Topic : Single Parenting

Number of Replies: 483
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Created on : Thursday, June 30, 2005, 12:46:38 pm
Author : dataimport
A family doesn't always include a mom and a dad. If you are raising children alone, get support from people who understand here.

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March 29, 2008, 10:24 am PDT

Insight for you

Quote From: charger_girl

I need some advise here, I have been a relationship with someone for the past 3 years. We live toghether and have since we met. I have 2 beautiful, strong children. Their father and I divorced about 5 years ago, he took off, started a new family and we rarely hear from him. My current boyfriend has taken over the role of dad. But he is like having another child. Very self centered. Before he came along I was doing fine. I was adjusting to being a single parent, and trying to keep our heads above water. But I had been promoted with in my company, so I was able to provide for my family without the help of my ex-husband. He (the boyfriend, we will call him "Joe") came along when I thought I was ready to start another relationship. He was a salesman, made good money, attractive, and was nice. Joe is a little younger than me, never been married and doesnt have any children of his own. On our second or third date I asked him to come over for dinner and a movie, I explained to him that prior to 9pm my children were awake. I had made it a rule in my house that men were not allowed to be seen, I called them my "pm boyfriends". and if I offered for them to come over when the kids were awake, it was something special. Well, I thought that Joe would decline, come over after bedtime, he didnt. He said that he would be there about 7 and would bring dinner. I was so happy at the time. I never thought that someone like him would want to be apart of my family. Well, he showed up on time with dinner, and never left.

We have been thru our ups and downs over the past couple of years, and even though we have tried to make it work, it never does. Before him, I had never-ever fought with someone in front of my children. It was a standing rule in our home. Alot of things have changed. Things that prior to Joe, my children and I enjoyed, he no longer allowed a family bed, and my children would get into trouble with him if they tried to come cuddle with me. He began locking my bedroom door if he was in there, to keep the kids out. I tried to tell him that it made me very uncomfortable, I saw the door as a barrier from them. He didnt seem to care, it was what he wanted to do. He even posted rules on the locked door for the children to abide by. And set times when they were allowed to knock, or ask a question.

This is how he was brought up. I on the other hand was not. We had an open door policy when I was growing up. I am also a child of a single mom, she is and always be my "soft place to land". His family was large, he is one of five, and his parents have been married for almost 30 years. They fought in front of their kids.

Well, to make a long, long story short. We split last year for a while, due to his emotional abusiveness. I had to move away from where we live and go back to my home town, he obsessed about being with me. He finally gave up, and got healthy. His whole personality changed back to the person I met. Things went well for a while, and when the winter hit, it went back to the way it was when it was really bad. We had agreed not to live together when I came back, but right when I got my house, he made up some excuse to his room mates and moved out. And in with me! We fight all the time, and he fights with me infront of the kids, he doesnt care when I tell him that I'm done fighting infront of them, and if he wants to continue the conversation we need to go away from them. This has taken a tole on them, I have noticed that since Joe has been here, that my children fight with eachother, and they sound just like us. Joe cuts me down, calls me names and attacks my person when we fight. My kids are starting to do the same thing. My son who is 5, has started showing his anger by tightening up, he wont drop an issue, even if its not worth fighting about. Joe does this. My daughter, who is 8, makes excuses for her actions instead of owning them. She yells at her brother, and most of the time provokes the fights. They both make mountains out of mole hills. Joe does all of this.

Now let me say that the only reason he is still around is because when my ex husband left, my daughter had huge seperation issues. It was hard on all of us to deal with that. But after months of play theropy we got the issues undercontrol. Now, my son is attached to Joe, and I worry that we will have the same issues with him.

I dont want to be with this man anymore, I dont want my children to deal with this. But I know that if I call it quites he will make it very hard on us. He has said that he cant be in their lives if he's not with me. I have had issues with that in the past. But, I dont anymore. I dont love him, I never have. But I dont want to hurt my children by kicking him out. What do I do??? Is it worth it for them to have a "father" around even if he is toxic to all of us? When they look back on my decision will they say, "I hate her for leaving him" or " I hate her for staying, and subjecting us to him"??????

SOMEONE WITH SOME INSIGHT, PLEASE HELP!!

