Is Your Ex Deliberately Trying To Alienate Your Kids From You?

Jan 27
08:18

2009

Len Stauffenger

Len Stauffenger

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If you see, sense or positively know that after your divorce, your ex spouse is alienating your children from you, you must deal with this. And if speaking to your ex doesn't work, here are some more tips to keep your kids' priorities first on your list.

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You couldn't stop your divorce. God knows you tried,Is Your Ex Deliberately Trying To Alienate Your Kids From You? Articles but sometimes, divorce just cannot be stopped. You made your strongest efforts to stop it, but it still happened to you.

And now, here you and your kids are: stuck with the result of being divorced. If you've read my other articles, then you know that I'm adamant about putting your children first. They are innocent victims in a divorce, and every attempt to buffer them from its effects must be taken. Remember:

1. Kids come first.

2. You'll mature if you consider their needs first.

3. They'll mature if you put them first.

You have determined to put your kids first on the list; you've decided not to talk badly about your ex; and you want to stick by all the best child-rearing rules that you know. But your ex is not. He breaks all the rules. He doesn't honor pick up or drop off times. He doesn't honor the forms of discipline when the kids are at his house that they two of you agreed upon. Worse, he has begun to denigrate you in front of the kids. He makes wisecracks about how you do things. He criticizes your appearance. He uses humor to make them laugh at you in a derogatory way.

How should you react? I know, I know, you'd like to do bodily damage, wouldn't you? So you ask yourself this question "How would my actions serve my children?" You can use your ex's immaturity along with your example to both grow yourself up and set a great example for your children.

Let's look at three examples and see if you can follow the objectivity in the answers, because if you can learn to remain objective, you will win the day and so will your kids.

1. If your ex lets your kids stay up beyond midnight to watch TV, and your rules have a 10 pm deadline, you can tell them "You know what my rules are about staying up beyond 10 pm. My preference is that you just get enough rest for yourself. These are your growing years and you need your rest. Sticking with scheduled go-to-bed and getting-up times is good for you and I want what's good for you." You will never get your ex to change, so roll with the punches and let the kids know what your good reasons are for your rules, and then drop it.

2. When your kids tell you Daddy calls you 'Godzilla' and laughs his head off, just explain "Your Daddy has a great sense of humor. That name doesn't feel good to me, so I'd prefer it if you did not use it either here or there." And then drop it. They know you and they know your feelings. The rest is up to them and they might just make you proud. Remain objective.

3. When your kids tell you that your ex said they didn't have to complete their homework and that their time with him/her is play time, you can tell them "Your work at school is like my work at my job. If I don't do my work, I don't earn a salary. If you don't do the work, you don't earn the grades that allow you to continue. Good grades are your job as a growing-up child and they are important. Do you want to get good grades? Tell daddy/mommy that you want to get good grades and need to do your homework." And then have a conversation with your ex about the importance of homework when your kids cannot hear you. And then drop it. An alternate possibility is to just oversee the homework at your house before they visit their other parent. You don't want to make your kids stress over your ex's behavior, so you find a way to get the homework done if he/she won't.

If your ex continues with alienating techniques and it's affecting the kids, you always have a resort in the courts. Talk to your divorce attorney and weigh his advice heavily before you decide which steps to take. Your children deserve to love both parents, but if one parent is alienating them from their other parent, this behavior should not be allowed to continue because the welfare of your kids comes first.

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