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Not sure I can cope. Please Read

481 replies

RegrettableDisaster · 08/10/2024 18:38

I don't know how all this will come across.
Everything feels like a huge mess.
I may word this oddly as I don't want to give away details of genders etc because both my DH and Stepchild spend a huge amount of time online and you just never know. So some things have been changed or worded weirdly.
I have a 14 year old trans stepchild. They came to live with me and their Dad (my DH) when they were 12, after multiple "suicide attempts" whilst still living with the Mother. They'd been out of school for a year. The Mother was at her wits end and making everything worse. She was emotionally abusive or emotionally absent. Controlling. Imposed restrictive eating to keep child looking slim. Criticised child's friends. Drank far too much, far too regularly. Introduced many men to her children and openly used them for her own gain - e.g getting them to pay for holidays, equipment she wanted, or days out. So all the stepchildren were regularly exposed to what can only be described as a scattershot, dismal lifestyle where people are commodities.
Before SC came here, DH helped for one extra day a week on top of his access arrangements but it wasn't enough.
He shied away from being too available due to his ex wife being controlling and taking advantage. (really unusal requests like "lend me your car for work" "stay in my house for a week to look after me and the children because I'm too ill with flu"
Not to mention how she would communicate with me. She often tried to convince me that DH tried to get her back when DH and I got together. That he preferred skinny women. All sorts of weird stuff.
So in short, DH kept her at arms length because she regularly overstepped boundaries and exaggerated facts. It was always difficult to get a clear picture if how the kids were, and DH based a lot of their wellbeing on how they presented during his time with them.
Dhring this time, there was support from CAMHS for SC.
A tutor for education.
SC refused to engage with tutor, or CAMHS most of the time.
The Mother was manipulative with CAMHS workers (even started dating one of them who was engaged with my Stepchild, who subsequently lost their job)
The suicide attempts just seemed like they weren't real. Like they were ways to get attention or a need met, but not real.
We were told things like "child has slashed his neck 21 times" but there were tiny grazes not even as severe as a kitten scratch. Or things like "Child has drunk bleach - awaiting ambulance" and it would transpire he had swallowed half a capful and so wasn't even taken to hospital. As it mostly came from the Mother it was hard to know what was real, and she never let DH see any paperwork or anything. The final time it happened, the Mother text DH from hospital, saying SC was going to try again as soon as they left, and sounded very checked out of trying to help anymore, so DH rang hospital and asked for my SC to not be released from care. They agreed for a 2 night stay. The Mother was angry we had intervened. I'm not sure what her goal was.
During this hospital stay, SC regularly updated their WhatsApp status to hint that they had tried to KTS.
SC was a complete mess when they came to live with us. Had been removed by the police for attempting to hurt the Mother and placed with us, and it was requested by SS, that SC remain here, and as SC wanted to, it was sorted.
SC slept on the sofa in the living room for 6 months because there wasn't a bedroom available. SC declared the living room was their bedroom and nobody was to enter after 7.30pm as they wanted to call friends and have privacy, whuch was awkward as the living room is a walk through to the kitchen from the stairs. It sucked because there were times when SC would "have a meltdown" and then "need" everyone to stay out of the living room at odd times, especially during school breaks, so basically everyone started living in their rooms. I get how awful it was for SC to not have a bedroom. So, when it became obvious it was going to be permanent, DH and I took the living room and we swapped around my kids so Stepchild could have a bedroom. We slept downstairs for 9 more months. At least it meant we could allow unrestricted access at sensible hours and could encourage family time once more.
Still, everything had to be different - no more razors or bleach in the house. (to prevent self harm) No more pencil sharpeners. (to prevent self harm) Locked up medication. (to prevent overdose) No more spray deodorant or air fresheners. (to prevent substance abuse) No lighters for candles. (to prevent setting fires in the bedroom) Everything mentioned in brackets they had been doing at Mother's.
They still manahed to self harm a bunch, found ways - stolen scissors from my kids who tried to hide them, finding razors hidden at the back of cupboards and taking blades from them (that was fun when I went to shave my legs one evening)
Eventually we managed to find everything.
Then DH let them have their own PayPal account and they ordered blades from Ebay.
CAMHS have barely helped/been effective therapeutically.
During this time, my mother died, my 15 year old couldn't cope with all the masses of change, so went to live with their Dad. I cannot express how painful it is.

