Gay40 - Hmmm so you think it's fine then that a man whose wife leaves him for another man, should not only lose the title of husband but also father? To some people, mainly women, father figures can be picked up and discarded whenever they feel like it. Not only do these men have to get over the grief of losing their marriage, more often than not also their home, they also have to live with EOW contact knowing a complete stranger who is happy to conduct an affair and is perhaps not the sort of person they want as a father figure is now raising there child. Then to cap it all off they get a bill for child maintenance, which is entirely right so long as it is genuinely going towards the children and not say, couples holidays and expensive presents to the new partner, yet all decisions on education etc are made at the maternal home.
Last time i checked most couples choose to raise a family together, why the hell that has to stop because you want to divorce I do not know.
Just because my babies came out of my vagina doesnt mean my husband is any less their parent as I am. And seeing how so many on MN get their knickers in a twist over the whole 'birth mother' debate, maybe we can all agree that there is only one mother and only one father. The ones who provided the sperm or egg, or the ones who have legally adopted the child.
It drives me flipping mad when I hear my DSS's stepfather, calling DSS, "son," and trying to be daddy in front of my husband. How my DH actually doesn't lose it I don't know.
Thankfully for DH, DSS can't stand his stepdad, hates him in fact. He has to pretend to like him and call him dad for his mum's sake. Perhaps the only thing that DH gets to have a say in, is that his son keeps his surname. The words, 'over my dead body' were uttered and it has never been brought up since.
I don't care how difficult it is to explain to your children, but there has to be some respect for the parents. Fair enough if daddy or mummy is happy to share the title with someone else, but if they are not then you have to respect that.