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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

WWYD - my daughter wants to live with me all the time - exDH wants 50/50

205 replies

Tigerbear · 19/12/2017 10:55

My daughter is 6, and her dad and I separated when she was one. We agreed then - and thought it was the best way - to have shared custody, where she's with me half the week, him half the week.
This has worked relatively well until recently. For the past 2-3 months, she's been extremely upset at the prospect of going back to her dad's, to the point of being distraught. She's said on many occasions that she no longer wants to continue living in two houses and that it's upsetting for her. When asked what she would like to happen, she first says that she wants us all to live together, and when I explain that that's not going to happen, she says she just wants to live with me and that she'd just visit daddy.

Several key things have happened to change the dynamic since exDH and I split: he met someone else, she has a daughter the same age as my DD (they're in the same class at school too), he moved in with her, and they then had a baby who is a year old. Her DD is quite a strong character, and although my DD loves her and they call each other sisters, I know my DD sometimes feels anxious by the other girl.
DD has also expressed jealousy of the new baby.

When asked why she wants to stay with me more, she says because there are 5 people at daddy's house, and only two of us at mine. She is quite sensitive, likes her own space and a certain calmness, and she obviously doesn't get that at her dad's (all three of the children share a room there, in a small flat), and she doesn't get any one to one time with her dad.

ExDH doesn't see that there's an issue - he says she's fine when she's actually at their house, and that it's more the anxiety/the prospect of missing me that's the issue, and that we just need to find a way of managing DD's anxiety and sympathising that it's hard living between two houses.
He brings up petty things like saying of course she prefers being at mine as you give her sweets and chocolate and let her watch more TV, which we don't do at ours (he made a big point of bringing this up during a meeting we had with teachers recently, trying to make himself look like the better parent).

DD was distraught the other day, begging me to ask exDH if she could live at mine. What do I do, when he sees no problem? He's saying she doesn't really understand what she wants at such a young age - his analogy: well, she says she wants to eat loads of biscuits, but we don't let her just go ahead with it, we can't change everything just because she wants to, it's disruptive for everyone.

The thing about exDH is that he's subtly controlling, smug, arrogant, pretty much despised at his work because of this (I found out from a friend who worked with him that a young trainee had left because of him gas lighting her). He has a way of making people feel like they're in the wrong, and I don't know how to fight it.
His solution is that we need to take DD to see a child psychologist to find out what's wrong.
All I see is my little DD totally crushed these days - she's always been such a joyful and happy child, and the light has gone from her eyes, she's fretful, always says she feels ill, doesn't want to do anything.

Sorry for the long post. Any suggestions much appreciated.

OP posts:
Weezol · 11/01/2018 17:50

Bert the school aren't going to 'sort this out'. If you rtft, the child has been upset at school, so the school are seeing both parents to discuss their child's wellbeing as is affecting the child's education and is disrupting the learning of others.

WitchesHatRim · 11/01/2018 17:53

50/50 is only equitable to parents - it is not whats best for the children at all - no stability, no permanent place, always adrift never at "home home" no wonder we have such high mental health issues

It can work very well.

Sweeping unfounded generalisations help no one

Yvest · 11/01/2018 18:18

50/50 is only equitable to parents - it is not whats best for the children at all - no stability, no permanent place, always adrift never at "home home" no wonder we have such high mental health issues

I couldn’t agree more.

tigerbear · 11/01/2018 19:05

Bert - I didn't ask the school to mediate, they offered, as they also want it on record that it's affecting her schooling.
I am of course hugely appreciative and grateful of them offering to do so.

OP posts:
Ellie56 · 11/01/2018 21:49

MrsBertBibby it becomes the school's business when what's happening at home starts impacting on learning, which it obviously is.

It isn't about sorting parents' shit out. It's about sorting out the problems of a very unhappy little girl, so that she can learn and make the progress she should be doing, which is what the school is responsible for.

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