Esc wrote:artist4perry wrote:How old are your kids>?? That plays a factor, also it depends on the child. Unfortunately they don't come one size fits all, they are quite the individual.
my kids are 14 and 7.
my youngest is a girl and shes adorable.
i dont know if you may have noticed, but the girls seem more attached to their dads than moms.
my concern is for my boy.
artist4perry wrote:Ask your child in a private moment at home,
what is bothering them and why they seem to ignore you. Tell them you are concerned about them.
im actually going through a divorce (annulment in our case) for reasons i cannot disclose here.
he and his little sister is currently living with my wife.
im getting worried that my wife is feeding him a lot of bull behind my back.
and for that reason i think why my son is ignoring me.
its actually complicated and i dont want to bore you guys with my personal problems.
thanks for the serious and not so serious advice.
really appreciate it.
hey wix, i hope i can afford your fee.
im sure your advice will be worth every penny.

I can't speak as a parent, but I can speak as the adult who went through her parents's divorce as a child, and as the woman who took care of a friend's three children when their parents were going through a violent and nasty divorce.
If your son is 14, then he is old enough to understand some aspects of adult relationships. I'd sit him down, and talk to him about the break-up and why it has happened. Be very careful not to speak badly of your ex; you don't have to take full responsibility for whatever has happened, just make sure you remember with every word that you are talking about
his mamma. And explain to him that you and your ex are in a bad place with each other, but you don't want him to feel like he has to take sides, that you expect him to continue to love
both his parents just as much as ever, even if you and your ex don't love each other any more.
Tell him you are talking to him man-to-man, that you think he's grown up enough to understand, and that you want to be honest with him about why the break up has happened. And then
do talk to him as more of an adult than a kid. He's old enough to understand that hurt, angry people say hurt, angry things.
One other thing I'd suggest (and it was the most important thing I think my mother ever did for me) - tell him it's ok for him to be angry with you, but it's not ok for him to bottle it up and give you the silent treatment. Give him
express permission to be hurt, to be angry, to argue with you, yell at you - just not ignore you and not stay quiet when he is upset about something. You might need to explain it's not you giving him carte blanche to throw a tantrum, but that he is allowed to express his hurt, anger, frustration, etc. and he is allowed to disagree with you.
If your ex is feeding him bullshit, and you give him free reign to express his negative feelings, it means that you are likely to find out what she's saying, and address those things. You
have to remember though, not to put him the position where he feels like you are attacking his mother, because then no matter what you say, you lose. And a good phrase to remember is "I'm sorry, that makes me really angry; I need to go calm down a bit and then we will talk about what she has said." Good for you, good for him.
I hope it works out ok - I've got my fingers crossed for you. Divorce is always hardest on the kids, and it's good to know you are trying to do what you can.
Why treat life as a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving in an attractive & well-preserved body? Get there by skidding in sideways, a glass of wine in one hand, chocolate in the other, body totally worn out, screaming WOOHOO! What a ride!