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It may be held against you in a dispute. A lot depends on the reasoning.
Example:
Your on call for your job 24/7. You get called out and have to miss a visitation. (not such a big deal)
You miss your visitation because you were too drunk to pick the kids up (huge problem and very bad)
So you see it also depends on why you are missing the appointed times.
Yes, the reason for missing a visit, But if you miss for example every other visit for no reason, if you go back to court the other partner could ask for you to have less rights and visits
Hello G:
It's not going to make the kid like you very much.
excon
I may have misread this, but I think it could also mean that OP might be having visits, but at different times than are scheduled. If that is the case, so long as the other parent is OK with the change of times and the court order doesn't specifically say ONLY those times (typically it doesn't). I wouldn't think it was an issue.
However, if you are simply missing visits and not making them up or at least trying to without reasonable answers (as noted above) I would agree with the above answers.
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