Why do you want to spend less time with your children when growing up happens so quickly these days? Don't you look back on how many years have gone already and wonder how it's passed so fast?! And to think you've got to spend less time with your children because your Ex wants them, is gut-wrenching to most of us. Divorce hurts - it hurts us in different ways, but it hurts us all the same!
One of the most painful parts of divorce is the involvement of our children. We could handle it without much grief really if we could just part company and divvy up the goodies, say goodbye and have them pretty much leave our life. When we have children with them, that's just not going to happen.
Truth is, it shouldn't happen either!
Children who do not know one of their parents struggle more as adults than those who have good time spent with both parents while growing up.
So, do you have to share your children? The answer is not so much that you have to, but rather why wouldn't you want your children to have the best start in life as possible … and your Ex, their other parent will help provide that.
Of course, you may well be saying, "Yeah - well, you don't know my Ex, and that's not the best for my kid." This is true, I don't know your Ex, I don't know the circumstances, however, unless you are dealing with abuse, your child benefits from time spent with both.
For decades, fathers have been cut out of valuable time with their children through misguided court orders where mothers have been left struggling to juggle being the providers and nurturers all year round.
There are generations of men who barely know their fathers because they've been prevented spending quality time together.
The father's don't know how to be dads either, because they weren't given the opportunity to learn on the job.
These young men who have since grown up inside the fatherless home have no (or little) role models and so they continue repeating such a broken and sorry story.
If your Ex has an interest in their children, you are wise to support time with them fully.
I know you can feel really lonely. I know you can feel that you're losing out on your marriage and now being a parent.
But truth is, being a parent is also about allowing children to have time away from you in a healthy and supportive way.
Jill Darcey
www.complexfamily.com