To keep it short, my daughter's father moved 2.5 hours away while I was pregnant. We didn't stay together but have been "co-parenting" since. During the first year of DD's life, BD came once a weekend (with a few skipped weeks) and visited for 2-3 hours at a time. He took her maybe 2-3 times for a few hours on their own but other than that, I was always with them. During that time he was living with his family and he recently moved out to his own place. Now that he was space and all the necessary amenities, I started to let him take DD overnight. We started with one night over the weekend. Over the holiday weekend, he asked to keep her an extra day since he wasn't working. I said, sure. When I got her back though, she started to hit me. And she has never, ever hit me before. I kind of wrote it off as a baby thing and it was only for the first day. Then a couple weeks later BD asked to take her two nights again and I figured it would be okay. When I got her back again, she was hitting again for that first day.
Now BD wants to file for joint custody and is insisting on having her 3 days a week. But I am thinking about going the other way and only doing every other weekend stays or just one night a weekend. BD's mother made mention that whenever she see's her blankie and dolly that I send her with, she instantly starts crying. To me, that's her association to home (with me) and her hitting me is her only way of expressing not liking the extended stays. I get that she needs to be with her father and I've been pretty easy going with it, but I feel like it's too much too soon.
She's 15 months, btw.
Opinions?

BEAN *06/29/2012*
Re: Should I regress in amount of overnights?
BEAN *06/29/2012*
This is a normal age for hitting to start, but I would still keep a close eye on when the behavior occurs and what it seems to be associated with. If she is hitting as a reaction, like out of frustration, crankiness, or inability to communicate- that sounds pretty typical. But if the hitting seems deliberate, like when she doesn't want you to do something or is upset about a situation- that's a signal that it's more of an emotional expression.
Either way, definitely talk to her father about what's been happening on their visits. Ask him to observe her behavior too, and see if there's a pattern. Whatever's going on, both of you need to agree on how to handle the hitting and apply a consistent approach when it happens.
Good luck, I know this co-parenting thing is tough.