T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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218.1 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Apr 30 1996 18:04 | 33 |
| His wife is, in my opinion, misstating the case. It's entirely possible for
shared custody to work out "happy", and single custody "unhappy". It all
depends on the temperments, motivations and selflessness of the parents.
When my ex and I divorced ten years ago, we had a 2-year-old son. To the
best of our abilities, we had shared equally in all aspects of nurturing
and child care, and it seemed natural to want to continue to have each of us
involved with our son to the maximum extent possible. Yes, it was unusual
at the time, but we ended up with shared physical and joint legal custody.
I will be the first to say that it was not a piece of cake. The major element
that made it work as well as it has was that, as best we could, we cooperated
in our son's upbringing, sharing major expenses and consulting on issues
such as schools, activities, etc. This in itself was not easy - many times
it was tempting to become antagonistic, but we managed to work through the
issues.
We've been doing this for ten years now, with the current schedule 3 weeks
at a time. We both live in the same city and have comparable incomes, so
there aren't great inequities in resources. Our son has had to learn to
cope with two somewhat different sets of "house rules", but he knows that
both his parents love him and are involved in his life. On the downside,
at times he doesn't seem to really "settle in" and may feel a lack of
stability.
There have been times when I felt it would be better for him to live with
just one parent (not necessarily his mother), but overall I think that I
would make the same choice.
This probably is of no use to your friend, other than to suggest that if
he wants to succeed he needs to redefine the argument.
Steve
|
218.2 | Not wise to stay together for children. | SALEM::PERRY_W | | Wed May 01 1996 09:54 | 13 |
|
I'm not sure you will find many, if any articles that support staying
together when one of the spouses is unhappy in the marriage.
My feeling is that if the problems can't be worked out to both parties
satisfaction it's better to end the marriage providing an honest
attempt was made to resolve differences!
Steve in re:1 is right about staying involved with the children
after the seperation/divorce. The catch is that all parties have
to be mature enough to overcome the obstacles to a sharing relationship
with the children. too often this is impossible because of all the
acrimony in divorce/seperation.
Bill
|
218.3 | | ASABET::pelkey.ogo.dec.com::pelkey | professional hombre | Wed May 01 1996 10:53 | 6 |
| gee I've never seen a seperation of parents work out
for the kids....
Always works in one or both (sometimes) of the parents
favors..
|
218.4 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed May 01 1996 11:07 | 8 |
| I now realize I completely misunderstood the base note. Argh. What the
friend wants is to "stay married for the kids". I agree that that is not
a good idea. Yet it leads me to comment on the pervasive attitude that
if one partner decides they're "not happy", then the automatic response is
divorce rather than working to strengthen the marriage. Too many people
think that marriage is a guarantee of eternal bliss without any obligation.
Steve
|
218.5 | happiness is not a yes/no state | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Wed May 01 1996 13:14 | 37 |
| I haven't got a direct answer to the base noter, although I have seen several
pointers in this conference to literature about the negative effects of divorce
on children. Everybody here seems to agree that
in the best circumstances, divorce hurts children
the best circumstances are all too rare in the real world
I'll also support Steve in .4, that being unhappy should not immediately and
necessarily lead to divorce.
Any time we make a long term commitment, we should expect a day will come when
we feel unhappy with it. But happiness is not a simple yes/no or black/white
kind of thing. We owe it to ourselves, our partner in the commitment, and
everyone else affected, like the children, to think long and hard about a few
simple questions:
How unhappy am I really? Where does it fall on the scale from
everyday dissatisfaction to life-destroying misery?
How could I change the situation and keep my commitment? Can my
partner and I work together on this? Could this be a treatable
depression? Am I really unhappy with something else?
Realistically, what will life be like for everyone if I break my
commitment? How will I feel about myself? Will my life really be
better? And what about my partner and the children? Will the
real cause(s) of my unhappiness remain with me?
I would not presume to answer these questions for anyone else.
I feel sad that our culture has generally encouraged simplistic answers to
questions like these.
