i recently divorced my husband we had a very rough relationship and when we seperated he went a whole year not contacting his 6 year old daughter.
***I am sorry you are going through such a tough situation. Mine had some similarities to yours in that my children were very young when I divorced their father and the situation was nasty. We had a lot of arguments about visitation and I felt that what he wanted at the time was not reasonable or realistic. I empathize with you.
These past 6 months me and my bf has taken her 400 miles to see her father(i believe she needs her father).
****So you have clearly made a concerted effort to facilitate contact, which is probably more than you have to be doing, especially considering that he went a year without any contact with her.
The first visit he deceided to go get drunk and cut his visit short,second visit was supposed to be for one week it had its problems and we went and got her early.
****You don't say what the problems were, but it seems pretty clear that he is not able to sustain contact with her for any length of time. It also sounds like there are some real concerns about his judgment and stability.
I have sole custody and i deceide visits,he wants her this summer for atleast 2 weeks and she has expressed that she dont want to go(he has only called her 2 in 2 months).
***So he goes a year with no contact, then has a visit where he gets drunk and opts to cut the visit short, then has another visit where he (and perhaps your daughter) encounter problems and that visit is cut short, and now he thinks an unsupervised visit of at least two weeks is appropriate? The father does not sound like he is in touch with reality here. Given how the past visits have gone, I am not surprised your daughter doesn't want to see him. I do know that in most states courts will not allow the custodial parent to withhold visitation because the child "doesn't want to". On the other hand, most courts would take all the circumstances into consideration.
She wants to go to her grandmas for a week and visit him while there but hes fighting me on this he thinks if he goes back to court theyll make me give her to him for 2 weeks.Any advice or suggestions would be helpful.I dont want to force her to go but i dont want to take her from her father and i dont want this to go to court.
****OK, from my own experience as a divorced mother and as an attorney, I can tell you that he does have a right to be heard in court if he wants to force the issue. I can also tell you that given her age, the fact that he went a year without any contact and then was unable to exercise his visitation the last two times without problems, it seems extremely unlikely to me that a court would allow him a minimum of two weeks' unsupervised visitation time with her. If he actually does take you to court, I would urge you to let the court know in detail what happened during the previous visits. Also, if he has or you believe he has an alcohol problem, you need to advise the court of that too, with specifics as to why you believe he may have such a problem. You might even be able to get the judge to interview your daughter in chambers (out of your ex's presence) to get an idea of her true feelings.
I found that when I didn't show myself to be too rattled by my ex's threats of court that often took the wind out of his sails. Often I would offer him something that I could live with, that he might not have wanted but where his attorney would tell him it wasn't worth taking his chances in court thinking he could get something better. Right now it sounds like you have the upper hand. You have sole custody---and it sounds like there's a good reason for that! You are in a position to let him know what you are and are not willing to agree to and that you are sorry if he does not like that. Another consideration: depending on where you are, if he did go to court, he would first have to file a motion, giving you enough time to respond, then the matter gets set down for some type of hearing. By the time the matter would be decided, summer might even be over.
For what it's worth, I suspect he will eventually give up trying to get long periods of unsupervised time with your daughter when he sees over and over again that there's actually some work involved.
Good luck! My thoughts are with you.
J.