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Thread: Single Parents

  1. #11
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    Probably. If my parents were still together it defiantly would have changed my family dynamic quite a bit. My parents divorced when I was 10 and my dad moved back to Canada. My dad left my mom with everything they had and he started over again.. my mom never really worked so she had to make money some how to support her family. She started selling real-estate and she was very good at it. Being an estate-agent she was working all the time so I was left on my own a lot of the time. I learned how to take care of myself and I became very independent at a young age. Coming to university I've discovered that people who have been babied and have had everything done for them don't have a clue. I thought people knew how to make basic meals, do laundry, clean.. most people don't even know how to use the washing machine, let alone sort their clothes.. If my parents had stayed together I would have been one of those kids. I love my both of my parents but them splitting up was probably the best thing they've ever done!
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  2. #12
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    my parents split up last september when i was 20, my mom left the day i moved out to uni, so for a year living away in kent everything was very much the same for me. except it was a very volatile breakup (my mom had an affair) and my dad got very depressed and tried to kill himself, so in the end i've come back from uni to look after my 9 year old sister.

    i definitely wish my parents were back together for selfish reasons, but i don't really. they had a terrible marriage, and my mom got out the only way she thought she could (which was wrong). i see my mom every weekday, she comes for 30mins - 1hr after my sister gets back from school, but she's not very involved with my life or my sisters anymore.

    the messy breakup made me question a lot of things. and from an adult prospective rather than the 5 year old watching daddy leave. it made me question love and relationships and i know my opinion on other people isn't right and i do think the breakup influenced those feelings.

  3. #13
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    If my parents split here are the two different senarios.

    With my mum, I can't predict the future. She can change at any time good or bad, you never know what she'll do. With my dad he's quite a straightforward person, we'd probably move back to Hong Kong too.

    I'd only care about one thing if they split that's my sister. Sounds harsh on my brother but I know he's the favourite to my mum so who gives a tosss.
    Last edited by Sharon; 14-09-2011 at 06:20 PM.
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  4. #14
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    Tbh, I'm glad my parents split up.
    My mom kicked my dad out january 2010, and I am just so glad. My dad was and still is a ****. He does everything for me, but I hate him. (Personal reasons). My mom hates my dad too. I'm only allowed to see him if it's nearby, and I'm definitely not allowed in his house. I think, if my mom and dad stayed together, it would have gotten worst, you know. But still, I'm glad they split up and if I could go back in time, I would make sure they had never gotten together in the first place.

  5. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by buttons View Post
    you must be taking the piss, you can not generalize like that at all. i don't ever recall wishing my parents would get back together, i was happy to be able to see them both and they have a much better relationship now they're seperated. what sort of world are you living in where parent's use the excuse that the child prefers two homes? that is the first time i've ever heard that and quite honestly it sounds made up.
    Because you have just used it because you have clearly been fed it, and believe it yourself. The idea that having two homes and 'still seeing' your parents (every few days at different times) is 'cool' or 'just fine' boggles the mind - it is not a good enviroment for a child to be brought up in and as I said earlier, its the typical excuse given by parents who have broken up purely for their own convenience.

    It is the truth and that is why it has been and always is met with such outrage in public life.

    Quote Originally Posted by buttons
    & you have to remember an 11 year old child whose parents seperate will have different views, experiences and behaviours to an 11 month old child
    or an 18 year old. broken homes are not always single parent families but many are from a mother and father who don't get along. there are 'troubled' kids from every sort of background and it's more to do with the relationship you have with your parent's than the absence of one. i'm actually getting kind of annoyed with your idea of a perfect family and how blessed you are to have had one. i may have seperated parents (when i was 11) but i haven't really missed out at all, at least i was taught the importance of family which clearly you haven't. the 2 parent's and kids family is NOT the 'best' type and never has been so get that idea out of your head. remember, father's haven't stuck around in the past and thats the way it'll probably always be.
    ..and I am getting annoyed by the idea that people such as yourself peddle, that somehow the traditional family does not matter or that children do not need it. If you look around the estates of this country at the broken homes, these arise purely based on the fact that divorce is so easy these days along with people putting themselves before their children. As for 'get that idea in your head' - no thank you and I reject that order, I think as I said earlier that the estates around this country coupled with the collapse in sexual discipline and discipline in general is a direct result that mainly comes from the collapse of the married family.

    Those who come from broken homes will be those most likely not to remain together as a traditional family unit when they are older, they will be less likely to make any committment to a girl they get pregnant and the child will grow up in a confusing enviroment with no solid mother figure or father figure. I have seen the results first hand in school and many of us have, the children who misbehave and who in general have problems are those who come from broken homes whether it be drugs, divorced parents, the missing Dad etc.

    I will keep on repeating it, that I am blessed to have a traditional family and I feel sorry for those who do not.