I am happy to see that this seems to be changing.
|
218.6 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Wed May 01 1996 13:33 | 14 |
|
Never have I seen divorce benefit children unless there was some
drug, alcohol, or violence involved. Even then, all too often,
if the mother is the one with the problem she _still_ gets the
kids, and the father who has been the only source of stability and
protection in the child's life is evicted from the family.
The "it will be better for the kids" is a cop-out to soothe the guilty
conscience of the person who, in spite of all the information about
decline in standard of living after divorce, still thinks that divorce
is the only answer to all their unhappiness. The animosity does not
stop with divorce. With a few exceptions, it usually gets worse.
fred();
|
218.7 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed May 01 1996 14:07 | 14 |
| Re: .5
>I feel sad that our culture has generally encouraged simplistic answers to
>questions like these.
>
>I am happy to see that this seems to be changing.
It is changing, but is getting worse, not better. More and more people are
considering divorce as a "first resort" when they're unhappy, and this
is accepted by society. They don't want to take responsibility for their
own feelings and actions or do any work to maintain the relationship.
The children suffer the most.
Steve
|
218.8 | Suggestions | XANADU::COLOMBINO | | Wed May 01 1996 16:27 | 23 |
| > My friend is trying to find documents/articles to support his
> statement that it's better for a child to be brought up by both
> parents and negative effects of broken family on children.
I don't have any specific documents/articles for your friend.
I would suggest two methods as a starting point. One is to do some work
at a decent library - many have access to on-line literature search services,
and I'm sure could help him find literature on the subject.
Another is to use Digital's AltaVista system on the WorldWideWeb
( http:/altavista.digital.com/ ). I did
a couple of quick searches - one on 'divorce near shared and custody' and
another on 'staying together near divorce and children', and found a
total of about 40 - 50 references. I didn't look at the articles to
see if they really related to the subject well, but its a place to
start. Of course what we find depends mainly
on what we look for, so your friend might want to develop his own Web search
stategy.
Hope this helps.
Chuck
|
218.9 | Takes both to make it work | WRKSYS::MATTSON | | Wed May 01 1996 16:32 | 18 |
| This may be obvious, but 'working on the marriage' is useless unless
both parties are willing to take long, hard, honest looks at
themselves. Too often, one spouse may want to work on problems, but the
other wants to maintain the status quo. They say they want the relationship
to work, but they want to keep it on their terms.
Why is your friend concerning himself with finding documentation to
'prove' that his wife should stay in a situation where she's apparently
not happy? Is he trying to keep her in jail? Maybe he should ask her
what the issues are that are making her unhappy, and listen with an
open heart. You catch a lot more flies with honey than with vinegar.
If she feels that he genuinely does want the marriage to work for
everyone involved, she may reconsider. But trying to force her to stay
'for the kids' will probably just make her want to leave even more.
As others said, a situation in which one spouse is unhappy will create
tension and a bad atmosphere in the home, which will hurt the kids. It
will also give them a BAD EXAMPLE of how a relationship should be.
|
218.10 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Wed May 01 1996 17:08 | 10 |
| re .9
> As others said, a situation in which one spouse is unhappy will create
> tension and a bad atmosphere in the home, which will hurt the kids. It
> will also give them a BAD EXAMPLE of how a relationship should be.
There is _nothing_ that will create tension between parents like divorce
will. And just what does divorce teach the kids about relationships?
fred();
|
218.11 | Stay and be Miserable? | WRKSYS::MATTSON | | Wed May 01 1996 18:18 | 21 |
| re .10
So are you saying that someone should stay in a relationship where they
are miserable? If they've given it an honest effort?
Ideally, both spouses should work hard to solve problems and make the
marriage work. It's important to the kids to see loyalty and commitment
to solving problems. But the best efforts sometimes don't work--the two
spouses may just want different things from the relationship, and a
compromise can't be reached. And then it becomes an issue of being true
to one's self, which is also an important example to set for kids.
It's a lot better to part with at least some mutual respect for each
other, than to stay, and allow resentment and hostility to eat away
at both people's lives until it's an out-and-out war. Do you really
believe that kids aren't aware of what goes on?
My daughter has a friend whose parents stayed together 'for the kids'.
This girl hates being at home, she's angry at the parents for martyring
themselves for her sake, and she's disgusted by the loveless sham of
her parent's marriage. If anything, they have set an example of what
she doesn't want.
|
218.12 | not good enough reason to destry a family | TEXAS1::SOBECKY | It's complicated. | Wed May 01 1996 18:37 | 9 |
|
re .11
Being true to oneself is not sufficient reason to end a marriage where
there are children involved.
John
|
218.13 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Wed May 01 1996 21:04 | 48 |
|
reply .11
>So are you saying that someone should stay in a relationship where they
>are miserable? If they've given it an honest effort?
If I had a nickel for every woman who told me that what they wanted
most in a relationship was "commitment"... Just what is this
"commitment" anyway? And who gets to decide what an "honest effort" is?
Apparently you are looking at the situation from a woman's point of
view of having little or nothing to loose but the sorry S.O.B. that
is "obviously" the cause of every crappy thing in the world. How
much would your tune be different if it meant leaving your children
behind? If he was the one who could evict you from your children
and your home on a whim, what would you think of this "commitment"
then?
I do not expect _anyone_ to stay in a violent and abusive relationship.
I personally have advised more than one woman to "Get the hell out
_NOW_"! Although I have seen many guys stay because they knew that
leaving meant abandoning the children. I've seen many a guy stay in a
rotten marriage because leaving meant abandoning children he loved to
a, to put it politely, less than ideal parent. Only to be given the
heave-ho anyway after the last drop of blood has been extracted. As
the saying goes "No greater love hath any man than to give his life
for a friend". Now much less for a parent for his/her children.
> Do you really
> believe that kids aren't aware of what goes on?
I've rarely seen a kid that will tell you it's much better after
divorce. In fact the animosity usually increases on an order of
magnitude. Yes there are the kids where dad was a abusive drug addict.
I can understand that, but those cases are in the minority.
What I have seen is kid after kid who dreams at night of their parents
growing up and working out their problems so that the child can have
_both_ parents he/she loves close to him/her. What I have seen is
kids with minds twisted with hate from the brainwashing of on parent
against the other. What I have seen is kids living in poverty because
the living standard of _both_ parents falls like a rock. What I have
seen are children with _no_ parent because mommy has to go to work
now. Children with little or no understanding of what "commitment"
means themselves. Let alone the ability to pass it on to _their_
children.
fred();
|
218.14 | | TEXAS1::SOBECKY | It's complicated. | Wed May 01 1996 23:47 | 36 |
|
Fred
The last paragraph of your reply .13 summarizes my feelings exactly.
We (I) haved lived through, and sufferd the consequences of, the 'ME
FIRST! generation with disastrous results. People are too willing to
destroy a family for no other reason other than temptation whispers in
their ear once too often.
Sorry for those that disagree...I won't change my mind. I believe that
the family is the only thing holding this country together anymore. If
we make it too easy for people to become morally unaccounable for their
actions through things like NO-FAULT divorce, then we are on the road o
certain ruin.
Parents need to grow up, put their differences aside, and move forward
for the good of the family. Parents goals are secondary to the needs of
their children.
Adults can find enough to occupy themselves, and continue to be civil
toward each other, until the children are grown. Your kids aren't
always happy, even with their own best friends. They don't expect their
parents to be goo-goo eyed every day, they don't expect their parents
to not have disagreements. They do expect civility and respect,
however.
Screw this "Be true to thine own self" crap. If you had the enery and
libido to have kids, then you own the responsibility to put your
selfish feelings aside for their benefit.
I'm not particulary speaking to Mattson, or the base noter. I'm just
spouting off.
John
|
218.15 | Control Tactics Won't Work | WRKSYS::MATTSON | | Thu May 02 1996 10:33 | 28 |
|
WARNING! The following contains material which may be inflammatory!
It's absolutely true that the aftermath of divorce s@cks. But I still
say that this guy in .1 should first try to hear his wife out and
maybe take a look at his own issues before he tries to control her.
