T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1190.1 | | PULPO::BELDIN_R | Pull us together, not apart | Mon Aug 05 1991 17:07 | 19 |
| My guess is you won't be given a chance to try to be a single parent.
Our society is not likely to agree that you can raise two girls without a woman
in the house. Even if they were boys, you would probably have trouble getting
custody. Not that I agree, but I think that's real world.
Given that you won't get custody without a fight, your choices boil down to
1) Let your wife have custody.
2) Take the kids through a nasty court battle for custody as part
of the divorce proceedings.
My vote is for 1) because the kids are not going to be well served by all the
exposure to the social-legal system. There is even a risk that under 2),
neither you nor your wife would get custody. Talk to your lawyer.
Dick
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1190.2 | Get a lawyer | MINAR::BISHOP | | Mon Aug 05 1991 17:16 | 7 |
| Get a laywer RIGHT NOW! You'll want to document the fact that the
children are living with you now.
You also might want to ask yourself why you are going out of your
way to help out your soon-to-be-ex wife.
-John Bishop
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1190.3 | Keep pluggin' away. | VINO::MACNEIL | | Mon Aug 05 1991 17:42 | 25 |
| You need a good lawyer to protect your interests in your children and
to help you understand your situation (which is deep s__t).
A good lawyer is:
- friendly, persuasive, and assertive in court. It doesn't matter
what he or she is like in his or her own office. I'm not sure,
but many judges are men and they may be more receptive to a
woman lawyer. Don't know if there are any stats on that but I've
some excellent woman lawyers in action and, even in a court,
human nature is human nature.
- honest and pragmatic. ( Yes, pearls are difficult to find, but
do the best you can.) If your lawyer paints a rosy picture of
custody battles, he or she is thinking of the fee, not your
chances of success.
- familiar with the law. (This point is less important than the
previous two. Don't let anyone fool you: a court-room
presentation in a sales presentation. You're selling yourself
and what a good person and parent you are.)
Chances are, that regardless what happens, if you keep in touch with
your children and if you can be there for them, you will still have
something nice out of life even if it is less than what you've wanted.
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1190.4 | Wishful thinking will not help here. | TERZA::ZANE | for who you are | Tue Aug 06 1991 12:56 | 11 |
|
She has made it abundantly clear what she wants and what she is going to
do. You have said that you believe you can work things out if she wanted
to. She has spoken and acted -- she says NO.
Start from there. Until you do, your children are prime targets for a
battle nobody really wants.
Terza
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1190.5 | try joint custody | ASDG::CALL | | Tue Aug 06 1991 17:14 | 6 |
| Chances are you will not get custody unless your wife gives them up.
I don't know too many women that would do that. The best you can hope
for is to go for joint custody. This is from someone that's been in
custody court three separate times. My ex went for the kids.
If I were you I would start looking for a lawyer and a Good one.
Good luck
|
1190.6 | Get your kids back into the marital home!!!! | LUNER::MACKINNON | | Wed Aug 07 1991 10:53 | 10 |
|
Get the kids back in the marital home now. As long as you remain there
with the kids you have a better chance of getting custody of them.
I would also post this note in the non custodial notes file. You would
get alot of good feedback from folks who have experienced this first
hand.
Good luck,
Michele
|
1190.7 | Lawyer needed.... | JUPITR::SHERMAN | Real life isn't like this | Wed Aug 07 1991 15:07 | 26 |
|
Divorce is never easy, no matter who wants it. But it is hardest
of all on the children. The only thing you and your wife seem to
have in common any more is that you both love your kids.
If you can keep it from becomming a grudge match and think of what is
best for the children it might help. I think joint custody is great
when both parents have a loving relationship with their children.
Also having them back in their "home" with regular schedules could
take some of the stress off.
Get legal advice as soon as possible. You never know what advise
your wife is getting, and you might find your situation changing
overnight.
Being a single parent is difficult whether you are male or female.
I have been a single parent for eight years and when it would get
particularly hard to deal with things, I would remember what it
was like before the divorce, and know that we are better off now.
Besides, my reward has been raising a great daughter.
I would never go back.
