ReMarriage

 

Remarriage among parents can present challenges at holidays and family events.  

 

After your parents divorce, holidays can quickly go from the best of times to the worst of times, with the bickering about gifts, the tug-of-war over who gets the kids on Christmas morning, and the battle to establish new family traditions when your family is no longer very traditional. But all that holiday hoopla pales next to the politics of planning a wedding. My younger half brother is quickly learning just how complicated life can become when you bring parents and step parents and ex-stepparents together, even if it’s only for one day.

I consider myself a pioneer in the field of divorce relations. Without a hint that anything was wrong, my parents called my brother and I into the living room one October evening in 1971 to tell us they had decided to separate. I was 11 years old, my brother was 8, and overnight, I become one of only two people in my grade 6 class living with a single parent. I not only felt abandoned by the father I adored, I also felt like an outcast.

My parents were high school sweethearts when my mom found out ‘they had to get married’. I was born just before my mother’s 18th birthday. My dad was in university, working part time to make ends meet. Though I know they loved each other, the marriage was probably doomed to failure from the start. Even so, when I discovered that my father had left my mother for another woman, my confusion quickly turned to anger at him and his new girlfriend, who eventually became his wife.

They had a son — my half brother — when I was 17. By then I had a stepfather who resented my father even more than I did. So when I decided to marry at age 22, my dad and his wife were almost completely shut out. My stepmother wasn’t invited to any of the showers, and my father wasn’t even introduced at the reception. I was still so angry at him that I made (in hindsight) the cruel decision to let my new stepfather walk me down the aisle. The marriage lasted less than a year, but the look on my father’s face in the church that day will haunt me forever.

As the years passed, and I remarried, I never did really warm up to my stepmother, as hard as she tried. But when I had my first child, the thaw began. Suddenly it was important to me that my son know his grandparents — all of them. So I let my dad back into my life… just in time to console him through his second divorce. Within a few months, my dad found someone new. Now my half brother had to deal with a stepmother who already had two children of her own. I tried hard to welcome dad’s third wife for the sake of my children. My half brother, unfortunately, was not so lucky — only he didn’t have any siblings at home to lean on.

So now that he is getting married, his mother, who has since remarried, is trying to make sure everyone is included. Amazingly, she has opened a gate that was always closed to her, and for that I’m grateful. The resulting family connections are so complicated, his poor fiancée (whose parents have been married for over 30 years) is going crazy. She’s a wonderful girl, though, and thanks to her, I am finally able make my half brother part of my family. His mother, whom I hadn’t seen in 10 years, even invited me and my daughter to the bridal shower. It was such a gracious gesture, so of course I went. We were made to feel very comfortable.

My father may be in his third marriage, but I see this wedding as my second chance to rescue my half brother from all the tension and confusion that I endured. On Christmas day, and every day, he and his new wife will be welcome in my home. I’ve learned the hard way that family should always be a priority, regardless of what form it takes.

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Shared in Divorce Magazine by Laurie O’Halloran, January 3, 2008.

Link to article: http://www.divorcemag.com/articles/its-complicated-but-it-is-family#sthash.TmjKyGCM.dpuf

# 138, Divorce is Complicated

Father’s Day

 

A letter to his son who he misses very much!

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To my son,

I don’t know what you’ve been told and I have no control over that. All I can do is to ask God every day to please remind your heart how much I love you until I can one day tell you in person. It breaks my heart to not be allowed to watch you grow, to not be allowed to send you Birthday gifts, Christmas gifts and to experience the meaningful father/son moments.

I do know that one day you will be making your own choices and will start looking for me and you can read the court file and see that I was ordered to stay out of your life. That is not what I wanted.

I want to be a father to you in every phase of your life and to be there for you if you need me…and when I need you. God blessed me with the son I have always hoped to have but what hurts is that although you will learn the truth on your own one day, we cannot get back the years of being father and son as you grow and develop.

So, in the spirit of Fathers Day I want you to know how much I love you…I always have and always will!!!

 I LOVE YOU SON,

Daddy

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Letters from Daddy/Mommy, June 23, 2014

Link to FB page: https://www.facebook.com/sendingourlove?fref=ts

#137, Father’s Day

Working Together

 

Co-parenting together in the same home while divorced.  Understandably, this may not be an option for all families!

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Divorce was a really rough time in my life. That was 4 years ago and we decided to still live together and raise our children together. We share our home in every way except that we have separate bedrooms. We have become good friends and I think we set a good example to our children that we can forgive the past and move on in an amicable manner. Our kids see us communicate nicely and work together. For now, this works for us.

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#136, Working Together

Still Blame Myself

 

No matter how old the children are, when parents divorce, … the child or adult child will blame themselves in the same way that small children do.  The feeling of blame for a parents’ divorce never seem to go away.

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No matter how old I am now, I feel that my parent’s divorce was my fault. I was six years old when my parents sat me down and told me that it would be best if they lived apart. I still remember the empty feeling. The feeling of where will I live and WHAT did I do to cause this. I have never forgot that feeling.

To this day, I still blame myself and wonder what I did.

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#134, Still Blame Myself

Basic Needs

 

A summary of what a child wants and needs while growing up.

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Thought for the night.

Is the world not hard enough for our children without us throwing them into the turmoil of a separated family and fighting parents?

The child only wants to be a child. The child only wants to be loved. The child needs to feel nothing but love, security and comfort from his parents. They only want to be a child to their Mother and Father.

Our children are born into innocence, and are only taught to fear, to hate and to be angry. It was the one job that we were given by God. Protect our children. Lets try harder to figure out how to do that.

God Bless.

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As shared on For-Fathers Rights, August 18, 2014.

#133, Basic Needs

Excellent Question!

 

If a child had two parents before the divorce, a child should have full access to both parents after the divorce…….

Divorce is between the parents and ABOUT THE CHILD!!!!!

LOVE WINS!!!   LOVE WINS!!!!   LOVE WINS!!!   LOVE WINS!!!!   

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How would you like it m

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As shared on Facebook page for Supporters of Shared Parenting Headquarters, April 21.

Link to FB page for Supporters of Shared Parenting Headquarters: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Supporters-Of-Shared-Parenting-Headquarters/659255667507027?fref=ts

#132, Excellent Questions!

 

 

Manipulated

 

One adult child of divorce shares thoughts on discovering how the saddest time of his life was when he was in the throes of PAS by mom.

Alienating parents be fore warned!  The child you are manipulating today against your co-parent will most likely discover the deeds of your actions.  Typically, one cannot manipulate and control one individual forever!  There will be no escape.  The damage will be done!

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When I “hated” my dad, it was the most unhappy time of my life. I didn’t connect why until later when I figured out that I was manipulated to hate my dad.

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As shared on The Father’s Rights Movement, May 25, 2015, 2:04 p.m.

Link to The Father’s Rights Movement FB page: https://www.facebook.com/Fathers4kids?fref=ts

#131, Manipulated

Marital advice

 

Marital advice that is short and to the point!

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One thing is, that if you’re getting married, you should be sure of what you’re doing first. Once you have kids-stay married!

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#130, Marital Advice

Grieving Heart

 

This child seems quite distressed, lost and forlorn.  Child is holding heart close to her with tears in her eyes.  Both parents are packed and walking away from her.  A very sad picture of divorce.  

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dreamstime_s_23113483

 

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#129, Grieving Heart