English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I am in a situation where my estranged husband has requested that he have contact with our daughter 2 nights a fortnight and 1/2 the holidays. The problem is he is a shift worker and is not always available. He will also rely on other people to take care of our daughter. I do not agree because I think that if he wants the contact he should make it quality time with our daughter. I also do not feel that it is fair that he 17, or 20 year be told that they have to fulfill his obligation.l think that at the age of 17 or 20 they should be off doing their own thing and working.

2007-03-21 13:36:16 · 12 answers · asked by Anonymous in Family & Relationships Family

12 answers

make a stipulation that he spend the quality time. If he truly wants to spend the time with her then he will. What does you daughter think. Is she old enough to ask that question to. I have not seen my son in 8 years and I know that it is his choice and I respect that but he knows that I miss him and will always be there for him if he wants me around.

2007-03-21 13:43:10 · answer #1 · answered by tazman 3 · 0 1

I hope you don't take this offencive....but...a father has a right to visitation no matter what his age or who is really visiting the child. If he goes to court to ask for parental rights the judge will award visitation no matter what his work situation....or who is really taking care of the child during the visit. But if there is already a judgment stating when the father is to have the child for visitation and he is not following the judgment then you can go back to court and ask for an amendment

2007-03-21 13:45:54 · answer #2 · answered by Tina 3 · 0 0

I also had a dead-beat dad. Unfortunately, I have about 20 half-brothers and sisters, most of whom I've never met. Dad's never had a genuine interest in seeing me. But you're in a different situation. You of course have to take your estranged husband's interest in his children with a grain of salt. What really seals the deal for me is that he is not in fact going to be there 100% of the time.

I have to admit that I'm not really thrilled by his story. My father figures were my brother and brother-in-law, and they did better than my real dad ever could. I followed my brother into a respectable, professional job, and learned EVERYTHING I need to know about how to be a man from him. Other mother-and-father-figures in your family should be able to do the same for your daughter.

He's made his bed, let him lie in it. In my certainly humble opinion, it's NOT fair to your child, at this point in her life.

2007-03-21 13:45:37 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Dad (unless he’s unfit) has the right to visitation/to maintain a relationship with his child. You don’t have the right to dictate what Dad should do during his time with the child. If he has to work during that time, then as long as the child is being properly cared for it’s not an issue.

No court is going to deny him visitation over this. The court does not penalize a parent for working (nor should they!).

2007-03-21 14:19:03 · answer #4 · answered by kp 7 · 0 0

AS he suffers from nightmares and is drained - who would'nt be. conserving him decrease back at college isn't assisting and easily makeing issues worse. so as this is the 1st concern to handle. - melancholy can run in families and there is regrettably many circumstances of youngsters no longer getting the splendid help. get decrease back in touch with the GP and request extra help - or a referal - you could verify your community NHS for infant psychiatry. interior step determine infant relationships there is a lot that has long previous on in the previous which you had no longer something to do with, IE the tip of your companions previous relationship. How has this impacted on the child? in keeping with risk the nightmares etc are led to by using this as is the stealing. Is there any concern you could think of of which will help or is there desire in asking the boy - what he thinks would help - purely one concern at a time concepts. that's good which you will ask - I do desire you properly. purely a thought - now please observe i'm unmarried no teenagers and could no longer fake to appreciate any solutions. yet my sisters son then elderly approximately 10 began to have nightmares. they purely asked him what he needed to ensue if he awakened so they worked out a plan, it worked slightly - it worked remeber boys attempt to be adult males and don't prefer to ask for help or say they are scared. yet my little contribution to this became that once the boy stayed over with me and stated how cool my homestead became - his mom and father have been given him to make strategies approximately his mattress room - while the room became accomplished over - no longer spending extensive quantities of money - his nightmares lessened. no longer each and every little thing will artwork first of yet I in many circumstances went for a swim in the evening and asked if he needed to return alongside in keeping with risk purely a nil.5 hour or so - this helped him sleep. With the lighter nights comeing in then in keeping with risk there is a few outdoor interest that shows.

2016-12-15 05:50:49 · answer #5 · answered by fechter 4 · 0 0

The problem is...you can not control the relationship your daughter has with her father. If you do, YOU will be the one who is resented. Let her go with him. Don't speak badly of him to her. Let her have her own opinion of him. Even if she comes home singing his praises now...his true colors will eventually come through and she'll see him for who he is. Who knows? He MAY even start being a real father to her. Just don't sabotage it by projecting your own feelings about him, on to your daughter. She'll find out on her own. Trust me, if you keep a girl from her daddy...she will resent you...NOT him.

2007-03-21 13:41:55 · answer #6 · answered by Lisa E 6 · 0 0

anybody that helps bring a child into this world should be entilted to see their child sometimes even if it 2 days out of a week. I understand what you are saying he doesnt have the time. what are his days off maybe he can get her then. but if the time is not there he really needs to make the time no one should be doing his job

2007-03-21 13:44:17 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I would insist if he wanted that time with her then he's to spend all that time with her every single time he sees her. I would try to be flexible with times though just to prevent any possibilities that he might rely on someone else to take care of her even if only for an hour or so.

2007-03-21 13:45:43 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Are you saying because he works he shouldnt see his daughter? My ex husband never held a job and doesnt do anything. Your daughter shouldnt be punished because her dad works. She should be able to get know her father. I would love for my daughter's dad to want to see her.

2007-03-21 13:41:38 · answer #9 · answered by Navulam 3 · 1 0

best think to do is to sit down a have a long talk with him
p.s. a child needs both parents to be objective in life

2007-03-21 13:40:19 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers