Having children is the financial responsibility of all fathers employed or not.
Not unless he gave her up.
In rose pistil are present or absent
If the adoptions have been finalized, the father cannot change that. However, by contacting the agency that facilitated the adoption, the adoptive families may be open to their children having contact with their biological father. However, some families want to have closed adoptions, which means their children will have no regular contact with their biological parents. If parental rights were terminated, there may be some major emotional issues for these children that might need to wait until they are older to address.
There is no current law prohibiting you from living with a man who is not the father of your children. If you marry him, he becomes their stepfather.This in no way changes the relationship between the father and the children, he is not their ex-father he is only the ex husband. You may need to remind him of this, if he is worried about his relationship with his children. Unless he is abusive, the children need to see their father and continue the bond with him.
No, the term "no contact with children" typically refers to restrictions or requirements imposed by a court or legal system that prohibit an individual from having contact with children who are not their own. It does not apply to a parent's own children.
No, you don't, but isn't the greater concern the children having access to their father?
There is no record of him having any children, nor of him having been married. Nor is there definitive evidence that he was not married, or that he did not father children. It would be presumptuous of any person to state definitively that Christ did or did not marry or have children.
There are many things it does not consider, such as the reason the father is absent, the socio/economic status, and the relationship between the parents and the children, just to name a few. The problems many children face after their parents divorce vary widely, and are often caused by many things, such as:Why is the father absent? Was he the one who chose to leave the home/marriage/family, or was the mother the one who wanted him to leave? If so, why? Was it for another woman involved? If it was the mother, then why? Was there another man involved?Were he and his children close before the divorce? Was he abusive to the mother or to the children? Is he an alcoholic or drug addict?Is he absent by choice, or is he incarcerated? Is the mother preventing him from seeing the children, or did he choose to not be with them?If he chose to be absent from them, is it because he felt they were better off without him, or does he think if he doesn't see them he won't have to pay child support?What kind of parent is the mother? Is she a loving, nurturing parent, trying to make up for the father not being present? Or is she abusive, negligent, too strict, too critical, not loving enough, etc.? Does she criticize the father and put him down to the children, making him feel the children don't want to be around him?Did the mother and children have to relocate to another home after the divorce? If so, is the new home not as nice, or as in a neighborhood as nice as the previous home? Having to relocate to a home that's not as nice as the one they had been used to can affect children, and even make them embarassed to have their friends over.Is the financial and social status less than it was before the divorce? If so, this can also cause children to to be embarassed to have their friends over, with them feeling like they won't seem "as good" as their friends.There are almost as many things that can possibly affect children after a divorce as there are reasons for the divorce, and it's different with each family. So to try to nail it down to a single issue is impossible, because there are just too many factors to consider.
Yes, but I teach fathers how to change that.
Some do, but to varying degrees of intimacy. Vampire males are known to father children. Most are absentee parents but they sometimes do lend some support to their wives and children.
For me the answer is yes it does. It gives children a fighting chance at having a well rounded life. Having both parents in a child's life gives him/her the opportunity to get life lessons from both the mother and father.