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Posts Tagged ‘Mothers Who Share Parenting’

Mothers Who Share Parenting: ‘We agreed we’d protect our son and show him how loved he was’

Saturday, April 3rd, 2010 by Glenn Sacks, MA, Executive Director

“If my son brings up his dad in conversation I make a point of saying, ‘you are lucky to have a great dad’…I want him to feel safe loving his father right in front of me, without fear of hurting my feelings or being concerned about allegiance to either parent.”

Fathers & Families supporter Maggie is a mother who shares parenting. Below, she tells her story.

Co-parenting benefits us as parents, but ultimately it is our children who are the winners
By Maggie

When my husband and I divorced in 2004 our families were heartbroken. Our son was three years old. Our parents were becoming friends, enjoyed spending holidays together and everyone was looking forward to a long happy life as one unit. We shattered a lot of dreams with our decision, but we knew it was the right one.

In the midst of this turmoil we both did a lot of things that we regret (mostly me) and had to work very hard to practice forgiveness (mostly him). However, we made a pact early on that we would protect our son and show him how loved he was. We knew that he would feel the rippling effects of our actions and agreed that our decisions would be made solely for what was best for him – not what felt good or what seemed “fair” to us.

That meant that during his younger years (age 3-10) he would likely spend more time with me. His father works fulltime and leaves before dawn many days a week. We knew he would benefit from having a stable home as much as possible; it just made sense. To compensate for the imbalance in the timeshare I committed to making our home and lives accessible to dad whenever he had extra time – sharing a meal, an unplanned trip to the arcade, or even just popping in throughout the week for a hug. We learned to be flexible. It has been tested many, many times with new schedules, new partners and decisions over discipline. We found a balance that works for us.

A couple weeks ago I had a big birthday party planned.  Dad called to ask if our son could go to Disneyland the same weekend. His girlfriend needed to fly to Los Angeles for business and they decided to turn the trip into a vacation. Saying yes meant rescheduling the birthday party until weeks later and that I would miss his first time at Disneyland. I was disappointed for maybe 15 minutes before I agreed wholeheartedly and made the opportunity work for everyone involved. We took our egos out of the parenting and solely focused on what would best serve our child.

Because our son doesn’t see his father daily I try to keep him present in our lives. We have photos of him on the wall. If he brings up his dad in conversation I make a point of saying, “you are lucky to have a great dad” or “your daddy loves you very much.” When he says he misses him I always offer the chance to call him.  I want him to feel safe loving his father right in front of me, without fear of hurting my feelings or being concerned about allegiance to either parent. One has nothing to do with the other.

As a result of our timeshare his dad has had to sacrifice the sometimes sweet and sometimes stressful moments of raising a child. I have had to do much of the parenting on my own…for now. Today we are sharing time with an eight-going-on-18 year old. Suddenly dad is the coolest thing since the invention of video games. Where he once wanted me, he is now looking to his dad for mentoring and to model how to be a guy in the world. I am coming to terms with the fact that he will likely spend his teen years primarily living with his father and that is ok – it’s what is best for him. We’re watching him and letting him guide us by his age-appropriate needs whenever possible. (more…)

Mothers Who Share Parenting: ‘My daughter has been the beneficiary’

Thursday, November 26th, 2009 by Glenn Sacks, MA, Executive Director

“All in all, we all get along and my daughter has been the beneficiary of this. She is an extremely well adjusted young lady, does well in school, has great relationships with friends, and I can only attribute her adjustment to the relationships that she has been able to have with all the parents/grandparents in her life.”

Fathers & Families supporter Johanna is a mother who shares parenting. Below, she tells her story.

Co-parenting can work if both parents expect their child to have an equal relationship with both of them
By Johanna

My daughter from my second marriage is 15. Her father and I divorced when she was 7 and I became the residential parent. We split because we just had grown apart. We tried marriage counseling but it didn’t help. In fact, my ex was very surprised when I actually filed for divorce and was crushed when I decided to move 45 minutes away with our daughter in order to be closer to my work, which had been a 1:25 commute for the prior seven years. My daughter and her father were always close and even though we lived in separate homes, I made sure that they had regular contact.

My daughter understood that her father and I both loved her and that her father missed her when she was with me. We got a cell phone so that she could call him for free and she did call him at least twice a day and sometimes more. At first it was with my reminders and then it became part of the fabric of her day. She looked forward to her weekend visits with him and though I didn’t have to, we chose to meet halfway.

