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She said she doesn’t want to play for a living, but she’s already secured some money for college to play.

She said she doesn’t want to play for a living, but she’s already secured some money for college to play.
Why are you having your kids so close together? Personally I'm not a fan of it because once a new baby comes in, you can't give the previous kid the attention they need.
Cosleeping or Coparenting?
@murksiderock
To be honest she sounds lazy and unstructured and it will eventually bite her her and her kids in the ass. Those boys sounds like they are on the way to living in her basement still at 40.
You can have an "open food" policy without having an open refrigerator one. Like back in the my mom would always say they had one option for meals, but growing up she would make a few different choices. However, the kitchen was closed, dishes washed and floor mopped after dinner. You took your ass to sleep and waited until breakfast for it to open again.
The cleaning thing again, goes back to a lack of structure growing up. My grandmother had 5 kids, worked 2nd shift and left those negros a list of chores to complete while at work. If it wasn't done, she was whipping ass out of their sleep. Even when I spent weekends as a little girl I had a chore.
She is lazy and unstructured, yet highly critical of other people and their lifestyle habits!
I called her "dirty" once and she lost it, could tell it hurt her, and our relationship has since gotten better. I dont use that word anymore and her cleanliness has shown improvement over time, but it certainly isn't at my standards of cleanliness. Herself, her person, isn't dirty, so I don't get why the home is...
I always looked at the "well it was 5 of us and kids are gonna be messy anyway" shyt as a cop out. I've spent well enough times around her now, and having kids if my own, habits are formed and behaviors are taught thru BOTH actions and nonaction...
You ain't even met her boys and hit the nail on the head. She's convinced her 4-year old is gonna be some ladies man, and this morning she was on that again, and again I told her the boy gonna have "mommy issues". She says mommy/daddy issues only arise when you don't have one; my response is the boy is coddled, and she excuses everything for him* (more below), he is not gonna know how to deal with women who aren't his mother if she doesn't change on this. But my girlfriend is defiant, her response is the boys up under their mothers learn how to treat women the best...
**this past Thursday, she got an email from her child's pre-K teacher that he opened a fence at school and took off running after repeated requests to stand in line and stop running and come back. Mom's response? "Why is the fence/gate small enough for him to reach? Why is he in position to take off running?"
Nothing said to her son about disobeying orders at school, and when I said this to her, she was nonchalant, on some "yes he needs to listen, but" type shyt...
I literally have a laundry list of examples I can give about her boys. No you hit the nail on the head, unless her parenting evolves or they get strong influences from elsewhere, they in some trouble and I think any mature, experienced mind can see it. This lil dude is not gonna be able to relate to any woman who not his mom, he runs over her. I'm convinced he's at least slightly Autistic, she got him tested and it said nah, but he's got some signs. Even if he was, and again the county said he isnt, it isn't a moderate or severe form anyway, the larger problem is exactly as you said, lack of structure and discipline...
Different issues with the older boy but all rooted in the same place...
She's about to stress herself out with her lack of parenting. Just getting a call in the middle of the work day can throw everything off, but if they expel/disenroll him altogether, it will be a scramble to find a new center and he will most likely get put out of that one too.
It's one thing to be a "mommy's boy" and another to be coddled. Men who are up under their mothers usually make the worst men. They are the ones who have been referred to as "man of the house" since 12 years old, with no resources or training to back it up, so as a adult he's just a bum constantly awaiting direction to take the lead.
I agree completely with your perspective. You are getting a front row seat to someone about ruin their fukking kids and you're genuinely concerned about it. But it also seems like you're tolerating a lot of behavior that just doesn't sit right with you. Do you think these things will eventually be a deal breaker or you're just venting to make sure you're not crazy?
You are doing the right thing by protecting your girls, and if you are not continuing the relationship then there’s nothing more to worry about and it’s not worth subjecting them and yourself to an uncomfortable situation.I began the process of separating my daughters from her boys and I just need some reassurance I'm doing the right thing from you guys here!
Biggest thing is the hitting! Her youngest son, who is now 5, has had a problem with hitting my daughters since he met them, and hitting other kids in general. To be fair, there was a healthy stretch of 6-7 months that it rarely happened, probably happened less than 5 times in that stretch, and then inexplicably picked back up around early November and has been a continuous issue since. His mother offers no hypothesis as to why this is; my guess is maybe it's tied to the class he's in---->he's in an IEP pre-K class of other 4-5 year olds who have various behavioral issues, and maybe seeing other children hit at school has crafted an image to him that it's okay to hit...
