Well, that was an experience! Thank you for your warmth and encouragement -- when the girls came home yesterday, I was able to initiate a tough discussion with a positive calm, rather than enveloped in the negative energy that I'd had earlier in the week.
I just opened by saying that I was concerned about my little one's reaction to being late for her dad, and wondered if he said things to them that made them feel badly. Such a flood that came out! Keeping in mind that they are kids/teenagers and they will naturally feel hard done by by their parents, the opportunity and the permission to let it all out has changed our relationship. I'd hoped that they knew this before now, but this discussion confirmed for them that I won't be hurt or upset if they tell me things that their dad has said, and more importantly I think, that I'm not going to turn around and repeat it to their dad or get angry with him.
Thankfully, nothing really serious is happening that I hadn't already noticed and addressed, or that they hadn't already seen for what it was. You know, he's a sad and petty bully who doesn't deserve these children. He's just entered a new relationship -- the first, really, since we split -- and, where he doted on the girls and clung to them as the only thing that made life worth living for him, they now feel like inconvenient nuisances. There was some argument a few days ago, and my eldest said that she wanted to go home to me, and he told her that he'd be more than happy to accommodate but that I didn't want her back until Sunday -- that I wouldn't allow her to come home! Does he have no sense of how a child would feel, to believe that neither parent wanted her?
I [i]am[/i] a great mom, and thank you for helping me with my perspective and problem-solving. We talked serious stuff -- that they felt that he doesn't love them as much now that he has a girlfriend, and I pointed out that he's just paying less attention to them and that he still loves them as much as ever. We *****ed a bit -- he bought the girlfriend jewellery from Tiffany's (What! He never bought [i]me[/i] jewellery from Tiffany's, and I was married to him for 9 years!). We did some reality-testing -- "He called us rude and badly-behaved!" "Yeah, but we actually were rude and badly-behaved that time." And we laughed about different ways they could respond to him when he got unjustifiably angry with them, and which response would make him most apoplectic.
They're wonderful girls, and I'm so proud of them and relieved that they're ok. It probably helps that they have each other. He is such an ass, and I'm so glad that I'm out of that misery!