Top Three Turn-Offs About SOME Divorced Dads
September 1, 2009 by Amelia
Filed under Dating & Sex, From The Dating Trenches, delainemoore
Submitted by Delaine
On the heels of my positive article called Why I Like To Date Divorced Men, I now want to disclose the top three things that turn me off some divorced DADS. Please read that again - I said SOME divorced DADS. And no, this is not meant to undermine the positive stuff I said in my other piece.
Turn off #1: They bitch and complain about having to pay child support and/or alimony. There are very good reasons why the laws are the way they are and men are required to pay support. Do they always seem fair? No. Can it make life challenging, if not downright tough for awhile? Absolutely. But there are two sides to every story in divorce, and quite frankly, no matter how a man tries to convince me he’s been totally screwed over, I don’t buy it. He has financial obligations to his children – PERIOD. If he has to pay spousal, those are his responsibilities too. If the situation is truly THAT unjust, he should bring it before a judge. Otherwise, he needs to accept that this is the way it will be in the short term, stop complaining and MOVE ON.
I know it can be really hard to be a divorced dad – in many ways. And I know it sucks having to get up every single day, go off to work, deal with that stress, only to juggle parenting with doing laundry, exercising, cooking meals, and running errands. But that doesn’t abdicate you from your financial responsibilities. Nor does it give you free reign to devalue your ex and her life; who are you to put a dollar amount on her head? Why should you complain about paying her to validate the busyness of your life? Your personal happiness is not based solely on what’s in your wallet so stop acting like she took away your soul. I want to know that your spiritual evolution has surpassed the value you place upon your wallet.
Turn off #2: They sing the woes of being a ‘single dad’, when in fact, what they REALLY are is a ‘part-time dad.’ A single dad is a man who has half-custody or more of his children. He really understands what goes into being a parent and understands the challenges and complexities of his job. A man who sees his kids every other weekend or in any part-time capacity does not merit that single dad status. Whether he knows it not, his ex’s parenting responsibilities far supersede his and are deserving of respect. Chances are, he doesn’t even know what half of them are.
Turn off #3: Part-time dads who attempt to bow out of their scheduled time with their kids – and are self-righteous about it. Men who say their kids are important but don’t show it through actions don’t have their priorities straight. I find it shocking how many men religiously carve time to go to the gym or promptly attend business meetings, or participate in monthly golf tournaments, yet they are consistently late and/or cancelling when it comes to their scheduled time with their kids. I’m not saying it isn’t challenging at times. But in the end, we always make time for that which is truly important to us, so excuses become nothing more than lame-assed excuses very quickly. If a man wants to gripe and complain instead of tackling his new life challenges with intelligence, integrity and a sense of humour, sorry – I don’t play the violin; life is too short to listen to the non-stop whining.
Delaine – www.iamdivorcednotdead.com
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Stay away from my Ex-husband. You have just described him to a “t”. I know you and I have said this before but after that I am really starting to wonder if we didn’t divorce the exact same man. It was like I could have wrote that post… and many others that you have wrote… it was like you took the words right out of my mouth. Great post! Keep up the great work.
I agree with everything you’ve said here and I’ll also say that the majority of people who fit these descriptions were probably exactly this same way before the divorce. In fact, this was probably a HUGE deciding factor in the divorce. In-equities and immaturity become more obvious to outsiders after divorce involving children because one parent is no longer “covering” for the other. If both parents were active, involved and supportive (including financially supportive) pre-divorce, they typically stay that way post-divorce. People who fit your descriptions probably aren’t suffering some post-divorce hard times so much as finally showing their true colors to the world.
Creating new, individual after divorce requires that both parents pull up their socks and roll with the changes/challenges. Like it or not, we’re about to get a crash course in change and personal development!
So for me, for example, who has been a stay-at-home mom for eight years, I’ve had to work super hard to carve a new career for myself. I’m getting there – it requires a lot of me, and sometimes it just plain sucks. But you know what? I KEEP MOVING FORWARD. And with a smile on face most of the time.
My hope for part-time divorced dads is that they,too, can ‘extend themselves’ and rise up into wonderful, involved, competent parents. But for that to happen, they have to value the job and work away at it through all the growing pains; hey – parenting is hard work!
At some point we all have to stop griping about how much tougher we have it than our exes and just MOVE FORWARD!
Ouch. There are times it is best to just keep one’s mouth closed and walk on by. This would be one of those times for yours truly.
Barry – Where’s the fun in that????
Ahhh Barry…you know I wrote this article for CRAPPY part-time dads only. If I personally knew any crappy moms, I would write bitingly about them too, but again – I don’t know any. This whiney part-time dad syndrome, however, seems to be fairly widespread. And it’s just SO dull and old.
Ok. Since you insist
I will tread lightly. Statistics show that most single dads pay their support. Statistics also show that most single dads would like to have as much contact and involvement with their kids a possible. The courts should automatically start at 50/50 no questions asked unless special circumstances.
