SetWave
Well-known Member
- Location
- Monterey Bay
You took the words right out of my mouth. Could not agree more.Forgive and get over it. "Getting back at someone" is rather childish, don't you think?
You took the words right out of my mouth. Could not agree more.Forgive and get over it. "Getting back at someone" is rather childish, don't you think?
No matter whether it is childish or not, try putting up with being shunned for twenty five years, then false acknowledgements or token recognition to mislead you, I doubt the Dalai Lama himself would remain a peacemaker, (okay maybe not him, I'm just being childish againYou took the words right out of my mouth. Could not agree more.![]()
We can yes, but live my life, (or "walk in my shoes for a day" as they say), and you may understand things a little differently.We can be better than that.
We've both walked a few rotten miles then, BUT, (there's always a "but"), not in each others shoes have we(?)I have walked many a rotten mile within and without my own shoes to have learned to let things go. Just walk away and keep walking.
Confuscion thinking?BUT, we share the human experience and I have learned that striking back is never the correct path.
I don't think you understood my post.I think there is a lot in what you say, and striking back may do as you say. Some fathers do nonetheless choose to shun those who have shunned them, and I'd say its unfortunate, but in the situation I've faced and not done till now, (twenty five years on from being forced out and failed due to lack of support), maybe I'm the fool(?).
Some do manage to act as you suggest I'd guess, (in fact I've met those who have come through the family law system, overcome the difficulties etc., and some even attended meetings and protests about family law with their now grown up children they've got together with again).
However the role of parent you're putting forward isn't the "loving role" some of us choose for ourselves and our child, even should it be doomed to fail if not supported by those in authority, and "social norms" mean your freedom to behave as you see fit isn't supported either, (I accept those doing as you suggest may be loving in their own way though).
No I'm not, though even if I were I would still demand to be the kind of parent I believe I should be, (once again refer to the last placard I posted about a parent having failed if your child hasn't told you "they hate you" at least once!).I don't think you understood my post.
I quoted what you wrote
Wanting to strike back sounds to me like you may be the root cause of the hostility you post about your daughter 's attitude towards you.
I do appreciate your post and your thinking to, and having said that, (whilst disagreeing obviously in some ways, I think it is churlish to complain when you've laid out what is in your heart), I must just say you cannot say "NO" to your heredity completely, the DNA you've had passed to you by both your parents, and as is known by those who study these things, the recessive genes only finding expression in your grandparents may come to the fore in the child. Without getting too deep, inheritable diseases cannot be denied simply because someone asserts, "I'm not your child", or "You're not my real father", (two statements my daughter never made btw, and she still uses her maiden name in her professional life, which I assume means she has some pride in it!).Life is short.
We’re living our second half of it, or maybe our last quarter.
Our children are only on loan to us.
Each person in our relationship at any juncture of our life is only temporary.
They can leave us in many ways; by divorce, disown, death...
We gave our all, our best because at that point of time, that was correct to us. We would not feel comfortable doing it any other way. So we need to realize that it was our choice to give... and give...
I may be wrong, perhaps you’re thinking “what do I get after all I’ve done...”
Nothing.
We cannot expect anything in return. Technically speaking.
We chose to give.
They can choose not to give.
There may be laws governing that, but even if they gave because it’s lawful, I believe the heart is unhappy.
The life, starting today...
Do I want to be happy?
What is my baggage?
Is it possible to discard?
What can I do by myself, for myself to achieve a happy state of mind?
If you can’t walk away physically..
You can do that in your mind, create a distance...
You need to have the courage to let it go, it’s for your own good. No one can help remove your baggage.
We can only suggest..., Love
Do your daughter a favor, if you're able. Shun her back. She either needs the rest or hasn't noticed.I want to point out twenty five years of essentially putting up with being shunned, trying to be tolerant and understand my child, I'm now "moving on" to at least a different approach by suggesting I might shun her back, should the opportunity arise!![]()
Fathers' rights campaigners question the assumption that it can ever be legitimate for the state to collude in disrupting a loving and natural relationship between a father and his children. Bob Geldof has written evocatively on this subject:The law must know it is contributing to the problem. It is creating vast wells of misery, massive discontent, an unstable society of feral children and reckless adolescents who have no understanding of authority or ultimate sanction, no knowledge of a man’s love and how it is different but equal to a woman’s, irresponsible mothers, drifting, hopeless fathers, problem and violent ill-educated sons and daughters, a disconnect from the extended family and society at large, vast swathes of cynicism and repeat pattern behaviour in subsequent adult relationships.
I cannot even say the words. A huge emptiness would well in my stomach, a deep loathing for those who would deign to tell me they would ALLOW me ACCESS to my children — those I loved above all, those I created, those who gave meaning to everything I did, those that were the very best of us two and the absolute physical manifestation of our once blinding love. Who the f**k are they that they should ALLOW anything? REASONABLE CONTACT!!! Is the law mad? Am I a criminal? An ABSENT parent. A RESIDENT/NON-RESIDENT parent. This Lawspeak which you all speak so fluently, so unthinkingly, so hurtfully, must go.
See Bob Geldof's views just posted to give your some idea "mate", (you wont believe who used to call me "mate", the man my ex ran off with, "are you related perhaps"?).What is really the problem mate? You don't seem to be getting on top of this situation.
See Bob Geldof's views just posted to give your some idea "mate", (you wont believe who used to call me "mate", the man my ex ran off with, "are you related perhaps"?).![]()
Thanks for the advice, whatever would I do without people who know absolutely nothing pitching in with their pithy comments!!Do your daughter a favor, if you're able. Shun her back. She either needs the rest or hasn't noticed.
No he's a four times married Englishman who gave up his son aged two years old when his first marriage failed for adoption by the mother (so he didn't have to pay towards him I'd perhaps fairly suggest).Is the man Aussie? Over here we call both male and female "mate" if we know them well and I feel I know you oh so well![]()
No he's a four times married Englishman who gave up his son aged two years old when his first marriage failed for adoption by the mother (so he didn't have to pay towards him I'd perhaps fairly suggest).
You know me you say, "how quaint"!![]()
Now, that's just childish.I'm now "moving on" to at least a different approach by suggesting I might shun her back, should the opportunity arise!![]()