My DH, me, and my stepchild now live with my other three children. I have an 18 year old, a 14 year old and a 15 year old. (my now 16 year old is enjoying living with their Dad, has been there a year and I am happy they are okay)
But I'm finding this all very difficult now, 2 years on.
Believe me when I say I've been really supportive. I took courses in mental health first aid and mental health in teens to make sure I was at my best to cope.
I helped with communication with the Mother to arrange access. I supervised it at stepchilds request. Invited her into my home, despite her saying our house is disgusting/too small/a weird colour/looks like a hospital!
I ran to the rescue when things went wrong during what eventually led to unsupervised visits at the Mother's house, an hour away.
I have provided an ear, a shoulder, comfort, comfort food, learned all their favourite things and spent time with them. I have absolutely made them a part of the household as if they always lived here.
I am here all the time. Like I'm always home, unless I'm running family errands. DH works part time self employed during the evenings, about four or five evenings a week, has two or three days a week out of the house all afternoon/day/early evening seeing his other two children (same mother as his child who lives with us)
DH also sees friends, on and off, not with regularity but on average once a month.
My stepchild recently accused their mother of sexual abuse during their early years, and there was a resulting police investigation. Stepchild had a formal interview and so did the Mother. Nothing came of it. Stepchild now says they are worried they imagined it.
But now, their siblings (10 and 11) don't want to see my stepchild, because their Mother told them their sibling tried to ruin her life. She has also driven a wedge between me and them, meaning both the younger ones have refused to see me, my children, or their siblings since February this year. They won't visit us at our house, which is why DH spends so much more time out of the house, taking them out.
I have started to feel resentful of this situation and the fact it isn't improving.
I keep finding things online that stepchild posts that put them at risk/make them vulnerable. E.G they boasts openly about their self harm. They even posted a photo of fresh cuts on YouTube once, calling them "fresh babies". They made a post a couple months ago that they regularly "huff" and have done since they were 10, and everyone thinks they are just a funny, chill person when they are actually Hugh all the time.
They ordered a dildo online and then graphically described to my child about trying it out and training their (biological) genitalia to "take it" even talking about bleeding. My child told me where it was hidden and I threw it out. Stepchild even confronted my child about where it had gone, once discovered it was missing, and my child confessed they had told me about it and it was thrown away for stepchilds own safety and explained the level of appropriateness for a 14 year old and sex toys.
Once when stepchild came home angrily and upset from a visit with their Mother because she'd mentioned weight, stepchild grabbed a bunch of antidepressants and swallowed them, then got onto a group chat and told the group chat, "Goodbye" upsetting a tonne of teenagers online, including one of my children (the same one above) who was part of the chat, who rushed to tell me (as I was cooking dinner, unaware there had even been an issue)
My child has disclosed to me that SC engages in sex role plays online.
I have seen ads that are shown on my phone, related to content viewed on our IP address, that tell me SC reads BDSM sex stories. This was going on for months until I got sick of seeing the ads as I couldn't block them, so I had to ask all the children. SC confessed it was them. And admonished me for bringing it up.
These issues have tipped it over the edge for me. I feel like my children are being exposed to all this and it isn't fair.
My stepchild goes to a 3 hour per day alternative provision, a bit like school, but only a handful of kids, and very low pressure. They regularly don't bother with work and it almost seems like when they are pushed, they have a big explosion.
They recently told a staff member they tried to hang himself whilst staying overnight with their (very much loved) Nan. They then text DH and told him, hoping to prevent school from telling us I think. School have had to report it, of course. So I expect to hear from professionals once more.
I have a huge issue with this act because I discovered my friend dead from hanging when I was 15 and it's haunted me, despite therapy multiple times.
I am at a loss.
I feel for the child very much. I also feel for my own children.
I also dread stepchild being around. They aren't great at socialising- they tends to dominated a room and make everything about themself, to the point all of my children now appear to avoid spending time around SC, because they can't have a conversation with DH or me without SC interjecting. SC also doesn't seem capable of just "hanging out" - like, SC NEEDS attention.... can't just sit in a room, be chill, watch a bit of TV with the family or scroll through phone stuff and occasionally show each other or whatever - it has to be this like, SHOW, or has to have constant interaction like play a game with an adult for hours, or have an adult listen to them talk about themself. Not an exchange. A monologue.
They are also very selfish. One of my children (15) has shown relentless friendship and support, cooks for SC, lends SC money, listens to SC vent, gives SC advice, and tells us when SC might be unsafe. When my child recently had a friend over, they told SC that they would like said friend as they had lots in common. SC joked that they'd steal adi friend from my child. My childs response was that said friend is very loyal. SC then made a bracelet for this friend, and talked about all the topics SC knew the friend liked (they are autistic so have specific tastes) and said they were their favourites too. SC then kept entering my child's room with more gifts for the friend, and then refused to leave and it made my child feel left out, as SC did the whole domineering thing. I asked SC to give them space, as friend was here for a hangout with DC, and SCs response was "I am very very lonely and feel sad all by myself, it isn't my fault if friend likes me better" and then text DC and said "told you I'd steal friend" My child is now disengaging because it all became too much. DC still chats and hangs out with SC but it is much less, and DC doesn't engage with the venting. DC even approached DH and warned him he'd probably have to deal with more issues with SC, due to the lack of willingness to support as much on my DC part going forwards.
How awful.
DH is basically useless. Very good at feeling sorry for my SC. And himself. Ironically, he thinks everything I've told him about that I've seen online is SC fabricating, just saying it all. But 100% believes everything SC tells him IRL.
I feel like this is really affecting my marriage. I'm in therapy now and I'm going to talk to her about it but I really just need to hear that I'm not a total c**t, for feeling this way.