Every dad I know who is going or has gone through the process, seems to start behind the eight ball and seems to have to prove they deserve custody rights. Statistics also show that moms who are required to pay custody are worse than single dads. Of course I understands the number of single dads paying are much higher.
Single dads who are deadbeats get most of the press. After all, how much fun would a single moms website be if she raved about how wonderful her ex husband is
. Not many of those sites around because they are not vocal.
Having said that, if your ex’s are deadbeats, string’em up and let him drip dry! My experience is that dads love their kids and want to spend time with them.
The biggest problem I hear about child support is that there is no checks and balances. No way of knowing how the money is being spent. Even though the mom probably needs the money, it still is the toughest check to write to the Ex. If the dad knew the money was going directly to the children’s needs and not to a new outfit, it would be easier. I am not saying that is what happens! Moms need the money I get that. But just role reverse. You are sending a check to you ex husband and can’t pay your own bills because of the payment.
Please understand, I am not saying the men should not pay, just giving a little psych behind the issue. Throw in the anger, hurt, disgust, (add any adj) and the money thing ends up being nothing about the children. Also add in antagonistic words from each attorney, and you have a powder keg ready to explode.
I think single dads just get tired of being kicked around. Times are changing. Dads are involved.
If you go to my website you will see articles I have written about this subject. I am a huge supporter of single moms and what they do and endure. If you listen to the interview I had this past week I think you get that message as well.
Ok, I am rambling and probably am being escorted to the door
. You know I love you women here or I wouldn’t be stopping by.
Bottom line, pay the support and pay on time period. Never, ever use kids as pawns for money or visitation.
Your site is very entertaining and fun. Here I go now, slowly, couching and ducking, slithering out the back door.
Barry, I love hearing about the good guys! It helps balance out the stupidity of my ex
As Delaine said, we write what we know and in my case, unfortunately, that’s an ex who has never paid any child support (in two years of divorce), flakes out on attending kiddo functions at the last minute after promising to be there and takes the kids about 1/3 of the time allotted him in the divorce and then whines about how rough his life is. He’s only worked about 6 months out of those two years, so he has an excuse for the lack of child support, but any parent who can sit around all day doing nothing but drawing unemployment ought to be able to make it to Open House. However, he behaved the same way while we were married, hence (at least partly) the divorce. I honestly expected exactly what I’ve gotten and it does seem to be the norm in my particular little piece of the world. Maybe there’s something in the water here???
stereotypes exist for a reason.
Being on the other side of the stereotype is challenging.
Neither my ex or myself pay child support, but i pay school for our daughter and she pays half by sending me a check. It has bounced at least 2 or 3 times, i understand but i also see my ex with brand new shoes (not payless) and has been on vacation many more times than i have than I have (with the person she left our marriage for).
I have 50% custody and my daughter is with me in that time. There is no ducking of responsibility, that is my favorite time. I hate the single trying to find a date life, for me it is not fun
Being a parent is hard, being a single parent is more hard.
Barry – First let me commend you for speaking up! AND doing so with eloquence. The goal of this site is to have intelligent, civilized conversations and discussions, not name-call or viciously attack the opposite sex. My point is…we’re listening; not just going on the offence. This isn’t a war, and I actually really like you men:)
The one thing you wrote that stood out for me is how men paying support wish they knew the money was being spent on the kids. I have no idea how women could be held accountable for that, and in all honesty, I’m not sure they should be. Cause from my perspective, you can’t place a tangible dollar amount on all the love and attention and energy that a mom pours into her children when she has them full-time. And I think that’s more valuable than the $50 of support she spends on getting her hair done. Men need to understand that a woman often has to rely on child support to get by because all her extra energy goes into the kids, not work or personal time, like many men have the freedom to do.
You seem to know men who really understand what’s involved in being a great parent; I’m afraid I can’t say the same. I see and hear men who talk the talk, but the delivery isn’t there. That being said, I hope that will change.
Jason – I’m sorry at your cirumstances with your ex. I can sense the sadness and disillusionment you feel for being betrayed by your ex-wife. That she has bounced several cheques only pours salt in the wound.
The one thing I’ve definitely learned since I started writing online is that men bleed and hurt the same as women do when it comes to betrayal and abandonment. I know there are good men out there who are faithful, who do have their priorities straight when it comes to their kids, and my dating again has been inspired by my faith that such men exist. It IS tough trying to date again when you know what you want yet it hasn’t appeared. But I like to think of my marriage as my ‘warm-up’ – vitally important steps I had to take to help me come closer to finding real love.
i second that motion! lol. the first thing i ask men with kids is “do you pay your child support?” Then i ask “what did you contribute to the downfall of your relationship?” . those two questions and the WAY they are answered (tone, blame laying, etc, not just the answer itself) tells a LOT about a man. my ex is a shmuck, but that doesn’t mean i didn’t contribute ANYTHING to the downfall of the relationship.
to give you hope, i met one guy who actually paid enough child support for his ex to be a stay at home mom until the daughter was in school. and he never said a harsh word about his ex, only that she is a good mother. he even gave up custody because she lives in another town with the daughter’s siblings, and he travels there to visit her regularly, but thought it best the daughter not be separated from her siblings. now THAT is a MAN!
