
Relationship status: 2nd marriage/married for 6 years
Posts: 87
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« Reply #1 on: December 27, 2016, 02:29:12 PM » |
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Good Afternoon, I read a few of your previous posts and can relate to the ex trying to appear normal, while being a manipulative loser. You're probably exhausted because of having to fight, you can't be sure of what is happening exactly, and you feel helpless for your daughter. He probably told D8 that the new baby would be missing her terribly (which is stupid cause the baby was just born), but if D8 hadn't gone for Christmas he would be telling her some junk about how you were ruining this very important and unique experience for D8. It's all bull, but you maintaining casual/positive dialog is very important. It is expected for her to miss them if she doesn't see them that often and want to talk about it and cry it out. You want to be supportive of anything she is feeling, so she can talk to you about anything. You support her manipulated feelings, then you support her when she starts to realize she's being manipulated. If you can, build a support network of parents of kids the same age and communicate with D's therapist, so you can talk about which behaviors should be normal for her. Most kids of divorce don't want to talk a lot about the other parent's house, so I'm not sure what the therapist was thinking about on that one. I keep it vague and try not to ask too many questions (just about the Pokémon she caught). When she offers information, I answer with the assumption that I am not surprised by this and it was supposed to happen. That's the hardest part. When she tells me a funny story about the times they Pokémon hunt at 2am, or that fun trip to NY (that is a different state and I knew nothing about), or about the new kittens they got to replace the other ones that "ran away," or how she wasn't supposed to tell me about certain things because her dad said I would punish her. I gave real examples because I want you to know that I know how hard it can be and how these things are just the tip of the iceberg. I believe you had an extremely difficult time dealing with him when you say there are many things you haven't included.
I did read that your S13 is starting to notice what's really going on and I'm very glad for that. I hope that encourages you to continue being an awesome mom for the both of them. My D14 keeps falling off and getting back on the wagon, so I'm hopeful, but still waiting.
If anything else, focus on a good support network for yourself and your own therapist if you haven't yet. Even just a friend to laugh at his emails with you and say, "what a loser" might help some of the stress. Once a friend asked if I could get my ex to pickup something from Sam's Club for him (since we don't have one near our town). I just found it hilarious because I imagine all the anxiety and fear I have, all the lies, his false accusations, the PA on D14, and I just walk up and say, "Hey, would you mind picking me up a case of Sprite," with no preface to any of the hostility over the past 5 years. It still makes me smile to think about. That's what friends are for.
P.S. I hope you don't mind the slightly more vulgar and hard assumptions I put in (I just thought it might distress the situation a bit)
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