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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to not let the father of my child take her abroad once a month?

329 replies

tuesdayschild17 · 17/11/2020 04:30

My daughter was unplanned with a partner who I had not been seeing for long. When I found out about her, I informed him and gave him the option to walk away. We did not stay seeing each other romantically after this time.

He chose to be involved in her life and has his name on her birth certificate (allowing him joint parental responsibility). She is nearly 4 now and he has seen her throughout this time with various levels of consistency. His family live abroad and also wish to be involved. I have done everything I can so far to facilitate contact, allowing them to stay in our house and look after her for weekends occasionally and letting her go on holiday to their country with and without me.

However, there have been large gaps in between him/them seeing her where he has been bad with contact. He has either been struggling with addiction issues or just unwilling to be around during these times. I have tried to still remain understanding, believing that it would be best for my daughter to maintain a relationship with him. Unfortunately, after she spent a week away from me in the Summer with his family abroad, I started to reconsider this. Her behaviour was really unsettled when she got back. She suddenly threw more and more tantrums and wouldn't eat properly. The nursery separately commented on a big change in her behaviour and asked if she was unhappy. I felt that this was a result of the change in circumstances and being away from her home at such a young age. Obviously the typical 'we don't have to raise her, so we can say yes to everything' came into play too.

Initially, I was raising her with substantial help from my own mother in terms of costs/childcare. However, since the beginning of this year, I have been doing it solo as a student and with a part-time income. Her father has a well-paid full-time job. Prior to September, I had never asked him for financial support as I didn't want to scare him away from a relationship with her. However, the financial strain of raising her single meant that in September, I asked him to begin contributing. We are struggling to come to an agreement.

As part of his side of the bargain, he wants me to agree to her travelling abroad once a month for a weekend to stay with his family. I am unwilling to do this because I feel it would be really unsettling for my daughter and cause more problems with her behaviour. I have agreed to give him access every other Sunday though, (which is the most regular he wants), as he does have a residence that he's renting and living in near where we live. AIBU to say that I will not agree to her travelling abroad and being away from me overnight, once a month while she is so young? (travel time would be around 5/6hrs each way). He Is threatening me with court, do you think a court would force me to allow this?

Any advice appreciated and sorry for the lengthy post.

OP posts:
Sunshineandocean · 23/11/2020 02:51

Not sure how mediation works In the UK but surely there are free ones? No? That you can get on the waiting list for? Although not legally binding so 🤷‍♀️

PyongyangKipperbang · 23/11/2020 03:18

I had to send a reply to my ex's solicitor when they wrote threatening me with court for regular access.
I said that I was surprised to be threatened with court for access that I had actively encouraged but he had never been arsed about, but that if thats what he wanted to do I would be happy to attend court with my evidence and would abide by the judges decision. Funnily enough, I never heard anything more, this was 15 years ago......

MotherExtraordinaire · 23/11/2020 03:33

Maintenance and contact are separate issues and a court won't care about this.

Secondly, a court would at 4 yoa award overnight contact. Given the fact that lo isn't at school, going once a month wouldn't be disruptive to education and monthly could easily transfer to each half term school holiday. This would negate the length of travel argument as is effectively holiday travel, that you've already consented to and precedent set.

In the same way a court could give the resident parent the right to travel for 28 days without the nrp's explicit consent, this can also be tge other way around. And given the courts emphasis on maintaining familial relationships, this would not seem unreasonable.

The poor behaviour on return, would be viewed as your issue @tuesdayschild17. That you need to manage your child's behaviour and not restrict contact.

Likelihood is that as long as the ex can show his life is in the UK and not a flight risk in terms of not returning with lo, likelihood is he'd get court agreement, be that 6 times a year for half terms or more frequently.

The maintenance issue is best resolved via cms.

ScabbyHorse · 30/11/2020 18:50

How's it going @tuesdayschild17 ?

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