Jane, those two questions you ask are very tell-tale and I’m filing them away. It’s really about assessing if someone has moved on with digity and grace, isn’t it? How people handle the pitfalls and challenges of life says so very much about who they are.
actually, for me it’s whether they take responsibility for their actions. as well as the dignity and grace. and whether they put their children’s needs first, above anger, above wants, above inconvenience. and whether they shield their children from the inevitable BS that comes with separation.
Delaine, I completely agree that every divorced Father with shared custody has a financial obligation to pay child support as does a divorced Mother if the Father is the custodial parent and she was the primary breadwinner. The sticky part is determining the amount, and my gut feeling is in most cases the ex-spouse paying inevitably feels it’s too much and the ex on the receiveing end feels it’s not enough. The problem is that the support determination by the courts is largely a snapshot of the current financial landscape and is based on the assumption that the financial statement will not change drastically for either party. But things do change. Problem: Is it worth it to drop a $2000-plus retainer for an attorney on both sides of the coin because as things have changed over time now one party is either overpaying by, let’s say, $90-120 a month, or the other party is being underpaid by some similar amount? i vote no – it just doesn’t make sense, and that’s making a big assumption that any divorced parent has an extra couple of grand just lying around for a retainer anyway. Someone will grumble under their breath but take the 4 grand and put it in a college fund in that case and move forward. I think good Dad’s will also pitch in for the unexpected major expenses that come up.
Jane: I think many fathers act with the intention to maintain dignity for their kids even at the expense of frequent indignity to themselves. It takes two to maintain a civilized environment for the benefit of the kids.
delaine, Thanks for the kind words. Divorce hurts, it hurts women and men and kids. You are right, I am still very hurt from my divorce, i dont really care about the bounced checks, but we are both struggling and to me it shows a bit what priorities are, and i am sure she has her side too.
I also read your post about dating divorced men, so I know you are not being completely negative in this post. Even this posts’ title is ‘SOME’ dads and it is fair.
Jane, Do you ask on a first date if a man pays child support and what they contributed to the downfall of the marriage? Really, those are the first two questions? I cannot imagine how this can be fun or make anyone comfortable or happy on a first or second date.
Shouldnt dating be fun? see cathy’s post: http://divorcedwomenonline.com/2009/09/divorced-womens-dating-styles/
I think this post applies to women and men, divorced or not. Nice post cathy.
Statistically, there are higher percentages of “deadbeat” moms than dads.
And if women really wanted equality, women’s groups in America wouldn’t repeatedly vote against rebuttable joint custody bills that parenting groups have tried to get passed in various states time and again.
A single or part-time dad is someone who beat the odds – parenting is something women have as a right in a divorce. Men have to fight for it.
Jane, you are obviously a bad date.
How would you feel if your date asked you if you got off your ass and contributed financially to your household during your marriage, and then asked what you did to contribute to the downfall of your marriage?
That man is also a bad date.
Check, please – I’m outta here.
the whoel reason for the “jaded” issue is because time and time again, over decades of unfair judicial practices from the higher powers that be in the courts have raked the souls of good men and willing fathers over the hot coals. you become “broken”. Women by nature, are vindictive and often the tru values and needs of the kids get lost and paushed aside to make room for unwanted wars that women seem to want to bring on. Is thie “equality”,,,or being a good mom?
Oh gee another male bashing session from the hen house. I see none of these gals have brought up the fact that more women than men DON”T pay child support.Much less spend anytime with the kids. And we never hear about the millions of women who intentionally make it impossible to see their kids once she shacks up again. (Google Parental Alianation Syndrome).I’ve been thru it twice now.Any man who is considering marrying any woman in this country needs his head examined. Most guys have finally figured out its far safer to marry a gal that already has kids than to have kids of his own.Never again
You haven’t the slightest idea what you’re talking about. It is the plight of all fathers who divorce a spouse, regardless of the reasons, that they are penalized to years of poverty. Is it hard?? Absolutely! But It’s worth it in the end to be free of a marriage that is a sham. Most of the fathers I know, myself included, would LOVE to have more than the court ordered every other weekend with their kids. This pathetic less than balanced time ratio only serves to alienate children from their fathers. I would suggest to you that any man that bitches about having too much time with his kids is no man at all, let alone a real father, and is most definitely in the minority of divorced dads. All I can say to you is, you sure can Pick em Doll Face. I would strongly suggest to do a little more research next time you publish something.
Chuck, it is you who hasn’t they slightest idea what he is talking about. All fathers who are divorced are penalized to year of poverty?
If it is “poverty” my ex is living in, I’ll take poverty over how my children and I live any day.
And, if you only get every other weekend with your children you either didn’t ask for more or you had a bad attorney.
As far as Delaine and her research, experience is a pretty good teacher and like you, most of the men I used to date knew how to do two things well, bitch about the ex and complain about how much child support they paid.
Funny thing, I don’t remember any of them living in poverty though.