Hi stepmum. Trust me when I say I know how you feel- alot of what you've said is so much like what my husband and I have been dealing with the last 2 years.
A few thoughts based on that experience (this is jsut my opinion, not professional advice):
1) sammy is correct- no amount of mediation or court will stop a twit being a twit. Nothing you do will change her behavior. Best you can do is find ways to make your peace with it and operate around it. You could consider some sessions with a counsellor to see how to help yourselves in this area. Also courses about parenting after separation could help (e.g. here in WA Anglicare run "Mums and Dads Forever", which has some sessions on this theme).
2) Do what you can to limit exposure to the ex. Our life got easier when pick ups and drop offs started happening at school, rather than her house (ok, it got easier after she got over complaining that 3-4pm was "her time"). If you can make that happen, do it. The silver lining coming out of the otherwise horrible experience of being slapped with a false Family Violence Restraining Order is learning how little interaction is needed to maintain enough contact to manage (parallel) shared parenting. That goes for messages and email as much as physical contact. Also helps reduce exposing the kids to that conflict.
3) I would proceed with your application (assuming there are not existing orders) but keep your expectations in check. Don't expect a swift resolution and do expect things to get worse before they get better. Assuming it's an application for orders- what would you be looking for? Its true having orders is not a guarantee that people will follow them (and the enforcement of them is pretty poor) but if there is a framework that both parties understand and they can follow it, there's less room for conflict. It's working for us (so far, it's early days), but the effectiveness of orders probably depends if there is a good reason for the parties to comply, so think about your specific issues what might be driving her choices to see if you think this will help.
4) You will need to learn to stand up to the bullying, but at the same time learn which battles are worth fighting. After many years of abuse from this woman while in the relationship, my husband felt very strongly about having to stand up to every shot she fired, I think out of feeling shame at having been bullied for so long before. Fight for the ones that matter and make a difference to you and the kids. You might have to get creative-to give an example from Christmas last year, ex would not agree for the kids to be at our house at the same time as their elder sister, who we also have shared care of. Neither mother would consider changing for the other so we turned it to our advantage and had the whole family over the weekend before (something we couldn't have done on Christmas Day regardless) and had a great, WHOLE day with all of the family together. Kids had a great time, as did we.
5) The worst part is how powerless you feel when then kids are stuck in it. The interrogations. The guilt trips ("you don't sound like you miss mummy!". The threats ("Don't you dare give your father any notes from school- they're for me! You'll regret it if you do"). And the insults (calling a 6 year old a "f**king little mole" or a "selfish b*tch"). Our experience is this kind of abuse is not far enough up the priority list for external action to be taken, or at least not until the kids are broken by it. You can't change her behavior. The only thing you can do is try and help the kids develop skills to deal with it- think anti-bullying skills, reinforcing a positive self-image (to contrast the negative messages they get). The Protective Behaviors program was recommended to us- though not directly for this sort of abuse, their message of "everyone has a right to feel safe" and getting kids thinking about having a network of people they trust that can help if things escalate. Focus on what you can do for them with whatever time you get. I think our kids can already see that alot of what they're told about their dad and I doesn't correlate with what they see and experience for themselves and they're engaging less and less in the excesses of their mother's behavior.
Wishing you and your family the best of luck.
A few thoughts based on that experience (this is jsut my opinion, not professional advice):
1) sammy is correct- no amount of mediation or court will stop a twit being a twit. Nothing you do will change her behavior. Best you can do is find ways to make your peace with it and operate around it. You could consider some sessions with a counsellor to see how to help yourselves in this area. Also courses about parenting after separation could help (e.g. here in WA Anglicare run "Mums and Dads Forever", which has some sessions on this theme).
2) Do what you can to limit exposure to the ex. Our life got easier when pick ups and drop offs started happening at school, rather than her house (ok, it got easier after she got over complaining that 3-4pm was "her time"). If you can make that happen, do it. The silver lining coming out of the otherwise horrible experience of being slapped with a false Family Violence Restraining Order is learning how little interaction is needed to maintain enough contact to manage (parallel) shared parenting. That goes for messages and email as much as physical contact. Also helps reduce exposing the kids to that conflict.
3) I would proceed with your application (assuming there are not existing orders) but keep your expectations in check. Don't expect a swift resolution and do expect things to get worse before they get better. Assuming it's an application for orders- what would you be looking for? Its true having orders is not a guarantee that people will follow them (and the enforcement of them is pretty poor) but if there is a framework that both parties understand and they can follow it, there's less room for conflict. It's working for us (so far, it's early days), but the effectiveness of orders probably depends if there is a good reason for the parties to comply, so think about your specific issues what might be driving her choices to see if you think this will help.
4) You will need to learn to stand up to the bullying, but at the same time learn which battles are worth fighting. After many years of abuse from this woman while in the relationship, my husband felt very strongly about having to stand up to every shot she fired, I think out of feeling shame at having been bullied for so long before. Fight for the ones that matter and make a difference to you and the kids. You might have to get creative-to give an example from Christmas last year, ex would not agree for the kids to be at our house at the same time as their elder sister, who we also have shared care of. Neither mother would consider changing for the other so we turned it to our advantage and had the whole family over the weekend before (something we couldn't have done on Christmas Day regardless) and had a great, WHOLE day with all of the family together. Kids had a great time, as did we.
5) The worst part is how powerless you feel when then kids are stuck in it. The interrogations. The guilt trips ("you don't sound like you miss mummy!". The threats ("Don't you dare give your father any notes from school- they're for me! You'll regret it if you do"). And the insults (calling a 6 year old a "f**king little mole" or a "selfish b*tch"). Our experience is this kind of abuse is not far enough up the priority list for external action to be taken, or at least not until the kids are broken by it. You can't change her behavior. The only thing you can do is try and help the kids develop skills to deal with it- think anti-bullying skills, reinforcing a positive self-image (to contrast the negative messages they get). The Protective Behaviors program was recommended to us- though not directly for this sort of abuse, their message of "everyone has a right to feel safe" and getting kids thinking about having a network of people they trust that can help if things escalate. Focus on what you can do for them with whatever time you get. I think our kids can already see that alot of what they're told about their dad and I doesn't correlate with what they see and experience for themselves and they're engaging less and less in the excesses of their mother's behavior.
Wishing you and your family the best of luck.