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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think "the kids will adapt" is a lie?

118 replies

Uncomfortabletruths · 16/07/2024 21:50

It feels like something we tell ourselves to make ourselves feel better.

Do kids really adapt easily post divorce?

OP posts:
Talkinpeace · 16/07/2024 22:37

My parents divorced in the 60's
it was a done deal that I only understood later.

As a teen I was INCREDIBLY angry with my mother
once I became a parent I realised how utterly impossible my father was.

He is now dead and I miss him
but I know that my mother was absolutely right FOR EVERYBODY
to leave him

Barnabyby · 16/07/2024 22:40

Uppity7 · 16/07/2024 22:10

The thing is, without the divorce then they would have to adapt to living in a household with parents who don't like each other. That's pretty horrible.

Often parents especially don't like each other post-divorce either, which can be very painful.
I remember growing up having to deal with each parent bad-mouthing the other. It wasn't pleasant.

As others have said, it depends how it's handled.

LGBirmingham · 16/07/2024 22:42

Of course they adapt but those adaptions might not be positive. Eg. Extreme people pleasing and suppression of your emotions as a way of making yourself more palatable to your absent parent. Or seeking out relationships with distant men as an adult.

Buttercupsandpoppys · 16/07/2024 22:46

Oh I also need to add that surprisingly issues in marriages even if not directly to do with the kids affects them in huge ways.

One of my best friends since childhood had an idyllic family. Mum, Dad 2 kids (boy and girl). Grandparents lived around the corner. Middle class home with a very successful family business. They went to disneyworld and skiing often. Mum and dad always seemed very loved up when I visited, cuddling on the sofa. They did things as a family often. Held bbqs etc.

When we were about 16 it came out the dad was having an affair with an employee for several years. Completely devastated all of them. The mum forgave the dad. However my friend completely changed from that day on. She suddenly started smoking when was always anti-smoker. She lost her virginity to a random older guy that she hardly knew. She was very ‘wholesome’ prior to this. She managed to scrap through exams and got a place at uni through clearance. At uni she was doing all sorts of dangerous things and seemed to have developed a hatred of men and a deep distrust. Also hated her dad despite the mum forgiving him.

We’re now in our thirties and she still hasn’t settled and only has casual sex and keeps men at a distance. She openly says the affair messed her up. Everything she believed was a lie from the one person she trusted more than anyone.

I’ve always found it interesting (as well as sad obvs) because the children aren’t really anything to do with an affair/sex love of parents. Plus the parents made up and are still together to this day. Yet it still affected her so.

Onabench · 16/07/2024 22:48

They have no choice and because they are child it is extremely difficult for them to understand their own difficulties and comprehend them. I hate it when people say "kids adapt so well". They aren't given a choice.

Uncomfortabletruths · 16/07/2024 22:48

I guess you mess them up whatever you do?

I agree it's about how parents respond, but sadly you can't control how the other parent acts. I can't stop him being toxic in the same house, so I certainly can't do it if we live in different houses.

I don't really understand couples who divorce well. If I got on well enough with him to divorce amicably - I would 100% stay.

OP posts:
Healthyalltheway · 16/07/2024 22:50

A negative toxic environment is not good for kids, be it a bad divorce or a bad marriage.

And, kids notice everything, even if don't rationally know what they are seeing or why they feel like something is wrong ( because they are too young), and they may not tell you until they are much older, or if ever.

lemonmeringueno3 · 16/07/2024 22:50

I don't think they adapt. I think they do a good job of pretending that they have. Unless the marriage was obviously and visibly abusive, and the children were aware of that, they would prefer their parents to stay together. At our school, in counselling sessions, children of all ages talk of having to pretend that they're happy with the new arrangement. On most indicators, children of divorced parents do worse.

I'm divorced by the way, four children. So I want to believe that they adapt but I don't.

Fairyliz · 16/07/2024 22:51

Haggisfish3 · 16/07/2024 21:54

I don’t think it’s a lie though. Kids do adapt, and will adapt most easily if they are secure in the knowledge they are loved and accepted by both parents.

But from a child’s point of view all that they see is that one of their parents didn’t love them enough to stay in the family unit.

Obviously I’m not talking about where there is abuse etc. However if one parent goes off with an affair partner or wants to ‘find themselves’ then the child sees it as they weren’t enough for that parent to stay.

StringTheory1 · 16/07/2024 22:51

Uncomfortabletruths · 16/07/2024 22:48

I guess you mess them up whatever you do?

I agree it's about how parents respond, but sadly you can't control how the other parent acts. I can't stop him being toxic in the same house, so I certainly can't do it if we live in different houses.

I don't really understand couples who divorce well. If I got on well enough with him to divorce amicably - I would 100% stay.

With respect, unless you’ve been in that position (as I have), you can’t know what you’d do. It’s all very well saying “if this then that” but you have no way of knowing.

ColinMyWifeBridgerton · 16/07/2024 22:56

I don't really understand couples who divorce well. If I got on well enough with him to divorce amicably - I would 100% stay.

I think that this is naive. A couple might hate each other so much that spending every day together is impossible, but be perfectly able to keep up the pretence of not hating each other for the 10 minutes a week you spend at handover. If you both love your children and genuinely want what is best for them, then why would you make the divorce difficult? The uglyness is over, the relationship and all it's unhappiness is done, you go your own ways and all you have in common are the wonderful children you both adore. Surely you can do that bit well, even if the relationship was awful.