Judy
|
1190.8 | | AITE::WASKOM | | Fri Aug 09 1991 17:41 | 36 |
| Some background. My son's father and I separated when he was 5, just
before he started first grade. We had "normal" custody arrangements
(Mom during the week, Dad alternate weekends and alternate holidays)
for one year, and then had joint physical custody for 6 years. At that
point Dad moved out of state, and the child chose to stay in the known
school and social situation and live with Mom. We did not get our
final divorce decree until 3 1/2 years after Dad left the original
marital home. The long time between separation and divorce was at
least partially so we could work out custody and visitation *without*
the courts and lawyers making it an adversarial process. We did
consult a lawyer during the first six months for an uncontested
settlement, and he did help us with writing up what we wanted and
bringing up issues we had not considered.
In your position, I would ask for joint physical custody. Let your
children's mother know that you still love and want to care for your
children. Absolutely, take them back for now and continue to care for
them. Take every opportunity you are given to have them living with
you, cared for by you, go to their school and meet their teachers,
participate in their activities. If you wind up in a court fight (and
I hope you don't, because they are almost always destructive), this
will be very powerful evidence in your favor that you are involved with
your children in a way that many fathers are not.
In our case, we swapped weeks. My son went to school from one house on
Monday morning, and came home to the other house on Monday afternoon.
This had the advantage of giving all of us a "neutral time" between
homes. It was a regular schedule, so the child knew what to expect.
It tended to confuse the school a little, but they learned to cope.
Other families with joint physical custody have had other patterns
which have worked for them.
Good luck to you. If you've got any other questions, feel free to
write me off line. (My son is now 18 and turned out fine.)
Alison
|
1190.9 | single father replying | CSC32::T_PARMELEE | | Fri Aug 16 1991 17:56 | 16 |
| There is alot of good advice being given here but I thought the author
wanted to hear from single fathers.
I am a single father of a 4 year old girl. Cori and I have been on our
own since she was 13 months. I will be glad to talk to you if you
want. My mail node is CSC32::T_PARMELEE.
My advice would be to document EVERYTHING. Try to keep the girls
livestyle as unchanged as possible. Get involved in all aspects of the
girls lives as possible. They will need a good stable environment.
The court system will look at who can best provide this environment.
The children are what's important here.
Call or write if you want to talk.
Tom
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1190.10 | <and another...> | GVA01::LANGTON | Theo Langton @GEO | Fri Aug 23 1991 13:29 | 6 |
| Hi. I'm a single father who has been separated 2 1/2 years, not yet
divorced, and I've had my 4 year-old son almost 1/2 time since then. My
situation is not yet resolved, but I've learned a lot and I'll be glad
to talk with you. I'm at GVA01::LANGTON.
Theo
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1190.11 | Another | COMET::PAPA | NEVER let anyone stop you from singing | Wed Aug 28 1991 01:44 | 4 |
| I am a single father and have been for 6 years. My younger son is 11
and the older is 14. In april my oldest went to live with his mother
because he wanted to. I also have a 24 year old daughter living with
me. She has been with me since she was 10.
|
1190.12 | Yes, you CAN HAVE custody! | BTOVT::WORCESTER_J | | Fri Nov 15 1991 17:34 | 28 |
| Hi,
2 daughters aged 7 and 9 have been living with me for almost 2 years
after I filed for a divorce. My divorce became final last June, but
the battle didn't end there... There were 2 more court Hearings, and
the most recent one was the most brutal...
Yes, I still have custody... It IS possible for the Father to have
custody but, NOT WITHOUT the EMOTIONAL and FINANCIAL EXPENSES of
proving to the Vermont Family Court, that the Mother of the children
is either unfit, chemically dependent on drugs, crazy, abuse the
children, or whatever...
DOCUMENT, DOCUMENT, DOCUMENT...!! Your children will LOVE YOU and
RESPECT YOU because THEY NEED to HAVE THAT KNOWLEDGE and sense of
SECURITY that you ARE THERE FOR THEM and ALWAYS will be.....
Yes, my EX has screwed me many, many times...even put the children in
the middle... but, I documented things to the court and she has a court
order to refrain from putting them in the middle between her and I.
Yes, it's EXPENSIVE,...and YES, divorce is ugly... BUT, the IMPORTANT
thing to remember is that your children need to KNOW that you are
there for them from the day they were born till the day you die...
Hang in tough...
John
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1190.13 | | RIPPLE::KENNEDY_KA | | Sat Nov 16 1991 02:04 | 5 |
| John,
Congratulations on getting custody of your children. You deserve many
kudos for going after what you want and hanging in there to get it.
Karen
|