In addition, if he wanted her for a special event, I did not nickel and dime him on visitation. Instead I let him take her.

He was fully aware of how she was doing in school, invited and attended her concerts and open houses with me, and was always aware when she was ill or needed to go to the doctor or dentist. The first few years, he changed jobs and his income level dropped. I voluntarily lowered child support from $410 (which I felt was too high for his income) to $250 per month, which in my opinion was always plenty enough to support her and her needs.

For holidays, for the first few years, we chose to share them even when my current husband came along. The first year, we did Thanksgiving together at his house (the former marital home) and Christmas at my home. My daughter patiently waited for her dad and grandma to come before opening her gifts. And, after dinner, she would go with her dad for the rest of her holiday break.

Typically she spent most of her holiday weekends and holiday breaks as well as much of the summers with her dad to make up for time not spent with him during the school year. When friends would invite her for overnights that fell on her dad’s weekends, my daughter would either decline to attend or her dad and I would work out an alternative for that. She chose her extracurricular based on things that would either not interfere with visitation or those in which her dad could attend.

When our daughter was 12, my current husband, who is active duty military, was reassigned from Ohio to Maryland. My ex-husband and I were able to agree on our daughter moving with me and then splitting the cost of airfare, with visits at least once a month and our daughter spending the majority of holiday weekends, holiday breaks, and the summer with him. Again, we made this work for us and worked around the times when airfare was least expensive. Since Ohio was my home as well, we would often travel there for weekend trips and ended up staying with my ex, so that there were additional visits in between.

This past year, we agreed that the new high school to which my daughter was assigned in Maryland was not providing her the level of education that we wanted her to have even though she was a straight A student. In her best interest, we agreed to change the residential parenting agreement and have our daughter move back to Ohio with her dad to attend the high school there, and then visit with me on long weekends and vacations.

My husband (her stepdad) has the best and least expensive insurance, so he carries her on that. All in all, we all get along and my daughter has been the beneficiary of this. She is an extremely well adjusted young lady, does well in school, has great relationships with friends, and I can only attribute her adjustment to the relationships that she has been able to have with all the parents/grandparents in her life.

Co-parenting, even at a distance, can work if both parents encourage the relationships and expect their child to have an equal relationship with both of them.

To read of other mothers’ experiences sharing parenting with their ex-husbands or ex-boyfriends, click here. If you are a woman who shares parenting and would like to share your experience on our website and E-Newsletter, please tell us about it here.

Mothers Who Share Parenting: ‘It’s simply co-parenting–putting the needs of your children front and center’

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009 by Glenn Sacks, MA, Executive Director
lisaebert

Lisa, her two kids, and a pirate

“I am often astounded at the parenting arrangements I see that are anything but shared.”

Longtime Fathers & Families supporter Lisa S. Ebert, JD, Director of Sponsored Programs and Research at the City University of New York, is a mother who shares parenting. Below, she tells her story.

Shared Parenting – It Should be the Norm
By Lisa S. Ebert, JD

My marriage ended almost five years ago. And of course we share the parenting of our two children equally. I say “of course” because I can’t imagine it any other way. I am often astounded at the parenting arrangements I see that are anything but shared.

My children, like so many others in society, have had to face the pain of parents who decided to divorce. Ours wasn’t a marriage where there were loud fights or infidelity or issues of drug or alcohol use, the kinds of issues where the children, while upset at the ending of the marriage, might also welcome the respite from some of those issues.

Rather, ours was a quiet ending to a good marriage that went bad. Our marriage was mired in painful and confusing issues which, from our 20 years together, seemed to both of us insurmountable. After it ended though, I never thought of us as a broken family. I thought of us as a family in which the parents were no longer married to each other.

We divided up the assets quietly and fairly among ourselves, and we share the custody of our children 50/50. Each month requires the two of us sitting down to coordinate calendars (he travels for work, I also travel occasionally) with the following rules in mind: the kids must have 3 nights in a row in one home, and we each have an equal amount of time with them. We split costs like tutors, clothes, summer camps, birthday parties and sporting events. For vacations, splurges, and other non-necessities, we are on our own.

Is it blissful? No, of course not. We sometimes have disagreements involving money, and parenting, as most parents do. Is it painful sometimes? Yes. My ex-husband and I were best friends for 20 years. Today, we hover between good acquaintances and captive co-parents. It is still difficult to hear my son’s occasional sorrow at not having both of his parents together for vacations anymore, or under the same roof for family game nights.