That's understandable but for the fact that his mother has done nothing to eliminate the hitting, even after reports of him hitting at school. This is a whole other story I may get to later, but as it concerns my daughters, he knows hitting is wrong. She doesn't want me to spank him. So it's been about a month since we spent a weekend there because I don't trust her to parent the hitting out of the boy; its been about a month since the last hitting incident because I'm only taking the girls there sparingly. Our kids met each other in December 2020. The last hitting incident was February 2022. It does not take 14 months to parent that shot out of a 4-turned-5 year old and my best option I've felt is to take matters into my own hands to protect my daughters...
Am I right or wrong? Other reasons I've begun separating the girls is because her and my relationship is clearly fizzling out, we're probably in the "last hour" of this thing so to speak, and I don't want it to be a sudden break from the boys and my girlfriend. Relationship still may be salvageable but I dont know if I have the energy for it. Also I noticed over time that, because I only get my oldest daughters on first three weekends, and spend a lot of time with her and her children throughout the week, bringing my daughters to her home on weekends was creating even less time than I already have with my daughters. I was less attentive, less active and engaged with them because I'm still spreading it between 5 kids, and doing things less frequently with them than is customary like reading or taking them out...
So part of that separation has been to get back more time with the girls...
But I am insecure and not sure I'm handling this all appropriately. I can give more details if needed or of asked nut from what I have shared, am I making the correct decision?
You are doing the right thing by protecting your girls, and if you are not continuing the relationship then there’s nothing more to worry about and it’s not worth subjecting them and yourself to an uncomfortable situation.
On the flip side if you do want to continue seeing her you gotta consider that kids, especially boys can and will do inexplicably dumb stuff. Unless the mom is actively encouraging the hitting, you shouldn’t blame her so much for his behavior. Sometimes kids just don’t fukkin listen especially at 5 years old. It can and does take lots of time fix behavior in some kids and as her partner, sometimes you gotta take the bad with the good. In which case it would not be a good idea to kinda hold your presence on weekends hostage. Kids need routine. If he is ever gonna stop hitting your girls they need a routine of how and when they are gonna interact.
My son had a hitting and behavioral problem at that age too. I’m still not sure why. He’s 12 now and pretty much a perfect young man. Still has a temper but has learned how to curve it. It took years of us working at it with him and eventually it just clicked.
So yeah, if the relationship is going nowhere, get yourself and your girls the hell out of there. If you want to continue the relationship you gotta look at it more as your problem too, and play a more supportive and less accusatory role.
Just constant and consistent correction/reinforcement. Lots of timeouts and/or taking his stuff away like toys/games etc. And most importantly talking to him and treating him as the growing human he is. Yelling and hitting dont work in this situation from my experience. Y’all gotta sit him down and let him know how scary it is to your girls and other kids when he behaves like that. Tell him how bad it makes his mom and his teachers feel. Talk to him about adhd, and what that may mean for his life. The pills he may have to take, and/or the way he will be treated with a diagnosis. I know he’s young, but he will definitely understand.This is more valuable than I can tell you. Thank you, fam!
A few questions/comments:
•what methods or actions did you take to reduce and eliminate your son's hitting?
She got her son tested two years ago for autism and the results were negative, but she believes he's autistic to at least a mild degree. She hasn't specifically blamed his hitting on being autistic, but she has hinted at it; she also has a friend who is a degreed psychiatrist and her friend thinks my girlfriend's son is ADHD, so she heavily relies on her friend's opinion. And it's frustrated me when she has danced towards insinuating that his hitting is a disorder cause, because he doesn't always hit people, and he doesn't hit everyone...
This is probably true. Some people/parents are just like that. As the partner, if this is one of your strengths, you gotta take charge and assert your will on the family. Tell her you know it’s a weakness of hers, and also tell her you are committed to taking charge of that side of things. Make her commit to allowing you to do what you need to do, to steer y’all in the correct direction.He knows it's wrong. My perspective is that she is unbelievably weak at parenting and establishing behavioral control and responsibility for her kids, and it shows with her oldest son in areas too (he's now 6). Your advice to be less accusatory is something I want to heed, but is an area of weakness for me when I've repeatedly watched her only really address his hitting when I say something...
