My ex is military and I am usually very flexible for the kids sake. I even *gasp* have let them miss school to go to a homecoming from Afghanistan. I feel like it is the right thing to do with the kids.
My wonder in the OP's situation is this though, we are commenting only on the one parent not being flexible in THIS particular situation. I know that my ex is not always as flexible as I am. There have been times he has wanted the children on a weekend that was not his. We had an issue where I had made plans, he wasn't willing to be as flexible in return and it did leave a sour taste in my mouth. He kinda left me in a position to look like the bad guy as the kids WERE more interested in his acitivity than going to mine which was family related and you know how that goes. They would rather go to an amusement park than sit around being pinched and kissed by a bunch of people they see once a year.
That being said, OP, is there a chance that this inflexibility comes from prior issues as opposed to this 'one' time?
Anyway, honestly, whatever the kids wanted to do was what they would do in my situation. I find the parenting plan to be a little complex, but then again some employment situations make it so. I just would hope that in this case the one causing the issue understands the 'want' as opposed to the need and sometimes that is o.k.
Kelly
I actually tried to keep that part out on purpose to keep it unbiased.
Yes, there is a 3 year history of one parent giving the other extra days for activities, or trying to trade and the other not reciprocating... but the mother is the one that does not reciprocate.
The father's family plans things around his schedule to avoid having to ask the mother for time, but sometimes it's unavoidable. While the mother doesn't seem to take into account the schedule, and then will just ask for whatever day a plan falls onto. It has consistently happened for 3 years. Just off the top of my head the kids have missed 2 birthdays (one for each of my kids), their father's Santa at the firehouse celebration, etc. In the beginning the father would give the mother a day but when he would try and pick up the kids on his make up day she would refuse, and at one point call the police. He graduated to not scheduling a make up day and just asking for a day here and there when he needed it, but she never gave him the time. In February, she kept the kids away from one of my daughter's birthday party. The following weekend he gave her his Saturday so the kids could go to a water park with her neighbor. They were trying to do a joint birthday party for the kids, but she planned it on a day that he works and still wanted him to pay for half (when he obviously wouldn't be there). He's decided that he is no longer able to try and work with her on trading days or straying from the schedule.
I think that's part of the reason he is not budging, personally. He's tried to work with her in the past, but even as much as he tries to work with her she continuously calls him selfish/controlling/not thinking of the kids, etc. He truly does not believe he is wrong and thinks he is able to take this week. She believes that he has broken their SPP several times which he has not so in her opinion, this is the final straw. The father allows the kids to spend the night at a friend's house, or their aunt/uncle's house who lives in the country on occasion. If the kids are gone, he may go out and do something and she feels he is getting a sitter in order to go out which isn't the case.
To another poster - the kids are now 7 and 10. At the time they were 4 and 6 when they were going through the divorce. The mother is a teacher and the father is a firefighter so they were very used to having both parents around the majority of the time.