But we try, both of us, to make it easier on them and ourselves, in small but significant ways. We have “family nights” occasionally, playing a board game or watching a movie. We go out to dinner together about once a month, and we share traditional celebrations (with extended families) on birthdays and Christmas morning.

Granted, this is unusual. But it works for us. And my children seem to be thriving. I think my kids have learned, through this gradual process of replacing old traditions with new ones, that they are loved and secure and have two parents who are equally devoted to them.

Anyway, it’s not heroic. It shouldn’t be newsworthy. It’s simply co-parenting–putting the needs of your children front and center stage, over your own, to help them recover as best they can from the trauma of divorce. I hope to see it become the norm. I have every confidence that it will.

To read of other mothers’ experiences sharing parenting with their ex-husbands or ex-boyfriends, click here. If you are a woman who shares parenting and would like to share your experience on our website and E-Newsletter, please tell us about it here.

Mothers Who Share Parenting: ‘My ex is a loving parent—our marriage was over but we will always be OUR son’s parents’

Friday, October 23rd, 2009 by Glenn Sacks, MA, Executive Director

Rachel, a Fathers & Families supporter, shares parenting with her ex-husband. Below she describes her experiences:

Throughout my life I have seen so many single parents (mothers mostly) raising kids. I was raised by my mother and saw my father only a couple of times a year. This is not an easy life.

When my marriage failed, we decided to share custody of OUR son. I know that I could have had full custody but this was just not the best thing for any of us.

My ex is as fit and loving parent as am I. Our marriage was over but we will always be OUR son’s parents. It would have been a different choice if there had been abuse or anything like that.

OUR son stays the night with his father on Monday and Tuesday and with me on Wednesday and Thursday. We alternate the weekends. I work like crazy on Mondays and Tuesdays and his dad works during the day Monday through Friday. Our son has never had to spend a minute in daycare and only very occasionally has required a babysitter. Why? Because we have arranged our schedules that way.

We are both very involved in his school and weekend time. It’s not a case where one parent doesn’t know what’s going on at school. No “Disneyland Daddy,” so to speak.

Also with our arrangement, we have eliminated any arguing about childcare costs. We both work and we both care for him when the other parent is working.

With our schedule, there are no long periods of time without seeing the other parent. I think this is very important for kids to have very regular and consistent contact. He has benefited huge by this. He is free to call each parent whenever. It has also helped us be consistent in discipline, because we are both so involved that we know what is going on. We both know who his friends are, what homework he has, etc. Kids can be a bit sneaky that way, but it’s harder for be sneaky when both parents are on the same page.

I know I am very lucky to have this kind of relationship with my ex-husband. We have both worked very hard to get it to this. Why have we worked that hard? For the sake of our son. It has not always been easy to say the least, but it is what’s right.

To read of other mothers’ experiences sharing parenting with their ex-husbands or ex-boyfriends, click here. If you are a woman who shares parenting and would like to share your experience on our website and E-Newsletter, please tell us about it here.

Mothers Who Share Parenting: ‘We could never put our children in the middle of our adult situations’

Monday, September 28th, 2009 by Glenn Sacks, MA, Executive Director

“We both knew we had to put our children’s needs before our own disagreements…we could never put our children in the middle of our adult situations. I continue to be unclear as to why some parents are able to put their children’s needs first and others are not but I have seen the effects of either of these paths on the many children who live through the divorce of their parents, including my own.”

Reader Kimberley S. Roberts is a divorced mother of two who has a shared parenting arrangement with her ex-husband. Recently I asked her to articulate for our readers why she believes that shared parenting is good for children, and good for women. Her contribution is below.

Co-parenting works
By Kimberley S. Roberts

Becoming a mother was one of the most exciting and scary times of my life. I have heard my children’s father state the same. I believe most parents want to do what is best for their children and would never knowingly inflict or be the cause of harm or trauma. However, life often hands us challenges that put us as parents and adults in difficult, life-altering situations and emotional states that can have long term positive and or negative effects for us, our children and our loved ones.

At the ages of eight and four my two children learned one of life’s most difficult lessons, that their parents were unable to live together and that their definition of family would be forever changed. Only as these two innocent and wide eyed little boys began to ask questions, did I realize the incredible responsibility my children’s father and I were faced with regarding how we both chose to handle ourselves and our situation as to minimize the emotional harm to our children.

