Kids Who Are Unhappy About Visitation
It’s something I heard time and time again from custodial parents who were back in family court for modification of their custody orders. “My son hates going on visitation. He gets upset days in advance. Sometimes I have to force him to go. I think we need to stop visitation.” This is a very common scenario and if your child has never once complained about going on scheduled visitation, then you are in a rare minority.
What Kids Really Hate
Most kids don’t hate the other parent. They hate the upheaval in their lives and they express it by complaining about going on visitation. At times they make it sound like the other parent is what they don’t like. “Dad ignores me. His house is boring.” “Mom makes me go to bed early. I hate it there.” Again, what the child is reacting to is the situation. Kids who live in one home with both parents have gripes about their parents, but it doesn’t mean those parents are bad parents who don’t deserve to spend time with the kids!
Don’t Insert Yourself into the Situation
In most divorces, there are some bad feelings, even years later. There’s nothing wrong with admitting that it might make you feel just the tiniest bit happy if your child is mad at, annoyed at, bored with, or frustrated with the other parent. It’s just what your ex might deserve in your mind if you let yourself admit it. That doesn’t mean you can encourage, support, or even allow your child’s reaction to go on. Your child needs two parents. Neither of you are perfect and your child gets fed up with each of you, but you’re both still going to be in his life. If you haven’t accepted that, it’s time to do so.
Don’t Be the Bad Guy
One thing that is particularly hard when you are the custodial parent is having to shoehorn your kid out the door to go on visitation when honestly you would be perfectly happy if your child didn’t have to go (you wouldn’t have to have those arguments about vacation schedules or put up with your ex being late or trying to change things at the last minute). It’s not fun to be the one forcing your kid to go when he tells you he doesn’t want to. The solution to this is actually quite simple. Tell your child it’s not up to you. The judge has decided this is the schedule and all of you have to follow it. There are no other options. You no longer have to be the bad guy and your child feels like there is a higher power that controls the situation.
How to Improve the Mood
Even if you’re able to reconcile yourself to visitation and remove yourself from the enforcer role, it still is no fun to listen to whining or complaining. Try these tips for making the transition easier:
– When your child comes home, ask him to tell you one fun thing he did.
– Smile when you hand off your child. Your mood is infectious. If you act like this is a great and happy occasion, it will rub off.
– Institute a no whining rule. Tell your child there will be no complaining about going on visitation.
– Make it clear that your child cannot cancel or postpone the planned parenting time. Often whining is an attempt to see if you’ll let the child off the hook. If changing the plans is not an option, there will be fewer complaints.
– If your child has complaints about what happens at the other parents’ house, tell her that that is something to discuss with the other parent, not with you.
I fortunately have not had to deal with this problem directly, but I have grandchildren who are affected. I worry about my teen grand daughter who is perennially “too busy” to see her father, even though she adores him. He leaves it up to her, but it seems to me that waiting for a teen to initiate action is a losing game. It does get to be a whole new thing with teens, doesn’t it?
Yes, it’s a very tricky area. One thing I always tell parents is they must convey to teens that they have to comply with the judge’s order. Once you give a teen some leeway, they take more than you offer. Teens need BOTH parents, even if they think they don’t. It’s really a critical point in their lives and they need to continue a relationship with both.