fairisfair
Senior Member
why hello dahhhhhling.I'm just being FAIR, ya know!
Hello, Angel-face.
why hello dahhhhhling.I'm just being FAIR, ya know!
Hello, Angel-face.
CJLane: I completely agree with you. Would you mind supplying the supporting links that you mention? Those who care about the emotional well-being of the children who do not live with both their bio-parents under one roof may be interested in reading these articles. Thanks!And the statistics show that consistency is what matters. That either a parent is available regularly or NOT available at all amounts to about the same. It's the now you see me now you don't parents that really f*ck up their kids. If you want links, I'll supply them later.
Well, we weren't telling him THAT part of his future...we wanted to save at least one surprise for him!
"...when it's MY wife and MY kids..." She's gonna luv that...
Well someone should have informed me that we were keeping that secret.
Sawwy!
Hee! S'okay. It's not like we care, is it?Well someone should have informed me that we were keeping that secret.
Sawwy!
for my state ? i live in a completely different state than she does. halfway across the country. so shouldn't i do it in the state where i think the child will be born ? what if i add it to the KY registry and she moved already and has it in LA ? how soon do i put it on the registry ?just bide your time. she will change and if she goes on gov't assistance, they will go after you whether she wants it or not. chances are she was mad that you aren't willing to just go along and she knows she has no recourse if you want a test. If she is 100% positive the baby is yours, she should be fine with a test just to prove her point.
Is there someone you all mutually know that you could keep quiet tabs on her. It is best to do the CS when the baby is born rather that constantly live waiting until the day she decides to strike. Legally, if you know there is a good possibility of a child out there and you did nothing, you would be liable for CS retro to the day of birth- even if she files at 18. Put your name on the father's registry for your state. that should document that you tried. do your best to keep tabs until baby is born.
i think she was blowing smoke because she was mad that you aren't going to just do what she tells you to do.
Dude...STOP COMMUNICATING WITH THIS WOMAN!!! I would also make a log of the exact time and date of said comments, including some documentation that this call took place (i.e. detailed phone bill showing calls placed/incoming). Not that it would really do anything legally, BUT, might come in to "use" later.told her i needed her address and that i'd be doing a paternity test. she got pissed and felt "disrespected" by the fact that i asked that. cause she says i'm the only person she slept with in two years. anyways, no contact is off, but i'm still going to send a certified receipt letter to the address she gave me so i can have it in writing.
she goes nuts. a few hours later she says "i don't want anything. i don't want your name on the BC. i don't want your money. i don't want u to ever exist in anyway to this kid. i don't want it to ever know who u are. my cell and email will be changed by 7 pm today and i'm making different living arrangements in another state within the next two weeks"
so now what ?? just start savin up my money so that in case she does want to file for arrears ?
I'm still seeking links. So far, all I have are print articles from journals. This was the subject of my little sister's master's thesis, so I'm familiar with the research and I've been conversing with her on this topic as we both have son's w/out fathers but I'm waiting for her to gather the links for me.CJLane: I completely agree with you. Would you mind supplying the supporting links that you mention? Those who care about the emotional well-being of the children who do not live with both their bio-parents under one roof may be interested in reading these articles. Thanks!
I wholeheartedly agree - and this is the other reason that I think 1) a long-distance parenting situation, if consistent isn't necessarily bad and 2) 'reasonable' or 'agreed upon' visitation is always bad because it leaves a child nothing to plan for or count on.it is shown that a predictable custodial situation was best - even if that means once a year visit. A child needs to be able to say "I spend time with my dad every Tuesday" or "I visit over the 4th of July each year". That's better than random unpredictable, more frequent visits.
change your number now so you dont have that problem.so i sent her a letter today telling her to stop all contact with me and to email me when the child is born to take appropriate actions. certified return mail.
she'll probably get all pissed off and start texting me like crazy, then i'll have to change my phone number.