The Mercury News

Family not restrained by order

- Ask Amy Amy Dickinson Contact Amy Dickinson via email, askamy@ amydickins­on.com.

DEAR AMY >> I am a 32-year-old mother of three. I have a restrainin­g order against their father after years of emotional and physical abuse endured by myself and my children. I was stuck in the vicious cycle of abuse for a long time.

He has had no contact with us for over two years.

My ex's mother (my children's “grandmothe­r”) recently tried to contact my daughter via text, sending her photos of her father and the father's new girlfriend, along with their daughter (she is the same age as my youngest son, so his current girlfriend and I were pregnant at the same time).

I have access to see these text messages and pictures before my daughter does and am curious about your take on whether I should delete them/block their numbers, or allow my 8-year-old daughter to decide for herself.

I don't trust anyone in their family and never received any acknowledg­ment of the tremendous amount of pain and suffering her son caused me and my children.

— Mama Bear

DEAR MAMA BEAR >> These family members are not likely to apologize for the actions of your abuser.

If they want to try to forge a relationsh­ip with your children, however, they need to understand that you are the gatekeeper.

I can't speak to the intent, but based on what you report, it sounds as if your ex or his mother might be using her ability to send text messages to your daughter as a “workaround,” which could violate the valid restrainin­g order you have against her son.

You should double-check the language on the court order.

Your child should not be receiving text messages from anyone without you seeing the message first. (I assume these may be coming in over a tablet device.)

Regardless of the status of the restrainin­g order, if you don't want your children to have contact with your ex's family, then it is within your rights to deny that contact across the board. For now, I suggest that you block this contact, given that it was uninvited and inappropri­ate.

If this grandmothe­r wants to contact any of your children, she will have to go through you. She likely knows this (she's a mother, after all), and this was a little test — which you have passed. Congratula­tions.

DEAR AMY >> “Fed Up” had asked repeatedly for his child's church group to leave him off of group texts, and though the leaders comply, they continue to readd his number every couple of weeks.

My solution, though probably not nice, is to tell the leaders that in the future he will add lewd pics and remarks if the practice continues.

This ought to solve the problem, but I'm not sure other parents would appreciate their kids dealing with that.

— S

DEAR S >> That is a genuinely terrible idea, for many reasons. Sending lewd pictures to children is both morally wrong — and illegal.

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