The best thing you can do for your children is to leave this relationship. If he ‘makes life hard’ then you’ve got to fight back with everything that you can. You don’t have to stay in this relationship any longer, your happiness and your health is more valuable then this relationship. You KNOW that he is a negative influence on your children, not a positive one. It is understandable that even though he is a negative influence, the kids have gotten used to him; but they will get adjusted just fine to life without the chaos that “Joe” creates in your home. You can’t predict what your kids will think in the future, the only thing you have any control over is your own actions right now; and right now, you’ve got to listen to your instincts. To be the best woman and mother you can be, you have to cut ties with this toxic man and move forward. Otherwise, your children are bound to grow up, seek out mates, and repeat this toxic pattern for themselves- you don’t want that to happen. I know that you want them to have happy, healthy lives. For them to live happy, healthy lives, they must have a happy, healthy mother. That is the best gift you can ever give to them. I wish you the best.
 
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March 29, 2008, 10:26 am PDT

nana-

Quote From: nana_liz

Hi::::

 

I'm a grandma who has a daughter that is a single parent raising 3 children on her own and her oldest one who is now 6 is having alot of serious behaviour issues, and I'm hoping someone out there can help with some advice... He will do whatevr it takes to break things, ruin things or rip or paint on or scribble with colors or whatever he can find to color with. He will also take an object and try to destroy the walls with making holes and things..... She has been separated now for over 3 years and it just seems like the more you try and talk to him about his behaviour the worse he gets. He is definately demanding her attention, but in a bad way. I'm not saying my grandson is bad, because he isn't...he is just making bad choices. Also, he will do whatever he can to get the other 2 children in trouble and they take the blame for things he's doing instead. Please if there is anyone out there that can help with some advice or something I sure would appreciate it alot... Thank you in advance...

 

Nana in Canada

The best thing you can do for your grandson is to strongly urge your daughter to have him evaluated; at the very least, she needs to report his actions to his pediatrician. Your grandson could have serious medical needs; he needs and deserves to be evaluated so that he can have a happy, productive life. I wish you the best!
 

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April 11, 2008, 6:51 am PDT

Wayward Adolescent

I would actually like some advice on my current situation. 

I raised a wonderful daughter for seventeen years with support of my parents.  Her dad was never around.  She had wonderful grades, put forth the effort to get into the college of her choice and was accepted.  Then one day she tells me that all of this planning for college was a lie, that she has been talking to her dad behind my back, she is going to go live with him and there wasnt a darn thing I can do about it.  I was shocked and hurt.  Suddenly I didnt know who this girl was.  I suggested that if she didnt like where she was living that she could stay with her grandparents for a little while, have her dad go visit her there so she could get to know him, still pursue her college goals so that she can have what she has worked so hard for and get to know her dad at the same time.  So she went to the grandparents, in the same state, however my parents helped her board an airplane to her dad in another state.  Now I am constantly harassed by her dad because he wants money from me.  He has my daughter call me and tell me that she can no longer talk to me until I quit "crapping on him", and I can hear him telling her to say this.  She has now become disrespectful like the dad she has never known.  When I ask for her return I am told that they are calling the police because I am harassing my daughter. 

My question is, do I let her stay there and hopefully find her way to some maturity or do I take legal action to have her returned?  It appears as though she is not being physically abused, but is being verbally and emotionally abused.  Her dad has alienated her from her life long support system not to mention her little brother.  He does not appear to of changed much from how I remember him over the years.  Any advice or point of view would be really helpful.  My support system is zero right now because they overstepped their bounds and went against my decision when they put her on that plane.  My daughter is not 18 yet.

 

 
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April 13, 2008, 9:20 pm PDT

just can't seem to stop!

I am always yelling at my 2 children and I would really like to stop, I just don't know how.I am very frustrated with so many different aspects of our lives and I am working on improving our situation but, in the meantime my yelling is pushing my 12 year old away from me and making my 2 year old very agressive and defiant.Unfortunately for me, I don't have a real support system so, everything is always on me.I'm 32 years old and I feel so worn out.There are days when I just want to cry but, I think that once I start crying I won't be able to stop.I hardly ever have time for myself and any extra money (after paying bills) is always spent on the children, so I don't get to do anything nice for myself.There is no such thing as a social life for me.I've been single now for 2 years.All of these things coupled with so many others have me totally stressed and frustrated.
 