Is he completely innocent of the fact that she wants to leave? Just the
fact that he's resorting to control tactics such as 'providing
documentation' gives me a pretty good idea why she might want out.
Does he REALLY WANT to make the marriage work? That usually means both
people have to change some things. Or does he want to 'win'?
I was operating from the assumption that these are adults that are
married. They are both individuals. They both have rights. Either one
CAN leave. No one can force the other to stay. Get used to it, it's the
way it is. All that the man in .1 can do is his best, to make sure he's
done his part to be a good mate, and then let go of the outcome.
I'm sure she has faults, too. Hopefully his willingness to look at
himself will encourage her to do the same.
Control tactics !!!NEVER!!! work. We women do NOT LIKE THEM!!!!
You can preach right and wrong until you're blue in the face, but
remember that change begins with the self.
|
218.16 | More about .o | STOWOA::FARHADI | | Thu May 02 1996 12:04 | 17 |
| Little more about .0 (my friend)
I don't know the whole story, as we all know, there are always two sides
to the story.
He is telling me that he loves his kids and his wife. She wants out because
of the difficulties that they had during their earlier (first 6 years) time
of their marriage. She does not want to go to marriage counselor. She wants
him to move out for couple of month which he is refusing, since he did that
last year already for a month.
So he wants to use these documents to convince his wife that divorce is not
good for anyone, specially Children. His wife states that Children are the
most important thing in her life.
P.S. Thank you for all the pointers. I have enough documents for him.
|
218.17 | making it work | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Thu May 02 1996 13:00 | 27 |
| I agree that there are marriages so bad that divorce is better for the children.
As Fred says, these usually involve drugs, alcohol and/or abuse. I also agree
that there are marriages where sticking together is better for the children and
the adults.
.15> maybe take a look at his own issues before he tries to control her.
> Is he completely innocent of the fact that she wants to leave? Just the
> fact that he's resorting to control tactics such as 'providing
> documentation' gives me a pretty good idea why she might want out.
See .16, admittedly not available to you when you wrote .15.
I would not be willing to condemn somebody just for asking for information.
Nor would I assume that somebody is not doing X because I see them doing Y.
> Does he REALLY WANT to make the marriage work? That usually means both
> people have to change some things. Or does he want to 'win'?
From the information in .0, I would have no idea. From the information in .16,
I'd guess, with the usual reservations, that he wants the marriage to work.
> Control tactics !!!NEVER!!! work. We women do NOT LIKE THEM!!!!
Interesting. Actually, we men don't like them either.
You might reread .15 in the light of your own wisdom.
|
218.18 | | WRKSYS::MATTSON | | Thu May 02 1996 14:11 | 14 |
| Reading .16 gave me a better idea of the situation. I'm sure it's
frustrating if one person wants it to work (In this case the husband)
but the wife doesn't. It's a tough one. Could any kind of a compromise
be reached? Could he TEMPORARILY stay somewhere else with the condition
that she see a marriage counselor with him? Can she possibly be talked
into giving it one more try?
I didn't mean to imply that he's at fault. I just don't think the
approach he's taking will work. I doubt that that will encourage her to
stay. If she insists on ending it, regardless, all he can do is try to
accept things, get on with his life, and let the kids know that he
loves them and is still their father.
|
218.19 | | NAC::TRAMP::GRADY | Squash that bug! (tm) | Thu May 02 1996 14:27 | 7 |
| If she's so unhappy, she can move out. If he leaves, he
jeopardizes his position regarding custody, and risks being
accused of abandonment.
He can't change her - only she can change her mind - but he can
safeguard his own interests in the children, and stay put.
|
218.20 | Don't move out! | SALEM::PERRY_W | | Thu May 02 1996 14:40 | 19 |
|
RE:16.
To all men reading this note, listen carefully!
If your SO says move out for awhile and after that time I will
make up my mind about staying together, *DON'T DO IT*
It is one of the biggest line of BS that women give to men.
