It's me this time, kells76
Yeah, win-win is not very likely, the ex will keep "moving the goalposts" anytime you propose another solution or get close to success.
Right, no argument there. That is how she operates.
I suspect the kids are, to a greater or lesser extent, feeling stuck in the middle, or at the least manipulated. You can take that dread of choosing off their shoulders.
Yes, they are being put in the middle and manipulated. Again, agreement.
In time your decision might even give them some relief that they can just enjoy the visit and still see their friends one last time.
The sticking point at least for me here is that Mom is constructing it so they CAN'T enjoy the visit. The whole time they'll know that it'll be "their fault" that Stepdad "can't" go to work and is "forced" to take time off. And because the kids can't be mad at Mom or Stepdad, they'll be mad at DH. I don't foresee any relaxation for them.
Yes, driving would take longer and might force you to come back later. So what? Once you are on your trip and there then you can mention it will take longer to get back.
If the conflict were "only" between DH and Mom then I would recommend this to DH. Again, the way it's set up, (a) the kids are now expressing fear of "will we social distance from grandparents? will we social distance from aunt?" (so, yes, moving goalposts away from "seeing our friends" to "afraid of airports" to "even if we drive we'll be around other people"), and (b), the kids would be told by Mom how untrustworthy DH is for "tricking" them and "lying" to them about the length of the trip.
Can you let go of your need to be overly fair and overly nice and overly obedient and do what you know you probably decide as the reasonable yet proactive parent?
If Mom wouldn't use that as ammunition to undermine DH's relationship with the kids, then yeah, I wish. Any "take charge" or "assertion" by DH is framed by Mom as "he doesn't listen to you [like we do], he heard how you felt and made you go anyway, you can't trust him". So the relationship would be sacrificed.
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I am glad you are going to visit your sister/SIL
Yeah, she's a treasure!
The decision itself does not need to be made with the help of a therapist. That is mom's way of minimizing dad's right to be a parent and to make parenting decisions. From my experience with SD13's uBPDmom, that's code for "go see the T so they'll explain why you're wrong"
I'm really glad you get that.
The girls are not old enough and mature enough to make this decision. They are children and should not be responsible for decisions for the health and wellbeing of their families or their friends
Yes.
You, as the parent and stepparent, make the decision that you think is best. That may mean you postpone your trip. It may mean you drive. It may mean that you wait until the girls are in the car and then tell them what you have planned.
So, like I brought up with FD's comments above, the "moving targets" have been:
1. "We want to see our friends before they go"
us: we offered to change days of trip
2. "But we don't want to go through an airport"
us: we offered to drive
3. "But we might not social distance from grandparents, and they've been inside a hospital"
us: ...
So I don't know if I'm getting to the core of this, but the center of this toxic soup is how Mom/Stepdad interpret DH's actions to the kids. If he's assertive about "what we're doing is going on the trip" and he tells them after they get in the car (for example), Mom's dialog with them will be "I'm sorry DH didn't trust you enough to tell you what was going on... Did you feel betrayed? Do you need a break from him in order to feel better?" type BS. Where it all sounds so helpful and good until you actually listen to it. But the kids aren't mature enough to get what Mom will do to them. Mom will punish DH through them by manipulating them if he takes them on the trip. And she'll make sure she
emotionally punishes them, too, by letting them know "Of course I support you doing whatever you want, I don't have a problem if you go on the trip, I love SIL... it's just that Stepdad can't go to work for 2 weeks if you go. Of course, do whatever you feel like".
I think that's it -- we're in the "Solomon and the baby" scenario, where both the moms are like "It's my baby" so Solomon says OK, well, how about I cut it in half so you both get an even share? The fake mom says "Sounds good, that's fair" and the real mom is like "Just give it to her if it'll keep my baby alive".
I feel like that's where we're at -- it would be cutting the kids in half to "make" them go... in the sense of enforcing/asserting that DH does in fact have the right to decide what we do during his PT with the kids. Sure, we'd "get our fair share". But Mom has no compunction about "cutting them in half" to punish DH.
Driving instead of flying won't fix it, changing the dates won't fix it... because the real "problem" is Mom's fear and control, and NOTHING we do will fix that.
So, going back:
What does that leave?
--You, as the parent and stepparent, make the decision that you think is best.
I want the kids to come. I think they need to face a lot of fears. I don't think they're emotionally strong enough to withstand the emotional punishment waiting for them.
So I am thinking that the best thing for them is for DH to assertively tell them "This is too much for you to decide. You have been placed in the middle of an incredibly stressful situation. It's the job of adults to get you out of the middle. I love you too much to leave you there. So you are NOT going on the trip and that's final."
--You and the kids go to therapy immediately when you get back to talk about how they feel about the choice being taken out of their hands - and possibly about how they feel about being blamed for someone else's choices. This seems like an excellent setup for a good therapist to work on boundaries and appropriate roles (parent vs child).
I will suggest that DH at least talk with SD14's T about this situation.
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Your ex has BPD and her "wants" - her feelings are paramount so naturally- your "wants " may not be worth the risk, while her "wants" are. The trip is not essential like food or work but it is something you want and may consider taking the risk to do it, but she's not likely to see it that way.
Yup.
I agree it should not be the girls' responsibility to make decisions. Also, there is an obvious solution to step dad needing to quarantine. Have the girls quarantine with you for 2 weeks after the trip.
Agreed about the kids deciding. I worry that suggesting the kids Q with us for 2 weeks (while I love the idea as a clever win) would be "solving the surface of the problem" while enabling the toxicity to continue "underneath" -- I can envision Mom saying "Oh, I'm totally OK with that, it's just that the kids shared with me how they felt about it, and they don't want to". And I'm getting really tired of offering Mom opportunities to "ask the kids what they want", because it just builds more triangles. I still think as part of a "last ditch" email it might be worth it... even just to see her reaction
I would also check with a lawyer in this situation. You don't want to be accused of negligence if you take the trip.
Good call.
The person in this situation who seems to be at highest risk is your sister with kidney problems and I think people with Down syndrome can have immunity issues and also heart problems. The decision might be more about her than anyone else
My SIL's parents are OK with it... my assumption is they have the best "read" on her health.
You might want to consider going on your own to visit, which reduces the risk to her.
Overall, as sad as I'll be if/that the kids don't go, that will probably be what happens.
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And so what if the kids don't go this time?
Is that just appeasing Mom? Will she be emboldened to keep trying this sh!t every single time we want to do something outside HER comfort zone? "Oh sure kids, you can go to the grocery store... I have no problem with that, I support you doing that... but Stepdad will have to stay home. I mean, it's your call"
Is that her plan? Because there will never be an end to this virus. And "even if there were", it wouldn't be enough of an "end" to satisfy here. You see the issue?
But I can also see, hopefully, it making a big statement to the kids if DH tells them "I'm deciding for you. I'm deciding that you're not going on this trip this time, and that's final. I'm doing that because it's not your job to decide this kind of thing."