OP posts:
lovemetomybones · 09/10/2024 11:11

I think moving house is a huge mistake also. It will no longer be your home, you will lose stability and autonomy over the situation. It might mean you are stuck with no alternatives, especially with your employment status. I would definitely make the moves to change that so you have the practical ability to be independent.

Finally moving will not solve the issues at hand, it's just moving them to a slightly better location.

grannypants22 · 09/10/2024 11:28

@funinthesun19 from what she has said I think she does want to stay in the marriage, she doesn't want to deal with the SC. Which is totally understandable. If the SC disappeared would she still want to split up with her dh? No. So the kid is the issue and the reason for the breakdown of the whole family unit.

I'm genuinely wondering what you all think will happen if the dh does move out with the SC. Sure it won't be the OPs problem anymore but the kid will still be messed up and potentially dangerous to himself and others.

Nobody has offered much practical advice on helping the SC. It's all just LTB which I understand from the POV of the other children, they are definitely suffering and it isn't fair. But what happens once they are gone?

YellowRoom · 09/10/2024 11:31

Please contact Womens Aid. Your DH is manipulative, controlling, jealous, he doesn't contribute financially and he's letting his child abuse your DC. You are isolated from friends and don't have a job - you are very vulnerable. I'm flabbergasted that you think him leaving will be bad for your children.

WearyAuldWumman · 09/10/2024 11:32

I'll just add this: 14 yr old children can be very dangerous. I've seen this kind of situation through my former work, as a middle manager in a secondary school.

The poor soul who is eventually going to be hurt by the OP's SC is not necessarily a family member.

I've lost count of the number of times that one of my colleagues or I received physical abuse because a troubled child lashed out at one of as in the safe space of school. Such children can also be very manipulative.

The teenager who ended my pregnancy by punching me in the stomach managed to convince SACRO (organisation aimed at stopping troubled people from becoming criminals) that I had "got in the way". I hadn't.

His defence was that he was the victim of a homophobic assault. What I saw was another boy running away screaming and trying not to be beaten up by the boy who claimed to be the victim.

He'd chased after and assaulted another boy, came into my room, gleefully punched me in the stomach [I wasn't visibly pregnant] and then did the same to the two male colleagues who came into my room. He was in full control of his actions. I later found out that the reason that he stopped was that another colleague - a former police officer - had grabbed his arm and whispered in his ear "Try that with me and you're through that effing wall."

Years later, the now adult assailant was boasting of the time he'd punched Mrs Weary in the stomach. (Apparently, you get street points for injuring a school middle manager. Who knew?)

I realised later that as an adult male, he managed to convince younger people who were then my pupils that he had snapped because I had been "homophobic" towards him. [This actually caused me trouble with another pupil further down the line. It was a while before I realised that the adult male former pupil was maligning me in order to cover up for his own behaviour.] I didn't even know him. I was a middle manager, but he wasn't in any of my classes. All I did was to yell at him to stop, and to try to keep my stomach away from him.

He's now working as a beauty and massage therapist and customer relations manager in a city further north. (I've read his glowing reviews. I Googled after I heard that he was back in town and boasting about hurting me.) I wouldn't trust this sociopath with a guinea pig.

It's possible that the OP's SC can still be helped. SC and DH need to be out of the house. The OP's children don't need to suffer any more collateral damage.

