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Wedding Woes

Be there for her

Dear Prudence,

I am heartbroken. I struggled to stay in my goddaughter’s life since her mom, my best friend, died five years ago. I live on the opposite coast, but have visited every year of her life, given her gifts, talked to her on the phone, and have tried my best to treat her as my own blood.

She had her daughter last year. I was at the birth and bought her the car to take the baby home. This was the result of my downsizing and selling some family property. Unfortunately, her boyfriend just sees dollar signs now.

He has two other children by two other women and talks a big game about being such a great dad, but the reality is that he games and vapes while dumping his kids on my goddaughter. She has called me in tears about being sleep-deprived with the baby, only to have his kids destroying the house and screaming that they want DoorDash, and being called names when she yelled at them for waking up the baby. She can’t say boo to these kids without their father and their moms calling her the wicked witch.

My goddaughter was the one who signed them up to get free winter coats and Christmas gifts this year. The actual parents couldn’t bother. I can’t travel much anymore due to my health, but I saved to buy a plane ticket for my goddaughter to visit me with the baby. Her boyfriend caught wind of this and threw a fit about what I have never done or given his kids anything ever. I have never met them. I met him at the birth of my great-goddaughter. They were only casually together the last time that I visited before the birth. We were going to see each other after the holidays.

I told my goddaughter that the money was already spent. She works full-time, has a baby, and her boyfriend can’t be seen to pay for crap. She told me that unless I treated all the kids “equally,” she didn’t want me in her life. After she hung up, I cried myself to sleep. I don’t know what to do here. My goddaughter has some aunts that she rarely sees, and I don’t know who to get in touch with. Her father left when she was 3. I have a spare room and would be willing to take her and the baby in, but we live so far away. What should I do?

Re: Be there for her

  • Continue to be there for her.  Eventually and hopefully she will come around and decide that it's better to be a single mother than with this guy.

    Or he's going to be a real jerk and cheat on her.  But she's likely young and not understanding of her self worth while being in a relationship where this guy is convincing her to parent his kids. 
  • This, without knowing more context, sounds like isolating behavior from this dude with a track record.  Just be there for her as much as you can and be open to communication that happen.  Until she's unwilling to bear any more abuse, you can't do too much that won't drive her away.
  • Be there; tell her you are there for her and love and care for her. In DV research & work one of the key factors in helping survivors get out and stay out is centering their choices and autonomy- it doesn’t mean you have to live, accept, or understand what they do, but if their lives are being restricted by an abuser they need to feel like they have and can make their own choices. A key piece is knowing they have options outside of the abuse- try to be that for her as much as you can. 
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