StringTheory1 · 16/07/2024 22:56

My ex DH and I (and his new wife) get on incredibly well. We co-parent as a three, and provide loving homes for our two children who are adored and well-supported emotionally, financially and practically by 3 strong, happy, loving adults.

Both kids are incredibly happy, healthy, well-adjusted children with confidence and emotional resilience, good mental health, secure friendships, very happy at school, lots of hobbies, no health probs, well-rounded.

Screamingabdabz · 16/07/2024 22:58

A relative of mine was a TA for a number of years in a year 3 class. Year 3 is a crucial ‘seven year itch’ time for many couples and they split up. She witnessed this many times and she said without exception, the children were damaged in some way and never the same again. She said it was so sad to see normal kids lose a little bit of their light and some really dipped in their school work, just because of the choices of the adults in their life.

Uncomfortabletruths · 16/07/2024 23:03

That's the issue I guess.

The worse the husband, the worse the divorce. Which is both more of a reason and less of a reason to divorce him at the same time.

OP posts:
ColinMyWifeBridgerton · 16/07/2024 23:03

My parents stayed together and honestly it's had a really negative impact on my sibings and I. Three of us in our 30s, with not one single normal healthy loving relationship between us, ever, in our whole lives. We are all confused. We don't know what love is supposed to look like, and we wasted so many years looking for it in the wrong places because we believed that the sham of a relationship our parents showed us was the goal. I've ended up in a relationship exactly like theirs (worse, in fact): cold, no affection, constant jibes and taunts. My sisters have had a series of weird long distance relationships with emotionally unavailable men, and we're all in therapy.

ColinMyWifeBridgerton · 16/07/2024 23:04

Screamingabdabz · 16/07/2024 22:58

A relative of mine was a TA for a number of years in a year 3 class. Year 3 is a crucial ‘seven year itch’ time for many couples and they split up. She witnessed this many times and she said without exception, the children were damaged in some way and never the same again. She said it was so sad to see normal kids lose a little bit of their light and some really dipped in their school work, just because of the choices of the adults in their life.

And what does your judgemental relative think happens to children in unhappy homes?

Edit to say: that also makes no sense. Kids in year 3 are 7-8 years old, for it to be the seven year itch the parents would have to be conceiving pretty damn fast into their relationship....

Uncomfortabletruths · 16/07/2024 23:05

Screamingabdabz · 16/07/2024 22:58

A relative of mine was a TA for a number of years in a year 3 class. Year 3 is a crucial ‘seven year itch’ time for many couples and they split up. She witnessed this many times and she said without exception, the children were damaged in some way and never the same again. She said it was so sad to see normal kids lose a little bit of their light and some really dipped in their school work, just because of the choices of the adults in their life.

Fuck. That's so heart breaking.

OP posts:
Seaside1234 · 16/07/2024 23:06

So what do we do? I don't want to be with my husband any more, and the longer I stay with him the more of my money he's somehow entitled to, despite contributing almost nothing himself. I wouldn't want one of my kids to stay in this relationship. But at the same time it seems it would be best for them if I did? And then how does that work if you separate once they're adults? That they might suddenly perceive the whole of their childhood as a lie?

I wish I could magically make my marriage ok again, but I can't. And I don't know what to do for the best for my children, who matter more than I do.

Rebusa · 16/07/2024 23:07

Amazondeliverydriver · 16/07/2024 22:00

I don’t think they are ever fine. They will tell you they are, but they aren’t really. My parents married and divorced/ remarried 3 times each throughout my lifetime (so far!) and each time it was really, really awful despite their best effort to keep things ‘normal’. Even now though I would never admit this to either of them as I don’t want to upset them.
Kids may ‘adapt’, but don’t kid yourself that it’s not hugely damaging, particularly for teens.

So they both married 3 times EACH?! 🤯

Yes, I believe it’s more often damaging that not tbh. The extent of the damage varies though.

Magnificentkitteh · 16/07/2024 23:09

I have wondered this re moving house.. in the end I didn't do it as I know my children and it just felt too high risk. People have said to me she'd fall into line on other occasions that just haven't come true. She is ND which I didn't necessarily know at the time but my instincts said I wasn't sure she would adapt easily.

Uncomfortabletruths · 16/07/2024 23:11

Oh @Seaside1234 I wish I knew the answer. I wish I didn't spend every waking hour asking myself that question over and over again.

OP posts:
Notamum12345577 · 16/07/2024 23:11

Uncomfortabletruths · 16/07/2024 21:50

It feels like something we tell ourselves to make ourselves feel better.

Do kids really adapt easily post divorce?

I’ll be flammed for this I know. Kids do best in a 2 parent family. That is why you should make your spouse a priority (obviously not at the detriment of the kids though)

Seaside1234 · 16/07/2024 23:12

@Uncomfortabletruths virtual hugs. I don't think anyone can win here.

Gorgonemilezola · 16/07/2024 23:13

Think it depends very much on the parent's attitude.

StarDolphins · 16/07/2024 23:14

I was a child in a home where my parents pretended to be happy for me & my sister. I remember being young & knowing that certainly my mum wasn’t happy. They never fought (until much later on) but we weren’t shown a healthy relationship. We were all relieved when they eventually split & all thought it should’ve been years earlier.

As said by others, it depends how amicable the co parenting is, how young the children are at separation and how secure & loving their resident home is.

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