Part 2…
In sum, please don’t feel your ability to impart the Catholic faith need be limited to Church and school–though these are two great ways to raise children faithfully. I can guarantee with your conscious effort to catechize your children, and your obvious devotion to sharing your love of God with them, that your evangelization efforts will be more organized, personally meaningful, and credible than the witness provided by your ex. It is terribly difficult to withstand a daily, incremental, meaningful testimony of love when it comes to faith formation.
I wish you every success as you enter this next phase of your settlement, and please be assured of my most heartfelt prayers. You are a wonderful mother, you have been hit with a burden that you in no way deserve, and you are doing admirably.
With that in mind, I hope you feel more empowered to mother your children the way you always intended to, and to secure your parental rights and your children’s best interests next week.
God bless, and good luck!!! Reach out ANYTIME by PM if you feel the need, or if you are concerned that communicating your strategy on a public forum could in any way compromise your proceedings. You have a friendly ally here.
PS. One more thought here to further undermine the argument in support to week on/week off arrangements. A 2/3/2 split is much more common for young children to minimize separation from either parent. Pending logistics and your children’s innate temperaments and preferences, if you can cooperate to ensure the children have time with both parents every day, or every other day, so much the better.
If his argument is that week on/week off minimizes potentially conflictual parenting exchanges between you, exchanges can be coordinated at the beginning/end of school days through the school to minimize your interactions with each other. Just a thought. Parents should bear the burden of managing their emotions and indiscretions (finger pointing squarely at him); it shouldn’t be up to your children to sacrifice personal emotional well-being to buffer their father’s emotional wants.