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April 13, 2008, 9:35 pm PDT

Single Parenting

Quote From: jaimie1974

The best thing you can do for your children is to leave this relationship. If he makes life hard then youve got to fight back with everything that you can. You dont have to stay in this relationship any longer, your happiness and your health is more valuable then this relationship. You KNOW that he is a negative influence on your children, not a positive one. It is understandable that even though he is a negative influence, the kids have gotten used to him; but they will get adjusted just fine to life without the chaos that Joe creates in your home. You cant predict what your kids will think in the future, the only thing you have any control over is your own actions right now; and right now, youve got to listen to your instincts. To be the best woman and mother you can be, you have to cut ties with this toxic man and move forward. Otherwise, your children are bound to grow up, seek out mates, and repeat this toxic pattern for themselves- you dont want that to happen. I know that you want them to have happy, healthy lives. For them to live happy, healthy lives, they must have a happy, healthy mother. That is the best gift you can ever give to them. I wish you the best.
I believe that staying in an unhappy relationship for the sake of the children is a huge mistake. They are not getting anything good from his presence. Trust me, the separation issues will be easier to deal with than the long term damage that this relationship will cause them. You obviously love your children very much, so why subject them to a man that YOU don't love and who clearly does not love you. Do your family a favor and lose the boyfriend. Besides, the longer you hold on to this relationship, there's no way for the right man to come into your life. You have to get rid of the bad before the good can come in.
 

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April 14, 2008, 9:11 am PDT

Support

Quote From: bklynmom

I am always yelling at my 2 children and I would really like to stop, I just don't know how.I am very frustrated with so many different aspects of our lives and I am working on improving our situation but, in the meantime my yelling is pushing my 12 year old away from me and making my 2 year old very agressive and defiant.Unfortunately for me, I don't have a real support system so, everything is always on me.I'm 32 years old and I feel so worn out.There are days when I just want to cry but, I think that once I start crying I won't be able to stop.I hardly ever have time for myself and any extra money (after paying bills) is always spent on the children, so I don't get to do anything nice for myself.There is no such thing as a social life for me.I've been single now for 2 years.All of these things coupled with so many others have me totally stressed and frustrated.
Being a single parent myself, of two, its normal to feel that everything falls on you because it does.  You are the foundation of your family and if you cant hold it together for your children then who will?  One thing I have learned to do is take time for myself.  At work during lunch I will take a nice walk because fresh air does wonders.  Take the kids to a park so they too can get out and exert some energy.  The more you yell the more frustration you bring into your home.  Learn to give yourself "time outs" if you are disciplining your kids out of anger.  Never discipline out of anger because you send your kids the wrong message.  I too am limited financially however there are many activities you can do as a family to relieve the stress.  You alone will have to make a conscience effort to make the change in yourself. 
 

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April 16, 2008, 3:14 pm PDT

Sons and Single mothers

 Hi,

I raised my twins as a single mother.  A boy and a girl.  They are 22 now, and different as night and day.  My daughter has a good full time job, owns her car, and is buying and condo, oh and she is finishing up her AA degree at the local community college.  As proud I am of her is how sad I am about her twin brother.  He quit school within spitting distance of senior graduation despite my efforts, and he talks a lot about getting a GED but so far it is just talk.  He has lived hand to mouth by his own choice, and he is headed down a long hard road that I tried my best to have him avoid.  At present I cannot communicate with him because he is always angry and resentful of everyone and everything.  I blame his inability to function in this world on myself.  I did not have a man in my life that he could look up to and model himself after.  Instead he began to emmulate his "criminal" father.  Now he acts and talks like his father and I am terrified for him.  He deserves better than that and I cannot reach him.  Single moms need to have a good male role model in their sons' lives.  Being a good mom is not good enough for men in the making.  I truly believe that this is why we have so many young men going in and out of prison and making babies that they have no intention of supporting.  I hope other moms with little boys realize how vital it is to get your son with a good man, grandpa or big brothers, or maybe an uncle or pastor.  They are men in the making and they don't bake right when momma is the only one raising them.

