I CAN confidently say that their lives won't be ruined and that they won't carry 'a lifetime of pain' like their mom or some of us. Yes, i am confident.
By saying 'go sour', I should have been more specific. I meant, the situation could go sour, resulting in something that, yes, could cause pain for a lifetime. You don't know the child. We are arguing hypothetically - but unless you have a working crystal ball, you just cannot know.
I'm sure she won't take her children into a dangerous situation, she'll figure it out.
Absolutely agree.
'However it is handled, there needs to be some handling'. Wow.
Yes, in response to your:
Ghost you would be in no way 'betraying your children' or forsaking them for goodness sake. Your kid won't become attached in a short time, especially if she knows he won't be around. Children are smarter than that. Ask a therapist. Your younger one is beyond that level already.
Which reads to me like 'the kid will be fine, don't worry about how she deals with it'.
I just think I got a nerve pushed, to be honest. I met my uncle once. I was ten. I knew he existed, I knew we didn't talk about him. He came over to our house and spent the afternoon. We were all supposed to interact with him, it was strange, he was strange, and then it was over. Something pretty unexpected happened a few days later and he was gone, off the map, never to be seen again. He had a psychotic break, he was institutionalized, eventually he was released (after about 20 years), and now he lives (if he's still alive) somewhere off the grid up north.
What we were told? "Your uncle B was really depressed, and it made him go crazy". My parents were not the sharpest tools in the shed, I don't know if they knew exactly how depressed I was, even at that age. But I ended up with a real solid reason to never put the word 'depression' next to my name, ever. And those thoughts we form as kids, they can stick. I can vouch for that.
I cry, sitting here writing about it. Yep, it's painful. Is it the worst pain I've felt in my life? No. Do I have the capacity to process it and move on? Surely - there are just bigger things I'm trying to manage right now. Do I wish I'd never met him? Yes. I'm glad my father got to see his brother, I am glad of that.
Is Ghosty's child identical to me? No. Is the situation identical? No. But in this case, personally, I believe it's totally appropriate for Ghosty to be considering her child's needs as greater than the needs of her father. And it might be good for her child to meet him, how the heck do I know? I don't.
That's all.