We both knew we had to put our children’s needs before our own disagreements, anger, shock and changing life and living situations. It was clear to both of us that we could never put our children in the middle of our adult situations. I continue to be unclear as to why some parents are able to put their children’s needs first and others are not but I have seen the effects of either of these paths on the many children who live through the divorce of their parents, including my own.

Each year divorce becomes more and more common place. Amazingly, many divorcing couples successfully maneuver through the process of divorce putting their best foot forward for the sake of all involved, especially the children. There is no “how to” book when it comes to helping your children survive the failed marriage of their parents, but I have learned through my own trials and errors and through seeing the effects of my ex-husband and my decisions, that there are some basic and common sense things that any parent can do to help alleviate the emotional trauma of divorce on their children and to make each parents home a safe haven for them. This requires a commitment by both parents to co-parent. Sadly, a large number of parents choose to use their children as tools to gain advantage and to inflict pain and emotional suffering onto the other parent.

Commonly the parent that has primary custody which is often us mothers, are the ones that use these types of negative tactics, often including alienating the non custodial parent from their children by withholding visits, not including the alienated parent in children’s life events and school events. From a divorced mom’s point of view I feel it is my responsibility to state that it is never ok to do anything that interferes with the other parent’s visits with their child(ren). I send out to a plea to all parent’s throughout the process of divorce and thereafter to always evaluate and make decisions carefully based on the lifelong effects they may have on your children, both positive and negative. In extreme cases a parent truly in fear for their child should go through the proper channels to address these issues and not take matters into their own hands.

No matter what our children’s ages or stages in life at the time of our divorces and long after our divorces, our decisions and interactions with our ex-spouses will mold our children’s personalities, outlooks on life, ability to engage in relationships, emotional stability and many other life areas. My children’s father and I decided early on that no matter what our “adult issues” were they would never be discussed in front of our children. No matter what our negative feelings were about one another, they would never be discussed in front of our children. And most importantly, we would never make a decision about our children by putting our wants and needs before those of the kids. This doesn’t sound too difficult but when you throw in money issues, child support issues, personality conflicts, a new dating partner, hurt feelings etc. it can become more of a challenge to put our children’s needs before our own. Yet to do this any other way would have most definitely caused long term emotional trauma for our children. As an adult and parent you must be able to make concessions and compromises even if you feel you are being wronged.

What does successful co-parenting look like in the long term? My children are now grown and emotionally stable young men that know they can come to both parents and spend time with both parents and our extended families without fear of punitive consequences or withholding of emotion or anger outbursts by one or the other parent. They have been able to celebrate their life milestones (graduations, birthday’s etc) with both parents present and both sets of extended family members present. They have been allowed to bond and form relationships with both of their new step-parents and not forced to make choices or hide these relationships.

Co-parenting works. The responsibility of co-parenting falls on both parents but a bulk of the responsibility falls on us moms and or primary caregivers as we are often in the driver’s seat due to the amount of extra time we have with our children. Co-parenting does not assure that our children will not suffer some of life’s traumas but they will not suffer because of intentional negative parenting choices. No one wins if our children suffer at our hands. If our children can’t trust us to do the right thing how will they ever be able to trust anyone?

It is time to advocate for the rights of both parents and to have a legal system that holds those parents unwilling or unable to put their children’s needs before their own accountable. Family law attorneys should know that by putting a paycheck before what is in the best interest of society’s children or not following their own ethical standards they are contributing to the alienation of parents and the long term negative emotional effects that alienation behaviors have on our children. Social Workers, counselors, therapists and psychologists have a responsibility to know what alienation of a parent looks like and assess and identify it early on to assist in eliminating the opportunity for the alienating parent to continue this destructive pattern of behavior.

As a parent who has successfully co-parented I would challenge all parents and advocates of children to take responsibility for their own actions, to advocate and send a message that alienating behaviors are not acceptable, and to advocate for system reform at all levels of family systems, family law and education. Our children are our the future and I am proud to say that I have contributed to our society in a positive way by being able to co-parent successfully with my children’s father, helping them to be happy, healthy and productive members of the communities in which they live.

[To read of other mothers' experiences sharing parenting with their ex-husbands or ex-boyfriends, click here. If you are a woman who shares parenting and would like to share your experience on our website and E-Newsletter, please tell us about it here.]