 
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April 21, 2008, 7:38 am PDT

excellent book

Quote From: hope4us

 Hi,

I raised my twins as a single mother.  A boy and a girl.  They are 22 now, and different as night and day.  My daughter has a good full time job, owns her car, and is buying and condo, oh and she is finishing up her AA degree at the local community college.  As proud I am of her is how sad I am about her twin brother.  He quit school within spitting distance of senior graduation despite my efforts, and he talks a lot about getting a GED but so far it is just talk.  He has lived hand to mouth by his own choice, and he is headed down a long hard road that I tried my best to have him avoid.  At present I cannot communicate with him because he is always angry and resentful of everyone and everything.  I blame his inability to function in this world on myself.  I did not have a man in my life that he could look up to and model himself after.  Instead he began to emmulate his "criminal" father.  Now he acts and talks like his father and I am terrified for him.  He deserves better than that and I cannot reach him.  Single moms need to have a good male role model in their sons' lives.  Being a good mom is not good enough for men in the making.  I truly believe that this is why we have so many young men going in and out of prison and making babies that they have no intention of supporting.  I hope other moms with little boys realize how vital it is to get your son with a good man, grandpa or big brothers, or maybe an uncle or pastor.  They are men in the making and they don't bake right when momma is the only one raising them.

There is an excellent book called raising boy's without men. It is a long term study done on single female parent homes, and lesbian parents that proves that men do not always need a male rolemodel to succeed in life. I am a single mother of a boy, and so far i am lucky enough to have positive male influences around him. But don't be discouraged. I encourage single mothers raising boys to read this book.
 
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April 21, 2008, 7:49 am PDT

I understand

Quote From: bklynmom

I am always yelling at my 2 children and I would really like to stop, I just don't know how.I am very frustrated with so many different aspects of our lives and I am working on improving our situation but, in the meantime my yelling is pushing my 12 year old away from me and making my 2 year old very agressive and defiant.Unfortunately for me, I don't have a real support system so, everything is always on me.I'm 32 years old and I feel so worn out.There are days when I just want to cry but, I think that once I start crying I won't be able to stop.I hardly ever have time for myself and any extra money (after paying bills) is always spent on the children, so I don't get to do anything nice for myself.There is no such thing as a social life for me.I've been single now for 2 years.All of these things coupled with so many others have me totally stressed and frustrated.
 i completely understand your situation. I have been a single parent since i was 6 months pregnant. My son is now 2 1/2 years old. It is very difficult to get ahead. No matter how hard you try, there is always something that comes up whether it be a sickness, an unexpected bill payment. And I understand what you mean when all your money is spent on your kids. I buy some mascara and i feel guilty that i have spent the money. Being a single parent is VERY stressful. Everything is dependant on you. You have to be the disciplinarian and the friend. I have no social life, and havent had one since my son was born. I'm lucky if i can find a sitter. I too have been single for almost 3 years because there is no money for me to go out and meet people. Can't join a club, because of a)finances, and b)lack of sitters. Can't  go out to a bar, or a movie or etc etc becuase of finances and babysitting. So i completely feel the stress you are in. However, i have also dealt with the anger issue as well. My anger was soooo bad that i went to my family physician for it. For me it was a combonation of a couple issues. I was dealing with post partum, some depression because of my situation and my hormone leves were completly out of wack. With some blood work and some meds, I no longer scream like a mad women. Perhaps something like my situation is going on with you. Dont fret though. I try to keep positive. I just tell myself that perhaps at this moment i am just meant to be at home and be a mom. I am 27 years old, im not bound to be single for the rest of my life.
 
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confused
May 3, 2008, 5:41 pm PDT

What do you do????

 What do you do when your 14 year old tells/lets slip stuff about her friends.  For example: she has one friend who is depressed, thinks about suicide, has supposedly tried it once by trying to cut his neck.  And another friend whose stepfather gets drunk and hits her.  I don't know the last name on either kid, she hangs out with them during the school day only.  So what do you do????  sit back and hope that its typical teenage angst/bragging/lying etc.  Does anyone understand what I mean?????????  Everyone knows that teenagers turn everything into drama and everything is the end of the world but what if its all true and I sit back and say nothing???
 

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