grahamg
Old codger
- Location
- South of Manchester, UK
I have two grandsons, and have seen just one of them just once, almost four years ago now.
I will never fight my own child, one daughter, through our English courts in order to get to see them, so will trust that one day she chooses to allow some contact or else accept that shall never happen (unless the lads grow up and become curious where some of their genes came from).
My reasons are that I have no faith in our English law (to start with), which now allows grandparents the right to apply through them for a contact order even where neither parent wishes it. If I had faith in it I would not allow the courts, and their court welfare officers or whoever might investigate every aspect, into my grandchildren's lives, and nor would I put my daughter through it.
I am frequently told on forums how things have changed in family law here, and all the many troubles of the past are behind us all (mostly I'm told this by members of another forum), but I've never believed it and never will. A recent example of how much things have not improved in my view is a widely publicised case here in England where a father actually "won" a contact order over his one son, but the legal fees he'd incurred ran to £200,000, and his ex.'s to £120,000. There was much hand wringing by the judge officiating, and comments such as the "courts would continue to do their best in the difficult/impossible cases presented to them, but in my view their actions do harm to all concerned too (obviously financially, but as the case rumbled on for ten years, emotional damage to everyone).
I no longer wish to hear from those telling me the system is fine as it is (albeit I know risks associated with child contact cases may make any better system impossible).
All I'm posting this thread for is that I wish to raise the issue of where all this leaves us. If children, or grandchildren have no relationship at all with one or more parent/grandparent, and this kind of treatment goes on affecting huge numbers of people, and the children themselves are not taught that treating loving parents or grandparents this way is shameful, then I believe society will suffer. Cut off from your own family, as a result of family breakdown has consequences for how I see the world, and I'd have thought everyone else. Where is the investment in creating a good future for your own grandchildren if you're not thought worth anyone's consideration (- let the world go to hell in a handcart is one thought if this is "okay")?
This isn't the way I think, but I cannot help but conclude family breakdowns of all kinds, creating people unconnected to anyone really will have serious implications (lest friends somehow connect you to a kind of support network).
I will never fight my own child, one daughter, through our English courts in order to get to see them, so will trust that one day she chooses to allow some contact or else accept that shall never happen (unless the lads grow up and become curious where some of their genes came from).
My reasons are that I have no faith in our English law (to start with), which now allows grandparents the right to apply through them for a contact order even where neither parent wishes it. If I had faith in it I would not allow the courts, and their court welfare officers or whoever might investigate every aspect, into my grandchildren's lives, and nor would I put my daughter through it.
I am frequently told on forums how things have changed in family law here, and all the many troubles of the past are behind us all (mostly I'm told this by members of another forum), but I've never believed it and never will. A recent example of how much things have not improved in my view is a widely publicised case here in England where a father actually "won" a contact order over his one son, but the legal fees he'd incurred ran to £200,000, and his ex.'s to £120,000. There was much hand wringing by the judge officiating, and comments such as the "courts would continue to do their best in the difficult/impossible cases presented to them, but in my view their actions do harm to all concerned too (obviously financially, but as the case rumbled on for ten years, emotional damage to everyone).
I no longer wish to hear from those telling me the system is fine as it is (albeit I know risks associated with child contact cases may make any better system impossible).
All I'm posting this thread for is that I wish to raise the issue of where all this leaves us. If children, or grandchildren have no relationship at all with one or more parent/grandparent, and this kind of treatment goes on affecting huge numbers of people, and the children themselves are not taught that treating loving parents or grandparents this way is shameful, then I believe society will suffer. Cut off from your own family, as a result of family breakdown has consequences for how I see the world, and I'd have thought everyone else. Where is the investment in creating a good future for your own grandchildren if you're not thought worth anyone's consideration (- let the world go to hell in a handcart is one thought if this is "okay")?
This isn't the way I think, but I cannot help but conclude family breakdowns of all kinds, creating people unconnected to anyone really will have serious implications (lest friends somehow connect you to a kind of support network).