ihatepillows
Junior Member
No. Communication is not possible. I have worked with him for years. As you get older, you get more attached to what you believe in and he is one of those people. He has told his daughter she is useless and a failure. I've told him numerous times to stop degrading her as it is not discipline, but bullying.Communicate a desire to still be in the child's life to the father at a time when it's appropriate. Preferably after giving in to something they want and having buttered them up a bit.
I would do everything I could to not drive a wedge between daughter and father. Even if it weren't true I would tell the daughter that her father loves her and is only acting in what he feels is her best interest so that the father feels comfortable and not threatened while the child is still supported. The worse thing that can come of that is she will just think you don't understand.
I am not religious and I never liked art. Didn't stop me from getting an A in art class. This teen girl is rebelling and needs to be told that she needs to try regardless of it being against her views.
I would offer to take the child to counseling myself to the father in hopes that it would mean time we could spend together there and back.
Thats just what I would do if I really wanted to stay in her life. What you do is obviously up to you but if you really care about her, based on the little bit I've read you type, the father needs to be in her life.
Having someone stressful in your house that you don't love can cause you to act out to those around both of you. Having you out of the home and away might actually bring them closer together if you just stay out of it as well. And he is the father.
Read the post up.
He sees me as the mother of his child. He doesn't let me be a legal parent because he doesn't want me to have that privilege and uses his child as leverage, not looking at what is beneficial to her needs. If I'm not around, he doesn't cook for her or anything. I make sure to leave food for her.