WearyAuldWumman · 09/10/2024 11:34

grannypants22 · 09/10/2024 11:28

@funinthesun19 from what she has said I think she does want to stay in the marriage, she doesn't want to deal with the SC. Which is totally understandable. If the SC disappeared would she still want to split up with her dh? No. So the kid is the issue and the reason for the breakdown of the whole family unit.

I'm genuinely wondering what you all think will happen if the dh does move out with the SC. Sure it won't be the OPs problem anymore but the kid will still be messed up and potentially dangerous to himself and others.

Nobody has offered much practical advice on helping the SC. It's all just LTB which I understand from the POV of the other children, they are definitely suffering and it isn't fair. But what happens once they are gone?

Once they're gone, DH and his ex have to seek the help that the SC needs.

OnaBegonia · 09/10/2024 11:37

Sorry to be harsh, but if I knew you I'd be reporting to SS, your DC are at severe risk from this predatory damaged teenager, you're trying to minimise it to avoid asking your useless DH to leave.
He brings nothing to the table and your kids are being exposed to horrible abuse, put your kids before this waster of a man and his dangerous son.

potplantsinparadise · 09/10/2024 11:45

@grannypants22 What happens when the DH & SC leave is that the OP's own children will finally be away from a predatory abusive teenage, in a safe(r) environment, and will able to receive the help they desperately need to recover from two years of living in a hostile and dangerous environment at such a young age.

And - whatever happens to the SC is DH's responsibility.

As another poster said earlier, OP has absolutely set her own children on fire to keep SC warm. Staying in this marriage will only prolong the flames.

BlackShuck3 · 09/10/2024 12:00

SC actually needs their dad to step up and to focus on them
Agree but the dad doesn't want the hassle, he's hoping he can manipulate other people into doing it for him.

ahemfem · 09/10/2024 12:01

grannypants22 · 09/10/2024 11:28

@funinthesun19 from what she has said I think she does want to stay in the marriage, she doesn't want to deal with the SC. Which is totally understandable. If the SC disappeared would she still want to split up with her dh? No. So the kid is the issue and the reason for the breakdown of the whole family unit.

I'm genuinely wondering what you all think will happen if the dh does move out with the SC. Sure it won't be the OPs problem anymore but the kid will still be messed up and potentially dangerous to himself and others.

Nobody has offered much practical advice on helping the SC. It's all just LTB which I understand from the POV of the other children, they are definitely suffering and it isn't fair. But what happens once they are gone?

Not OP's issue

excelledyourself · 09/10/2024 12:03

WearyAuldWumman · 09/10/2024 11:32

I'll just add this: 14 yr old children can be very dangerous. I've seen this kind of situation through my former work, as a middle manager in a secondary school.

The poor soul who is eventually going to be hurt by the OP's SC is not necessarily a family member.

I've lost count of the number of times that one of my colleagues or I received physical abuse because a troubled child lashed out at one of as in the safe space of school. Such children can also be very manipulative.

The teenager who ended my pregnancy by punching me in the stomach managed to convince SACRO (organisation aimed at stopping troubled people from becoming criminals) that I had "got in the way". I hadn't.

His defence was that he was the victim of a homophobic assault. What I saw was another boy running away screaming and trying not to be beaten up by the boy who claimed to be the victim.

He'd chased after and assaulted another boy, came into my room, gleefully punched me in the stomach [I wasn't visibly pregnant] and then did the same to the two male colleagues who came into my room. He was in full control of his actions. I later found out that the reason that he stopped was that another colleague - a former police officer - had grabbed his arm and whispered in his ear "Try that with me and you're through that effing wall."

Years later, the now adult assailant was boasting of the time he'd punched Mrs Weary in the stomach. (Apparently, you get street points for injuring a school middle manager. Who knew?)

I realised later that as an adult male, he managed to convince younger people who were then my pupils that he had snapped because I had been "homophobic" towards him. [This actually caused me trouble with another pupil further down the line. It was a while before I realised that the adult male former pupil was maligning me in order to cover up for his own behaviour.] I didn't even know him. I was a middle manager, but he wasn't in any of my classes. All I did was to yell at him to stop, and to try to keep my stomach away from him.

He's now working as a beauty and massage therapist and customer relations manager in a city further north. (I've read his glowing reviews. I Googled after I heard that he was back in town and boasting about hurting me.) I wouldn't trust this sociopath with a guinea pig.

It's possible that the OP's SC can still be helped. SC and DH need to be out of the house. The OP's children don't need to suffer any more collateral damage.

I'm so sorry this happened to you. What an awful life changing experience.

