To keep it short: my ex-wife cheated on me with this guy, we divorced, she married him immediately after. Since January we’ve been co-parenting, she has our son (14 years old) for 2 weeks & I have him for 2 weeks. Her now husband is wealthy, and for the winter holidays they plan on going to the Maldives for 3 weeks (I agreed to give up 1 week of my 2 weeks; gonna get +1 week with son after the vacation). Apparently son has been asking his mom and stepdad if I can come as well. So ex-wife calls me and asks me if I’d like to go, all expenses paid by them, just to be with our son and have some fun - and let’s “put all the bad blood behind”. I told her I’ll think about it, but honestly I don’t think I’d feel comfortable. At the same time going would make son extremely happy obviously. Idk.

  • FeelzGoodMan420@eviltoast.org
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    23 minutes ago

    I’m so sorry that you’re dealing with this situation. Unfortunately, no, I would not go. It’s not fair to you. I commend your dedication to your son but it would do too much damage to you than is worth it.

  • Cracks_InTheWalls@sh.itjust.works
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    1 hour ago

    My gut says fuck no. My brain says have a frank, balanced discussion with your kid and decide from there.

    I know my own answer would still be fuck no, but I don’t know you or your kid.

  • Hikermick@lemmy.world
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    15 minutes ago

    “for your kids sake” is the only part that should be relevant. This is for you to decide. If the answer is no that’s ok but you owe him an explanation. If the answer is yes you have it in you to make everyone else uncomfortable

  • sbf@feddit.org
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    55 minutes ago

    Don’t go. And if your son doesn’t know why you two divorced, tell him.

  • Lemminary@lemmy.world
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    1 hour ago

    I wouldn’t. If my ex-partner decided to have an affair without thinking of the consequences, I’m not obligated to do it in their stead. I’d be covering for their fuck up and become a welcome mat.

    Having said that, I’m a product of divorce and I knew from a very young age who fucked up and why. If my parent had told me at that age why I wouldn’t go, I would’ve understood. But then again, I’m not your kid.

  • TheReturnOfPEB@reddthat.com
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    4 hours ago

    You will be used as childcare repeatedly for their fun.

    And they will make you look like the bad guy in front of your kids if you flinch.

    Prepare for that.

    • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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      3 hours ago

      I’d kind of see that as a bonus. Some time to bond while on a nice vacation on someone else’s dime would be cool especially if it meant not having to deal with the ex and the new guy as much. Definitely don’t go if you’re not going to be civil with the ex and him though (which would be understandable given the circumstances). Ruining the trip for everyone else won’t gain anything other than possibly resentment from the kid.

    • Lumisal@lemmy.world
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      1 hour ago

      Childcare… Of his own son?..

      You know parents who, you know, love their children, actually want to spend time with them, right?

      • nomous@lemmy.world
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        46 minutes ago

        You know a whole lot of parents don’t love their kids and don’t want to spend time with them, right?

        I’d absolutely assume mom & new dad would have several romantic dinners and activites alone while bio-dad entertained his kid.

        edit; oh I see someone grew up in a loving household and assumes they’re all like that

        • Lumisal@lemmy.world
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          47 minutes ago

          I don’t think the guy would be pondering on here about going if he didn’t love his kid and didn’t want to spend time with him.

            • Lumisal@lemmy.world
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              31 minutes ago

              Even you were talking about the dad, why did the kid suffer because of the mom? He won’t be blind to their actions regardless

              • nomous@lemmy.world
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                18 minutes ago

                I didn’t say the kid suffered?

                It’s a shitty spot for bio-dad to be in. Kid may see it for what it is and may not. If I were the dad I simply wouldn’t put myself in that sitatution. They can go enjoy their vacation and I’d spend the time with my son after.

  • TempermentalAnomaly@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    I only saw one other comment talking about your son, so I’ll chime in.

    Make sure to hear your son’s voice. This is his way of trying to make a connection with you and maybe more. Hear him out and don’t reflexively respond. Spend time making sure he feels heard and loved. And whatever you decide, he’ll know that his connection with you is strong. I don’t know what level of processing you’ve done with him, but I can imagine it getting a little back burnered as you work through the betrayal and grief.

    • KammicRelief@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      Agreed, great answer. As a fellow parent, I know that connection with your kid is far more important than whatever “dignity” you’ll “lose” from going on the trip.
      He’s probably old enough (only you know, OP) for you to even talk about your discomfort with going, and to be open about your personal pros+cons of going. Who knows what he’ll say, but it sounds like a good conversation to have.

      • CandleTiger@programming.dev
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        2 hours ago

        Having your kids watch you lose your dignity is not going to make a good relationship.

        They are very attuned to that sort of thing. If they watch one parent allow and invite the other to trample on them the kids will also lose respect.

