FullofLove1052
New member
Always interesting points and commentary. I like the idea of the thread for Children of Poly. Kevin, you posed very valid questions.
Re: Making time for a partner. In looking at my past schedule, I had no time to cut from my job (I had minimal say until I gained leverage), child(ren) (right), sleep schedule (insomnia loved me until I crashed), hobbies (if sleeping counts), spouse (unless you consider that 15 minute exchange post-overnight), etc. It was even more convoluted because my spouse refused to lose anytime with our children in the evenings. My children never stayed at my ex's house. After working all day and being away from them, who was I to tell him, "So we are going to her house. You can see them tomorrow night--if your work schedule permits. If not, rain check. Okay?" I feel out of line for saying that. Me time? Haha. As far as me, if I saw my child(ren) for breakfast on the morning of scheduled overnights with my ex, that was where it ended because I would go straight to her house from work. If they were lucky and work did not interfere, they might have seen me the next night for bedtime. That was not always the case. I can remember days where I did not see my youngest daughter at all. No hobby could keep me out of the house like that. Gambling or drinking, maybe. I rarely do either. Trimming time is the ideal thing. Lesson: if you do not have it to trim, you do not have time for it. For me, it was that damn relationship.
Sidebar: Having a mono spouse who was tolerant of poly also meant she was not really welcome in our home. That is how I ended up at her home without them. He resented the idea of a third parent. Thus, overnights were rare in our home until the end, and even then, he grew sick of her and asked her to step back. Proverbial line being drawn in the sand from his POV. The line was our family on this side and her way over there somewhere. I could not say to him, "I do not want this person in my home because it is my sanctuary," and proceed to invite the one person he craved distance from in the same breath. He could and did flip that on me. If I knew I did not like feeling put out of my home, I had to be mindful of his feelings regarding that, too. What would I have looked like asking him to leave so a guest could stay? It made more sense for me to outsource so to speak.
I am sure there are poly parents who swear they are doing what is best for their children. Some parents probably ignore the red flags. I did. My child grew tired of pretending like she was happy. The trigger that caused her to spiral was a situation at her school that left her feeling like she needed me, but her subconscious told her I was unavailable or inaccessible like all the other times. She lashed out at me because she was mad at herself for believing that I could possibly be available to her when my past conduct contradicted that.
Truthfully, there are mono parents who think they are good parents and doing a good job. I have met a lot of people with mummy and daddy issues who came from "good" homes. I have also met an equal number of royally screwed people who did come from good homes. Parents cannot be blamed for everything. Our childhoods certainly impact us and shape us. Good or bad.
Re: Parenting Success or Failure. What constitutes the measure of failure? Is it your child telling you they hate you? Is it your child not inviting you to their wedding or introducing you and your "poisonous" ways to their children? Is it your child refusing to visit you when you are on your death bed? Who knows? What is the measure of success? Is it being in an old age home and still getting visits from your children? Is it still having relationships with them when they are raising their own families? Is it asking forgiveness, receiving it, and getting it right the second time? Is it getting a child to the point of graduating? Is it keeping your child out of jail and off drugs? Is it raising a child to 18? I think there are quite a few facets. The parents might believe they did the best they could, but the now-grown up child might beg to differ and vow to be nothing like them. Is that to say the parents failed? Failure is subjective. As is success.
Re: Making time for a partner. In looking at my past schedule, I had no time to cut from my job (I had minimal say until I gained leverage), child(ren) (right), sleep schedule (insomnia loved me until I crashed), hobbies (if sleeping counts), spouse (unless you consider that 15 minute exchange post-overnight), etc. It was even more convoluted because my spouse refused to lose anytime with our children in the evenings. My children never stayed at my ex's house. After working all day and being away from them, who was I to tell him, "So we are going to her house. You can see them tomorrow night--if your work schedule permits. If not, rain check. Okay?" I feel out of line for saying that. Me time? Haha. As far as me, if I saw my child(ren) for breakfast on the morning of scheduled overnights with my ex, that was where it ended because I would go straight to her house from work. If they were lucky and work did not interfere, they might have seen me the next night for bedtime. That was not always the case. I can remember days where I did not see my youngest daughter at all. No hobby could keep me out of the house like that. Gambling or drinking, maybe. I rarely do either. Trimming time is the ideal thing. Lesson: if you do not have it to trim, you do not have time for it. For me, it was that damn relationship.
Sidebar: Having a mono spouse who was tolerant of poly also meant she was not really welcome in our home. That is how I ended up at her home without them. He resented the idea of a third parent. Thus, overnights were rare in our home until the end, and even then, he grew sick of her and asked her to step back. Proverbial line being drawn in the sand from his POV. The line was our family on this side and her way over there somewhere. I could not say to him, "I do not want this person in my home because it is my sanctuary," and proceed to invite the one person he craved distance from in the same breath. He could and did flip that on me. If I knew I did not like feeling put out of my home, I had to be mindful of his feelings regarding that, too. What would I have looked like asking him to leave so a guest could stay? It made more sense for me to outsource so to speak.
I am sure there are poly parents who swear they are doing what is best for their children. Some parents probably ignore the red flags. I did. My child grew tired of pretending like she was happy. The trigger that caused her to spiral was a situation at her school that left her feeling like she needed me, but her subconscious told her I was unavailable or inaccessible like all the other times. She lashed out at me because she was mad at herself for believing that I could possibly be available to her when my past conduct contradicted that.
Truthfully, there are mono parents who think they are good parents and doing a good job. I have met a lot of people with mummy and daddy issues who came from "good" homes. I have also met an equal number of royally screwed people who did come from good homes. Parents cannot be blamed for everything. Our childhoods certainly impact us and shape us. Good or bad.
Re: Parenting Success or Failure. What constitutes the measure of failure? Is it your child telling you they hate you? Is it your child not inviting you to their wedding or introducing you and your "poisonous" ways to their children? Is it your child refusing to visit you when you are on your death bed? Who knows? What is the measure of success? Is it being in an old age home and still getting visits from your children? Is it still having relationships with them when they are raising their own families? Is it asking forgiveness, receiving it, and getting it right the second time? Is it getting a child to the point of graduating? Is it keeping your child out of jail and off drugs? Is it raising a child to 18? I think there are quite a few facets. The parents might believe they did the best they could, but the now-grown up child might beg to differ and vow to be nothing like them. Is that to say the parents failed? Failure is subjective. As is success.