Katbum · 09/10/2024 12:06

ahemfem · 09/10/2024 12:01

Not OP's issue

And the reality is nothing will happen. SC will either grow out of it naturally or get worse and have life long problems that blight their life and the lives of their loved ones. There does come a point where people can not be helped. I don’t think that point happens while your child is still a child, but this isn’t OP’s child. SC’s actual parents are doing fuck all.

TheKeatingFive · 09/10/2024 12:07

Nobody has offered much practical advice on helping the SC. It's all just LTB which I understand from the POV of the other children, they are definitely suffering and it isn't fair. But what happens once they are gone?

But that's not the OP's job or responsibility. The child needs professional help.

TomatoSandwiches · 09/10/2024 12:25

@grannypants22

This child the SC is too damaged for anyone here or at home to help.
They sound like they need intensive treatment in an institution or away from home with onsite medical professionals.

The longer the child stays the longer they will damage the ops biological children, they have already swxually assaulted one of them.

This is not tenable, the child and the useless husband need to leave.

MostlyHappyMummy · 09/10/2024 12:27

Always sad to read about situations like this but ultimately they just continue because women are desperate to keep a man regardless of any impact on them or their children.
it's very difficult to understand if you don't have the same mindset as these women and as we can see from threads on mumsnet there are many many women who behave this way.
you can only hope that they see sense one day and their children can recover from the harm caused.

TryingToBeLogical · 09/10/2024 12:49

Another previous poster touched on this, but it’s worth highlighting more strongly. One of your children moved out, because the situation was so damaging to them. However, your husband finds it unacceptable that your step child would move out? This sounds quite hypocritical.

AliasGrace47 · 09/10/2024 13:47

Your SC child is manipulative & the dildo incident is unforgivable. But I still have a lot of sympathy bc I suspect there has been horrific abuse in their past, such early damage an intensive response is needed. And their father did not care enough to do anything. That must cause them great pain.
grannypants, they're not a 'problem child', they're a victim of severe abuse & neglect, let down by everyone apart from OP. DH is a problem husband. He's dismissive of Op's concerns, doing absolutely nothing to protect hos son, & what about the other children? He's oblivious to the effect on his wife & children.
If the problems were all DH's ex's fault, OP wouldn't be in this situation. A huge part is down to her husband. The SC's issues are inextricably linked to husband. And yes, I, & I bet many others on this thread, would say the same if DH were the bio dad of Op's kids.

CostelloJones · 09/10/2024 13:52

how are SCs biological siblings? Surely if SC is so damaged by their mother these young children are also not safe?

sunflowersngunpowdr · 09/10/2024 14:18

Sit your kids down - apologise profusely for putting them through this nightmare and then file for a divorce. You can't allow them to be around this.

Heronwatcher · 09/10/2024 14:23

Nobody has offered much practical advice on helping the SC. It's all just LTB which I understand from the POV of the other children, they are definitely suffering and it isn't fair. But what happens once they are gone?

It will force the dad to do what he should have done years ago and take responsibility for his child’s actions.

I agree that the SC needs specialist help and to be away from a situation where they can get their kicks out of shocking/ scandalising others. They may also need sectioning under the mental health act. They may find that in a calmer environment with proper support from a parent focussed on them, rather than a step parent who is worried sick about their own kids things improve naturally. But again, the OP has tried, it’s not working so the dad needs to step up and everyone else needs to be safe in the meantime.

andIsaid · 09/10/2024 14:26

The step child has a father, mother, grandmother, step mother, and step siblings who, in some way shape or form, step up.

The OPs dc?

Nobody.

CharlotteLucas3 · 09/10/2024 15:15

This is truly awful to read OP. You seriously need to grow a backbone and put your children first. It sounds like your saviour complex has warped your sense of priorities.

BriannasBananaBread · 09/10/2024 15:26

I'm only halfway through the thread but OP these points jump out.

Does DWP know you're married with a DH living with you? From what you say about him not contributing much and you being on benefits, it sounds possibly not. I'm not wanting to derail the thread with any kind of moral discussion about it. If you're committing benefit fraud that's serious OP, you could be prosecuted. Where would that leave your DC then? I hope the DWP do know about your marriage and living circumstances so this isn't an issue, but if they don't then get legal advice ASAP because flagging it up to them yourself if you've done fraud (by telling them about your marriage now, at this late stage) maybe isn't in your best interests.

