Hartford Courant

What to do when a co-parent won’t cooperate

- By Jann Blackstone Tribune News Service

Q. It’s a new year and I’d really like to put my best foot forward with my co-parent. This Christmas, my holiday backed up to her weekend and we had to return my son to her the day after Christmas just to sleep, only to return to my home in the morning. To eliminate all the backand-forth, I proposed he stay with me and that we lengthen the time with her when he returned, but she wouldn’t even consider it. It was an automatic no. It always is. What’s good ex-etiquette?

A. I find many co-parents are so used to saying no that they don’t even listen to the rationale when a change is proposed. “No!” comes out of their mouth and that’s it. And you can bet if that happens, that parent has not weighed what is best for the child. They are either concerned about things like revenge or fear that the child might like the other parent’s home more, or who has more time, not what’s easier on the child.

Here’s the thing to remember: It’s not your time with your child. It’s not the other parent’s time. It’s the child’s time with both of you. Your child is only one little person who is trying to split his life between the two people he loves. You can make his life easier or make it more difficult.

In the co-parenting classes I teach, we practice saying yes. In the

Yes Exercise, someone requests a change. Before a parent answers, they are instructed to ask themselves, “Is this for me or for my child?” And then we explore the answer. If it’s a legitimate “no,” why? That way the parent making the request can hear the parent’s rationale to saying no.

The more you say yes, the more inclined your co-parent is to say yes. You know how discouragi­ng it is to have every request for a change denied. Set precedent. Make sure when a request is made of you, you don’t say no just because.

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