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Dear Dr. Sylvia,
I
have been the residential custodian of my 15-year-old son
since he was born. During that time, his father has maintained
a responsible and regular presence in his life with weekly
visits, weekend sleepovers, and vacations. During the past
four years, however, the day-to-day responsibilities of raising
my son became more difficult. He was diagnosed with ADHD and
a learning disability in fifth grade, and trying to find the
right combination of medication and behavior modification
combined with pre-adolescent hormonal changes took its toll
on both of us.
His dad, though wanting the best for his
son, was really unable to contribute to the day-to-day activities
because he simply was not present daily. Consequently, he
did not have to deal with perpetual lateness, homework battles,
sports events, and so on. By the end of our son's eighth-grade
year, I had reached an emotionally exhausted state. In anger
and frustration, I told both my son and his father that during
the high school years they would have to live with each other
because I could not take it any longer. Of course, much turmoil
occurred during the next several weeks, but my son ended up
moving in with his dad.
High school has been a blessing for my son,
and he is thriving. The problem is he would like to live a
week with his dad and a week with me. Since his father and
I are almost equally distant from his school, I think it is
a great idea and at least worth a try. His father is against
it, saying it would not be healthy for our son and would provide
no consistency for him. His dad has several evening meetings
during the week, so it's not as if he would be "missing
him."
Our son is bright, articulate, and gets
along well with adults and children alike. Having had the
summer to regroup and the stress of his eighth grade behind
me, I am much more relaxed and enjoying him more. He would
like to see if an alternate-week arrangement could work, and
I would love to have that happen as I do miss his daily presence
in my life, as does his brother. Do you think that at his
age his wishes should respected? Is there research that indicates
that alternate weeks would not be beneficial or in his best
interests?
-- Torn Parent --
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