I really wish you hadn't married him. You don't understand how marriage works financially. You keep talking about "your" house, that DH moved into, and how he can move out to live at his mum's. His mum has no obligation to house him, she can refuse to have either DH or SC there. As you're married, your home isn't "your" home any more, it's the marital home. This means DH has a legal right to live there, you can't change the locks or stop him entering, unless you've had police involved for domestic abuse then you can get those rules changed. If there's no savings or pensions to be used to even things out, if the house is the only asset, it'll have to either be sold and the proceeds divided between you and DH, or one of you who remains there has to buy the other one out for their half. It's not "your house" any more OP, the day you married him you gave him co-ownership of it automatically.

Your "D"H isn't, so I'm not going to call him that any more. He's a jealous feckless cocklodger. You mentioned having previously experienced coercive control - no OP, you're currently experiencing coercive control with your current H. You're worried about asking him to move out because you know he won't like it and will become jealous. You can't even see how he's used SC to control you and isolate you and keep you trapped home constantly. As well as the basic fact of using you to do his parenting for him. You're worried about ending the relationship because you have no peer support due to this isolation. Without him and SC in your life you'd have friends and a better relationship with your DC.

He's no role model and no loss. Your DC are learning to tolerate things they shouldn't have to tolerate. They're learning to take responsibility for things that aren't their responsibility. They're looking at their mother being used and having no life and that's getting filed under "normality" in their brains when it shouldn't be, because it isn't normal or ok. That type of upbringing leaves a person open to easily becoming involved in abusive relationships as an adult because they basically don't know right from wrong, so when they encounter wrong they don't run away from it, they engage with it and try to fix it. Which is exactly what you're doing with H/SC. You want this type of future for your DC? Because it's what you're training them up for.

It gives me chills that you didn't realize the dildo talk was sexual abuse from SC to your DC. If someone sexually abused my DC they wouldn't be in my home one second longer after I found out. What you should do is phone social services and say SC can no longer stay with you due to this, with immediate effect. Literally turf SC out onto the street. That's how you protect your DC. SS and H can worry about what to do with SC, SC isn't your responsibility. It gives me further chills that not only is SC still in your home after committing sexual abuse verbally towards your DC, but they actually have a bedroom upstairs along with all your DC while you and H sleep downstairs in the living room. Your DC are at so much more risk due to this.

In summary, to protect your DC, SC should leave your home today and not return. Call police on them if they kick off and tell police what they've done, it helps them to get help if SS are getting reports from police too saying intervention is needed. Your relationship with H isn't a good one and is likely to deteriorate further once you stop providing all the free services he's come to expect, like being a 1-2-1 support worker 24/7 for SC. As things start to fall apart you're going to see how much more controlling he can be. Get help from Women's Aid. Get a divorce solicitor, start getting your ducks in a row with financial paperwork. Accept the house is not all yours and will probably need to be sold so you can split proceeds. Forget about this planned new house move to the middle of nowhere (further isolation of you by H, OP) and look for what you can afford alone for you and DC, probably a flat or small terrace.

Purplebunnie · 09/10/2024 15:53

@BriannasBananaBread

You have highlighted something I had been mulling over. The sexual abuse of OP's DC by the SC - I just wasn't sure if this was what it should be called

I've also mulled over but am not sure about ages etc if OPs own DC would be at risk of Social Services intervening and removing them but I have no experience and am probably wrong. Maybe this is leverage needed to get SC the support they need that SS have failed to provide and get SC out of the house - that OP's children are at risk

Edited to add - hope I've explained this properly

ahemfem · 09/10/2024 16:19

Purplebunnie · 09/10/2024 15:53

@BriannasBananaBread

You have highlighted something I had been mulling over. The sexual abuse of OP's DC by the SC - I just wasn't sure if this was what it should be called

I've also mulled over but am not sure about ages etc if OPs own DC would be at risk of Social Services intervening and removing them but I have no experience and am probably wrong. Maybe this is leverage needed to get SC the support they need that SS have failed to provide and get SC out of the house - that OP's children are at risk

Edited to add - hope I've explained this properly

Edited

The sexual abuse is the stand out point for me. It's unacceptable and OP has no excuse for not protecting her child once she knew. God knows what else has gone on she doesn't know about.

NiftyKoala · 09/10/2024 16:46

ahemfem · 09/10/2024 16:19

The sexual abuse is the stand out point for me. It's unacceptable and OP has no excuse for not protecting her child once she knew. God knows what else has gone on she doesn't know about.

You are right there is no excuse. Sadly it does not seem anyone will rescue these kids.