If you move out and after the agreed upon time is up and she
says *I've decided I don't want to stay together* You won't
have a chance to get custody of your children. It's hard
enough for men to get custody under the best circumstances.
Come up with an arrangement that keeps men in the house,
live in a seperate room etc. You can co-exist in the same
house and not risk losing your children.
Bill who's been through it!
|
218.21 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Thu May 02 1996 16:57 | 17 |
|
re .18
> I didn't mean to imply that he's at fault. I just don't think the
> approach he's taking will work. I doubt that that will encourage her to
> stay. If she insists on ending it, regardless, all he can do is try to
> accept things, get on with his life, and let the kids know that he
> loves them and is still their father.
Again I ask how much different your tune would be if it were _you_
who was being forcibly separated from your children, then forced
to fork over a substantial amount of your continued income to finance
the situation. Such B.S. was supposed to have gone out with The
Emancipation Proclamation.
fred();
|
218.22 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Thu May 02 1996 17:20 | 15 |
| From today's Pueblo Chieftain, Pueblo, Co.
I don't have time to type in the full article, but no less a flaming
liberal as Roy Romer, Governor of Colorado is quoted:
"Common since and most studies tell us that fathers play a critically
important role in the lives of their children an that father's absence
makes the lives of children harder".
However, most of the article was about establishing paternity and
what a great job is being done to collect child support. The quote
is somewhat a nonsequitur in the article, which gave an overall since
that men were the cause of most divorce and that men were absent from
their children because they just don't care.
fred();
|
218.23 | At least she ow understands why | CSC32::M_EVANS | It's the foodchain, stupid | Fri May 03 1996 21:26 | 26 |
| All you can do is try counseling. It could be that your spouse is
generally unhappy with some small items, it might be things that you or
she have grown into.
Divorce is hard on children, but so were the flying plates and words
and parental units choosing not to come home at night on my oldest.
Yeah, right. I was supposed to stay with him, even while he was
screwing the upstairs roommate, generally creating messes and refusing
to clean them or cook, when I was the financial support for the family
unit, while saying I was offering no support to the household. "Umm
honey, could you at least sort the laundry and change the sheets in the
bed when you and she do the horizontal bop in my bed? I don't like
sleeping in someone elses bodily fluids." He still doesn't understand
why I left the night he twisted my arm for not being susie homaker
while going to school and holding down a job to feed him, our daughter
and the sorry-a$$ girlfriend he had upstairs.
In our case, there was no point in counseling. I had had enough. I
did see to it that he did take his daughter on weekends, or at least
for a couple of hours on Sundays, even when he didn't pay support.
(that 10K would come in awfully handy for Lolita now. She has a few
months of college to go.)
meg
|
218.24 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon May 06 1996 11:58 | 14 |
|
re .23
Don't get me wrong. He probably got what he deserved, but to continue
to try to make my point here...
If the laws had been reversed, even after all that, he could have kept
the kid and forced you to support him with "child support" while he
continued to boink the upstairs roommate. And if he was also
neglectful and abusive to the kid...too bad. So you would then
have had the choice of 1) put up with it, 2) abandon the child and pay
child support, 3)abandon the child and become a "deadbeat".
fred();
|
218.25 | | MPGS::PHILL | In casual pursuit of serenity. | Thu May 09 1996 17:34 | 22 |
| Hi,
I think there are a few references out ther. Fathering seems to be the hot
topic these days.
"Divorce Busters" is a book I vaguely remember seeing around. There is a new
book - the author was on teh TV teh other night. He seemed to make sense. Also
somebody pointed me to an article in this months Better Homes and Gardens on
the importance of Fathering.
Now I think I could end up agreeing with either argument in .0. People seem
to be pointing out the main issues. I would like to hear her side. I do think
it's pretty unfair to avoid counseling. I think if one spouse wants to try
counseling then the other should try it.
Children need both parents. I am painfully aware of that these days. If one
of the parents is abusive to themselves the other parent or the children then
they are being deprived of parenting as much as if that parent was not there.
A suggestion is for the friend in .0 to try counseling by himself. I've seen
that be productive in other cases.
Peter.
|