  • Track_Shovel@slrpnk.net
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    5 hours ago

    There is no way you should do this. Not only are you clearly having reservations to begin with, but you need to keep your dignity intact, too. The whole affair is just going to be rubbed in your face. You deserve better than that.

    While your ex may be coming from a ‘good place’ she shouldn’t have asked, out of respect.

    Your kid has feelings about the divorce but he’s going to have to adapt to this new reality that your ex chose for him. It is her fault he’s going to be disappointed, not yours.

    • meowMix2525@lemm.ee
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      2 hours ago

      I feel differently. I don’t know the ex or their partner of course but I see it as an olive branch. They share blood through their child together. They’re going to have to be around each other regardless of how things ended. The only person who loses with this grudge being held is the kid between them.

      I yield that I have never been in the position of loving someone and being betrayed like that. I know it evokes strong feelings and I’m not minimizing that, but it doesn’t really matter at this point whose fault it is or who chose what. None of these bad feelings will ever change what happened or who that person is. The only thing you can change is your own behavior in the future and to manage your own feelings and expectations with that person so it doesn’t happen again. Fool me once, fool me twice and all that.

      So I’m not saying you have to forgive and forget. I wouldn’t ever put the ex in a position of personal closeness or trust ever again. If that’s what this is to OP then 100% stay home. However, if I am correct in seeing this as a chance to acknowledge what happened, move on, and lower tensions between them for the kid’s sake, then I think it can be positive. It’s also a valuable lesson for the kid to show them the ideal way for an adult to behave after interpersonal conflict, how they as an adult should ideally work through tough feelings.

      It depends on the person though. If you can’t move past those feelings, if you can’t model the ideal, which would be completely understandable, then the best thing is probably not to go. Work together with the kid to help them understand the situation. Might be time for a heart to heart with them and to let them in on the feelings you’ve been dealing with so they can fully understand what’s keeping you from going.

    • iheartneopets@lemm.ee
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      4 hours ago

      This comment really just hits every nail on the head for me. It could be that the ex is feeling bad for what happened, but wants to divert the blame/bad feelings onto OP.

      It’s also rich to me when the cheating partner is ready to “put all the bad blood behind them” as if they don’t want to live in the stink of what they did any more. They’re happy now, why can’t you also be happy with them? Etc etc. As if they didn’t blow up everyone’s life with their choices.

      • moody@lemmings.world
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        4 hours ago

        One downside here is the kid is going to be told, at least as far as he can understand it, that daddy didn’t want to go. And the kid, not understanding the nuance of the situation, won’t understand that it’s because mommy fucked up their relationship.

        If it were me, I’d go and do my best to enjoy the trip. Babysitting duty doesn’t sound so bad when it’s your own kid and you get to share travel experiences with them.

      • Track_Shovel@slrpnk.net
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        4 hours ago

        I lived through this one, as a kid. It sucks all around. I’m now older than my parents when they split, and have an assload of insight into the matter. I carefully watched the whole thing unfold over 25 years, before I was out of the ordeal, living on my own, and away from watching the two people I cared about most be nothing but complete shitbags to one another.

        They’re happy now, why can’t you also be happy with them?

        Oh how wonderful, maybe at one point they can sit around the campfire, eat smores, and sing kumbaya

  • magnetosphere@fedia.io
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    5 hours ago

    Would your ex go if the situation was reversed? Would she be willing to “put all the bad blood behind”? Not if she had any self respect. Frankly, I think just asking you is an insult in itself. It puts the onus on you to be the “bad guy”.

    Your feelings are completely valid. Your son is old enough to understand the basics. DO NOT GO. She’ll ask, but don’t bother explaining why. She lost her right to know your heart when she betrayed you.

  • Signtist@lemm.ee
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    7 hours ago

    Sounds to me like the kid is also having some feelings surrounding the breakup and subsequent remarriage that aren’t being addressed. Why does he want you to come too? Is he hoping it might bring you and his mom back together? Does he feel uncomfortable around the new stepdad, and wants you around because he’s more comfortable when you’re around? I think if you have a conversation with him as to why he’s asking for you to come too, it might influence how you approach the situation, or at least give you a better way to explain why you can’t come due to your own reasons.

    I know this is a difficult decision on your part for how it affects you, but your son is also in a very vulnerable position right now, and needs both of his parents paying attention to him and the feelings he’s having, even if he doesn’t know how to express them directly. My parents broke up suddenly due to cheating when I was around the same age, and it was a traumatic time in my life because my parents both assumed I was old enough to “get it.” I wasn’t. Family is one of the main sources of stability in a young person’s life, and to have it fall out from beneath you isn’t something you get over on your own very easily.

  • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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    5 hours ago

    They offered to pay on the gamble you’d say no and look like the bad guy to your kid.

    If you go, arrange for it to be just you and your kid, for YOUR week, then fly home