A dad watched his ex shut down every chance to bring their kids to his birth country during their marriage, labeling it dirty and dangerous while skipping Spanish classes and clutching the passports plus consent letters that barred international trips. Solo visits to meet extended family stayed off-limits. After the divorce, he built a new life, blending families with his current wife, her daughter, and their young son together.
This year they finally jetted off for a month of snorkeling, jungle glamping, desert motorcycling, and feasts, then shared the joyful photos and videos. When the older kids spotted them and felt hurt, he showed proof of his past lone journeys and explained their mom’s earlier blocks had stopped the visits. Now she blasts him for badmouthing her and poisoning the children against her.
A divorced dad took his new family on a long-awaited trip to his home country, leaving shared kids upset.














The Redditor faced a tough spot: years of trying (and failing) to include his first set of kids in cultural trips because of passport and consent issues, versus finally creating new memories with his current family.
From one angle, the ex may feel blindsided and defensive, worrying that the explanation paints her as the obstacle and risks damaging her bond with the children. Parents in high-conflict divorces sometimes worry that highlighting differences in how new versus old families are treated could breed resentment.
On the flip side, the Redditor argues he was just answering the kids’ questions honestly after they saw the exciting posts, and that withholding the context would have left them wrongly blaming him instead.
Broader family dynamics after divorce often reveal how extended family connections can suffer when one parent limits access. Research on binuclear families shows that cooperative co-parenting tends to preserve stronger ties between children and grandparents or relatives on both sides, while ongoing conflict can weaken those links over time.
A key issue here involves international travel restrictions in custody situations. U.S. rules generally require both parents’ consent for a minor’s passport (especially under age 14), and travel abroad often needs a notarized letter of permission, creating real logistical barriers when one parent objects. Experts note these disputes frequently arise in post-divorce conflicts and may require court intervention to resolve.
Psychologist Edward Kruk has highlighted the serious toll of behaviors that interfere with a child’s relationship to the other parent or their extended family, describing tactics as “tantamount to extreme psychological maltreatment, including spurning, terrorizing, isolating, corrupting or exploiting, and denying emotional responsiveness.” He notes that affected children can experience “low self-esteem and self-hatred, lack of trust, depression, and substance abuse.”
In this Redditor’s situation, sharing factual context (that past trips were blocked due to consent and passport issues) might help the teens understand the history without exaggeration, but framing it gently matters to avoid escalating blame.
Neutral advice often includes focusing on future possibilities, while encouraging open conversations that prioritize the children’s cultural curiosity and emotional needs over past grievances. Co-parenting counselors frequently recommend documenting attempts at inclusion and seeking mediation rather than public explanations that could heighten tension.
See what others had to share with OP:
Some people judge the OP as NTA because the ex-wife has been preventing the children from traveling internationally.






























Some people state that the OP is NTA for telling the children the truth about why they couldn’t join the trip, as long as the ex-wife actually forbade or prevented it.






Others acknowledge the situation is nuanced, noting the OP tried for years but should have pursued legal options like court.


Do you think the Redditor was right to explain the passport and consent issues to his kids, or should he have stayed silent to keep the peace?
Would you prioritize a future trip with the older children once they’re adults, or focus only on the current blended family? How do you balance cultural heritage with co-parenting harmony when exes disagree? Drop your thoughts below.













