Meet the Other Phone. Protection built in.

Meet the Other Phone.
Protection built in.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

See all MNHQ comments on this thread

Ex's anger problems and impact on children

106 replies

mrsbingle · 25/09/2013 23:01

In many ways my ex is a very good ex. He pays child support, on the dot, every time, he takes huge interest in the dc and is reliable about pick ups and drop offs.

The children are 6 & 10, and spend 2 nights a week with him.

Last night I got a call from my dd holed up in a bedroom saying "Dad is going crazy, yelling and hitting." I said I'd pick her up and asked her to pass the phone to her dad, he was able to contain himself enough to say "OK" when I said I was going to pick her up.

When I got there she was at the door waiting, then the younger one came flying out, howling at the top of his lungs. (I had assumed he would be in bed asleep.) He climbed into the car and I told him to buckle up and close his door.

My ex stood there looking very grim but didn't say anything.

Took the kids home, calmed them down & put them to bed.

Later I got a text from ex saying he was sorry, he'd lost it and had hit them both and that he thinks it might be better for them with him out of their lives.

This has happened countless times before with the exception of the remorseful text.

I am unsure what to do. I have toyed with phoning police about his violence towards them, with doing nothing, with resigning myself to the fact that he's a lost cause and to get on with our lives without him, and with trying to talk sense into him.

I am trying to work out what will be the least damaging way forward for the children and I'm not sure that no contact is the answer. Surely this will cause terrible grief and issues of rejection?

His own father was an alcoholic who shut himself away and did not speak to anyone for years. My ex carries a lot of grief about that. His insight into his own behaviour, however, is nil. One day he'll be knee deep in remorse and self pity, the next he'll be blaming the children.

I would really appreciate some advice. Thank you for reading this.

OP posts:
mrsbingle · 29/09/2013 16:57

No he hasn't paid for childcare yet.

OP posts:
Lweji · 29/09/2013 17:04

I said no, that we were not part of the solution to his anger problems any more than we were the cause of them.

Good for you.

Jux · 29/09/2013 19:17

Yes, good response.

I wouldn't advocate separate visits at this stage. The norm over here is one evening a week and every other w/e, so in your place - if you trust him with them - then I would start with one evening a week at most for a couple of hours and work up from there depending entirely on how he behaves. It is safer for the children to go together at present.

Retroformica · 29/09/2013 19:52

Totally agree 100% with keeping the kids safe but wanted to ask if there was any way you could do some swapping of childcare to enable you to train for the half marathon. Working through loss and stress with excersise is very effective. A real life line mentally. Is there anyway you could have friends kids for 1x 2hours each week and she could return the favour so you could squeeze in a long run. I think if you also managed a couple of short lunchtime runs on top of one weekly long run, the half would be doable.

SolidGoldBrass · 29/09/2013 20:37

Remember that what he wants is irrelevant. His wishes, needs and feelings do not matter. Abusive people forfeit the right to consideration and drop to lowest priority when it comes to sorting out the family. Don't waste a second of time or a penny of money on 'family therapy' - the person with the problem is him and no remotedly competent therapist will see you as a couple or a family when the problem is the abusive man who has been rightly thrown out of the family set up.

mrsbingle · 29/09/2013 21:34

Retroformica Thanks for the suggestion and also for your understanding.
My mental health has been very fragile in the past and I feel overwhelmed by the prospect of never getting a break.

I don't have lunch breaks, I work through them so I can get the dc from school.

At this stage I really don't know what to do, but during the next week I will have some time to think it over.

SGB I agree with what you say about the family therapy. We won't be doing that.

OP posts:
New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread