I'm six months past the most recent D-Day, and my divorce from WH was recently finalized. My college aged kids are totally estranged from their father, and my daughter is back home from school for the summer, living with me.
We have been adjusting to the usual things that come with a college student - who got used to tons of freedom during the school year - being back home for the first time and having to exist as part of a family unit. Plus, there is the new dynamic of the "family" now being me, plus her. No dad.
She's been very independent all summer, but in recent days, her independence has seemed almost directed against me. As in "I'm going to go out of my way to ignore you, to not talk to you, to be indifferent to you." I asked her about it today, and she shared a lot of anger which culminated in "you can't replace dad, and that sucks, but that's how it is and you need to stop trying."
I was taken aback, as the idea of replacing her dad has never crossed my mind. I've tried to be supportive of her during this difficult time, but it seems like despite her total estrangement from her dad, she feels like having any relationship with me is disloyalty to him. Or she's processing her grief and anger at him, and she's taking it out on me. I came across the term "loyalty bind" online, and it sounds very much like what could be happening here.
My heart aches for her. She's in IC, so I'll ask her if she's talking about this in IC and encourage that. And I can reassure her that no matter how complicated her feelings are for her dad, I'm never going to replace him and would never try. And I definitely don't want her to resent me in years to come if she feels that in some way I was tacitly encouraging her to choose between parents. I'm bending over backwards NOT to do that, but it seems like in her pain, she's attributing a lot of things to me.
Thoughts? Experiences to share? After the blow-up of my marriage and family, I can't begin to bear the thought of her going through even more grief and pain than I'd realized.