The Daily Courier

Readers weigh in on man’s plan to move away from children

- ELLIE TESHER

DEAR READERS: A Jan. 26 question from a man, separated a year, and considerin­g moving across the country to be with “the love of (his) life.” prompted strong responses.

His move would mean leaving behind his own three young sons, to live with this woman and her triplet daughters.

Reader No. 1 — “I’ve been in the exact same situation as that man, and moved far from my two-year-old daughter 16 years ago, for a “new” life.

“However, I cried every day, my “new” life crumbled, and I was back 89 days later.

“Thankfully, I had enough sense to get back home.

“I had immense personal growth and self-insight from the experience and am a better man for it today.

“But I lost the close bond with my daughter, and I’ve struggled to maintain what I got back.

“Love is not letting 5,000 kilometres hinder love from growing. And it’s the glue that makes life worth living. If it’s true love, a couple will make it work.

“But to leave your children, that love pales in comparison to the long-term devastatio­n to the child’s life.

“This man’s sons will have abandonmen­t issues for the rest of their lives and will never forgive him. He won’t be able to forgive himself.

“To this day I weep for the loss I felt. I won’t ever forgive myself for that.

“Nothing’s more important than being the best father he can be.

“That guy needs to wake up. Once he’s there, he’ll regret it for the rest of his life.

“Also, the amount of pressure on the new woman isn’t sustainabl­e. The immense loss his kids will feel is crushing. As you recommende­d, he needs counsellin­g to learn to cope with his current life.”

Reader No. 2 — “He’s “separated,” not divorced, and he’s already considerin­g a cross-country move for a woman he hasn’t know for very long.

“He should be finalizing his divorce before he makes a major commitment to a woman and her three kids.

“Then, if he thinks he can be full-time father figure to children who aren’t his, and part-time (at best) father to his own sons without causing a lot of resentment from them, he’s being naive.

“His children will see this as it really is, he’s choosing another person’s children over his own flesh and blood.

“Children know when they’ve been put on the backburner and are no longer a priority to a parent.

“What will he regret more — losing a woman he doesn’t really know well, or respect from his children?”

Reader No. 3 — “This father will be abandoning his children. They will not accept his decision. He will ruin their relationsh­ip, they will grow up without a father, and they will resent him.

“Furthermor­e, he’ll be leaving the everyday heavy-lifting to the mother, assuming that she’ll be able to handle everything, while he’s abdicating the responsibi­lities that he signed up for when he became a father.

“The burden of care will fall solely on her shoulders, and I can’t think of a more selfish act.

“This devastatin­g act of abandonmen­t will have far-reaching consequenc­es for those boys, who deserve their father.

“If he’s any kind of decent human being, he will stay near his children and be the father they deserve.

“At this point in their lives, THAT is what matters. Not his happiness. Their stability is the most important thing. Leaving would be the ultimate act of foolishnes­s and selfishnes­s.”

TIP OF THE DAY Don’t rush into a move that can ruin your relationsh­ip with your children. Think long and hard, get counsellin­g, put the children first.

Read Ellie Monday to Saturday in The Daily Courier.

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