Parents

/

Home & Leisure

Ex-etiquette: Importance of trust

Jann Blackstone, Tribune News Service on

Published in Family Living

Q. I don’t trust my child’s father. He says one thing and does another—all the time. I get to the point where I think maybe, just maybe, I can trust him and then he pulls something that makes me furious. Most recently I found out he is taping when we exchange the kids to use against me at some point, but last week he was telling our co-parenting coach how much he appreciated my honesty. It’s maddening. What’s good ex-etiquette?

A. Good co-parenting is based on trust. Actually, just about every ongoing relationship is rooted in trust. If you can’t trust someone, you don’t want to continue the relationship. But when it comes to the custody of your child, you have a court order saying you must share your children’s time and negotiate any changes in good faith. You can’t tell anyone about their shenanigans because that’s badmouthing, and you are chastised for being on the defensive because that’s holding a grudge.

Meanwhile your kids are getting older by the second and watching how you both interact with the other person, who they love as much as they love you. And you ask yourself, how can that be? I’m honest, they aren’t. I put the kids first, they don’t.

If you are constantly at odds, odds are your co-parent feels exactly as you do. And most kids love both parents. They don’t want to figure out who is right and who is wrong. However, if you put them in that position, they may not love either of you less, but they may start to gravitate to the parent they can trust. Trust eventually becomes an issue for everyone.

If your kids see you treating their other parent as if you don’t trust them, that registers and it is likely that it will backfire.

 

So, how do you cope with a co-parent’s dishonesty? You must stop reacting. Stop allowing their behavior to control your responses. In other words, decide what is the correct action—not reaction—to a situation and then follow through.

For example, taping your exchanges is underhanded. It reeks of an ulterior motive. But now that you know, would you act any differently if you were being taped or not? If the answer is yes, check that. If the answer is no, all taping will do is prove that you are polite, accommodating and won’t take the bait when provoked. Using that as the criteria, it’s doubtful those tapes will ever be used against you. That strategy has backfired.

More importantly, it’s the mindset behind taping that I find troublesome. Good Ex-etiquette For Parents Rule No. 8, “Be honest and straight forward,” is a rule for a reason. Every conversation we have with our co-parent sets the stage for the next conversation. If it is rooted in honesty, you are putting your kids first and tapping into your higher self. That’s good ex-etiquette.


©2024 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

 

Comments

blog comments powered by Disqus

 

Related Channels

Focus on the Family

Focus on the Family

By Jim Daly
Georgia Garvey

Georgia Garvey

By Georgia Garvey
Lenore Skenazy

Lenore Skenazy

By Lenore Skenazy

Comics

RJ Matson Working it Out Randy Enos John Deering Zack Hill Scott Stantis