    Quote Originally Posted by buttons
    to answer the question and not get annoyed so early in the morning, i'm not sure how i would be different. i may not have such 'daddy syndrome' where i go for older guys to be treated like a dad should to their daughter but that could stem from always being spoiled my the elder males in my family. if anything it's made me stronger and maybe the reason why i'm less feminine but it's not a big deal. i still have a dad and he's happier with someone else and it's okay :S
    It is a good sign you are becoming annoyed, sexual revolutionaries always become upset when their idea is dared to be questioned (as I have here) because they think that it is now so universally accepted that no other opinions to it exist - it is by the state, and by the establishment while the rest of us pretend that divorce 'just happens' - but I am glad that when I have heard of divorce being spoken about around me personally, I still detect an element of 'thats bad' - which divorce is, it is a bad thing in almost all cases. I also think the fact you are examining yourself so closely and linking what relationships you like and so forth shows insecurity that many who have seperated parents feel. It is of course, an attempt to justify and to naturally defend the (usually) bad choices of their parents.

    Quote Originally Posted by buttons
    god how selfish of him to have a new gf n break up the family
    I don't know the merits of the divorce concerning your father, however it is true that many divorces [the breaking of the family] these days are simply undertaken for the convenience of the mother and the father. And that is selfish.
    Last edited by -:Undertaker:-; 14-09-2011 at 09:12 PM.


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  6. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by -:Undertaker:- View Post
    If you ask children of divorced or divorcing parents they will always say deep down that they would much rather Mummy and Daddy were back together. The usual excuse given by parents often divorcing for their own convenience is the 'Billy much prefers having two homes' - this is false, it is always used to justify to themselves [the parents] that their decision does not or did not affect their child/children.

    I have noticed throughout school that the majority of troublemakers, children with troubles in general have been from broken families. It is not a good outcome and shouldn't be viewed upon as such. I myself am blessed by a family, something so many miss out upon today often thanks to the selfishness of parents who break up families based upon convenience by putting themselves before the children. Of course there are families which break up for real reasons such as abuse and so forth, but in many cases this is not the case as I have explained above.

    I await the howls of outrage and yells from the cultural revolutionaries.
    I think your views (like so many times before) are complete ****e.
    I say ****e, as they're not worthy to wipe your arse with, they're actual body expulsion.

    I think for you would be correct if you had said most trouble makers are from under-privilaged families. This is a true statement - we all know and have seen the facts to corroborate this sad story. This is due to lack of social equality in which we could support the needy, ensure they grow as a person and to assist them and their families with repairing their social issues, such as drugs, drink and general abuse. That's an ideal, in 'Britain' that would cost an un-told amount so it'll never happen. With the concentrated rate of issues in council area's there's no way of controlling that.

    I think you'll often find if anything, most single parent families live quite well because either the single parent over-compensates for the lack of another parent or both parents give MORE to their children (in the sense of attention, monetary, time).

    I think you're being greatly unfair, especially with your own issues in which YOU should address. If we're mostly the issues in schools then what the **** happened in your childhood to affect you so much?
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  7. #17
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    I never had any contact with my dad and I really don't know how much different my life would've been if he was involved in my life. My dad died coming up to 2 years ago now and after having no contact with him since a few months after I was born I was told by many people that he always said that he wanted to get in contact with me and be involved in my life, why he didn't I have no idea! I was in regular contact with my Grandad (his dad) who knew my address and contact details so my Dad didn't really have any excuse to not get in contact with me.

    I don't think my life would've been that much different, I've always lived with my mum and my gran, I guess when I was younger it would've been nice to have my mum around for stuff like my first day at school and just silly things like that but as we lived on our own she was always too busy out working multiple jobs to get money to get nice things and stuff that we needed! I guess if he was still around then they could've both have had some decent jobs but still had time to spend with me :p I don't think I'd really change anything about the way I was brought up with just my mum yeah I made many, many, many mistakes but I wouldn't blame that on the fact that I didn't have a father figure in my life. Infact I don't know if my father did get in contact with me if I would bother to want to get involved with him but that may just be some resent towards the fact that he left in the first place :p

  8. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by Casanova View Post
    I think your views (like so many times before) are complete ****e.
    I say ****e, as they're not worthy to wipe your arse with, they're actual body expulsion.

    I think for you would be correct if you had said most trouble makers are from under-privilaged families. This is a true statement - we all know and have seen the facts to corroborate this sad story. This is due to lack of social equality in which we could support the needy, ensure they grow as a person and to assist them and their families with repairing their social issues, such as drugs, drink and general abuse. That's an ideal, in 'Britain' that would cost an un-told amount so it'll never happen. With the concentrated rate of issues in council area's there's no way of controlling that.
    So in other words, replace the family with the state?

    We have already done this and it has failed.


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  9. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by -:Undertaker:- View Post
    So in other words, replace the family with the state?

    We have already done this and it has failed.
    Personally, I think your parents need jailing for the 'successful' job they done.

    I don't mean replace, I mean support. Don't twist what I said.
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  10. #20
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    My dad died when i was 2, it hasnt effected me in anyway. I didnt know him tbh, and my mum has been the best she can be. I've always had what i wanted ect ect.


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