I’m not totally against hitting and harsh punishment, but from my experience it’s not gonna work on its own. Obviously in the act ain’t nothing much you can do but whoop their ass and send them to their room. But from my experience, this isn’t what’s gonna fix the behavior in the long term. Gotta go way deeper than that, and even positive reinforcement when you don’t believe he deserves it can go a long way.For my part I counsel him when he does it, I've lightly popped his hand or butt, I've made him stand in a corner, but I can only do so much. There isn't a consistent source of discipline for him or an establishment that there is consequences to the hitting from his mother, she won't even address the problem of hitting at school until forced to have conversations with his teacher...
Schools can’t wait to diagnose our kids (I’m assuming he’s black, and that makes it even worse) they get money, and they get an excuse not to work so hard to fix his behavior. They get to write it off as a “disorder” and it becomes the kids identity. And even the kid looses hope that they will ever be ok. I hate that outcome. If you can, don’t let them box that boy in. He can be so much more.He's getting tested in April by a neurologist, as his school has stated they "don't understand why" he hits and pouts and shyt. But of course they won't, they don't see the boy everyday and don't really know how his mother parents him---->he does that shyt because he can get away with it...
You gotta do some soul searching breh. It ain’t worth it to stay together if you are miserable. If these things can’t be fixed, you are better off being happy and healthy apart than you are miserable together. You gotta put yourself in the best position to raise that newborn. If that’s apart then you gotta do what you gotta do. Reality is you gone be stuck dealing with her shyt either way. Might as well do it in a way that’s most healthy for you.So if I'm being too judgemental please let me know, and please let me know what methods you took to curb your son's hitting!
•I don't really want to continue the relationship but the other part of it is that I'm going to run into an issue of seeing my youngest daughter who I had on September 20 with her. She's vindictive, arrogant, and selfish, my girlfriend is. I'm already dealing with this from my oldest children's mother. I don't want to have to fight simultaneously with another woman...
I’d say yes, you are being a little too judgmental. He’s only 5 years old. Some kids are just hard. You may have gotten lucky with your other kids, so you don’t know what it’s like to struggle with a kid that just won’t do right. Imagine if it was your daughter doing this stuff despite your best efforts (even if your efforts weren’t “the best”)and all you got was judgement from your partner. shyts got to be hard on her, to keep hearing from everyone how fukked up her son is. She probably feels she’s protecting him at this point.I understand parents don't have to agree on everything but there are a few big things I really find hard to negotiate even further. Her oldest son has been in trouble every week since school started for offenses from punching a kid in the stomach and tripping a little girl, to consistently disrupting class, to talking and standing when he isn't supposed to, and guess what the penalty for this constant misbehavior has been?
A talking to with threats of "whipping your ass" but nothing else. He fukked up all week his birthday week and still got all his gifts, his party, etc. He gets in trouble and still gets to come home and play after his mini-lecture. No enforcement that there are consequences for his actions...
It's tough to witness this and be with her, with the limited capacity of what I can do to straighten him up, combined with her mother's nosey and own lackadaisical ass. Because I have a strong hunch on where this style of parenting is leading the boys, and I care about them. But it's tough to idly sit here watching it unfold believing the results of all of this are gonna come out very loudly in the years to come, so the only thing I can figure is to slowly separate myself from my relationship with her and them...
I do not wanna be around when shyt gets really ugly in the years to come; I'd have no problem sticking around if I was given more of a hand on raising them...
Am I too judgmental on this or am I right?
The impact of losing access to one of your parents even at 16 months is traumatic for your daughter. For her sake you need to do what you can to see her on a consistent basis. Whether that is a cease fire with your ex or legal action, the price for your daughter is steeper than you think.
I speak from experience. My daughter was 18 months when I moved out of the house. She is almost 8 now and it is clearly to me that the disruption was significant for her psyche. She is less well adjusted than my younger children because she experienced losing access to me.
I have drama with my ex for SURE but she can't deny for a second the importance and impact of having me in her daughter's life.
I know I am making it sound easy but what is more important than nurturing and molding your child? If you need to get yourself together do that on the days you don't have her. Even you at 60% means the world to her well being.