In the divorce biz, we used to call it "disneyland dad".
Today, I'd say it's "Disneyland parent" bc moms are equally capable of this kind of no boundary parenting.
Kids are smarter than we often give them credit for.
Eventually, they figure out who is the stable one, who provides unconditional LOVE within their BOUNDARIES.
In the meantime, it hurts. It SUCKS. As a BS, it can feel like a whole new violation, more disrespect on top of the mountain of disrespect that prompted the M/relationship to end.
My suggestion is to do what you can to manage those feelings (eg anger, frustration, etc) you carry WRT your ex and his parenting. Kids can sense it, even if you aren't necessarily saying anything. And kids are REALLY good at playing parents against each other to get what they want (as a child of divorce, I was a master at that game).
So - have your parenting boundaries in place. Yes, they DO have to do their homework. No, you aren't going to 6 Flags today bc we can't afford that (and there is NO shame in not having the $ to do the expensive stuff). BUT, we can go to the park, or hiking, or on a bike ride, etc.
When my BFF got divorced, she had 3 young ones, born w/in 18 months of each other (one set of twins). And was broke as a joke. They would bike ride to the park or the library or whatever was FREE. I can still see her like a mamma duck with those kids. They explored all they could in their city, while she watched & pinched her pennies.
Those kids are really great kids. Their "disneyland dad" doesn't have much of a role in their lives (BFF told me the other day that one of her kids sent him a text saying "happy father's day". no card. no gift. no call.). Why? Because that kind of disneyland parenting is not about the kids..... it's an ego stroke for the parent w/o boundaries. It's a way of screaming "love me, love me, love me"... and a way to try and "one up" the other parent. Usually, the boundary-free parent will eventually move on to something else, leaving the kids confused and feeling cast aside (and when that parent is a WS? They are in the business of casting aside humans that don't serve their black hole of emotional neediness, so it feels perfectly comfortable to them - they've shown the level to which they are capable of that kind of behavior).
And trust me - you ABSOLUTELY matter. This is not really "about" you at all.... these are CHILDREN, who are selfish by nature until they learn otherwise, and you can be the parent that helps them learn otherwise, that supports them, etc.
There's a brene brown audio that I just love called "the power of vulnerability" which I got via my local library on Hoopla. It's about 6-8 hours of taped speaking engagements, that synthesizes a lot of Brown's major themes (and iI don't think it's the same as what you'd find on YouTube). It has some really good segments about parenting that REALLY resonated for me (in a "damn I wish I'd heard that when my kids were young" kind of way). I highly recommend it (and bonus! Still has a lot of the healing stuff from Brown that IMHO helps all of us BS navigate the shit show that our lives can become post dday).
Sending hugs to you Perdita1... kids are tricky and they will challenge a lot of our "stuff"... they are excellent at figuring out what our buttons are and pushing them -hard! And... we can see those challenges as opportunities to learn and grow and (bonus) help them do the same.
[This message edited by gmc94 at 11:08 AM, July 3rd, 2021 (Saturday)]