Today, at least one-third of all children in the U.S. are expected to live in a step family before they reach age 18. The blended family is becoming more of a norm than an aberration. Born of conflict and loss, new found commitment, and often heart-wrenching transition, step families face many lifestyle adjustments and changes.
Yours, Mine and Ours is even on greeting cards. These mergers are at the best difficult and at the worst, caustic and damaging. Credit goes to families who have made these partnerships work for themselves and their children. It is an ongoing and delicate process to ease children into a new family dynamic and a partner into a role of care-giver and provider for children that are not theirs. It takes careful planning, open discussions of feelings, positive attitudes, mutual respect and patience.
It is those hook-ups that are not thought out or addressed that has become a major problem. Many single parents are quickly jumping into yet another relationship. Issues are not addressed, children are not considered, ground rules are not established. Young lives are rearranged yet again, but without a game plan.
Can you imagine bringing someone into your home that you met on the Internet? Just this week a news story warned of the danger to your family. Man and woman meet on-line. Man marries woman. Surprise. Man is a pedophile with the grand plan to exploit this woman's young children. This Mother allowed a man she barely knew to come into her family's life because she was "lonely" and he had a good job. Her children will forever suffer for their Mother's haste in finding a companion. Her need was placed before the needs of her children.
Second marriages should be a process. Getting to know another person takes time. For any parent, the children involved should be the first concern. Below are guidelines from http://www.helpguide.org/
Building a Life together: A Review of the Dos and Don'ts
1.Do reassure children that the divorce/death was not their fault. Invite questions and discussion.
2. Do start talking with your children about the possibility of blending your family long before your marriage. Be tolerant of outbursts in children when you tell them about the re-marriage. Typically, they hope for reconciliation between the two biological parents. Realize children are suffering a loss during divorce.
2. Do start talking with your children about the possibility of blending your family long before your marriage. Be tolerant of outbursts in children when you tell them about the re-marriage. Typically, they hope for reconciliation between the two biological parents. Realize children are suffering a loss during divorce.
3. Assure children that they will continue to have a relationship with the non-live in parent.
4. Don't push your children into creating relationships. Allow bonds to evolve slowly and naturally.
5. Don't expect your stepchildren to call you mom or dad. Let them decide what they want to call you. Their comfort level is important here.
6. Do expect and accept different feelings between parent, child, stepparent, and stepchild.
7. Do establish a unified parenting approach that is evenly applied to everyone in the family. Create a solid bond that demonstrates stability and a sense that the new couple is in charge. Reach agreement with your new partner on how to address the important, unanticipated parenting situations that arise.
8. Don't forget your marriage by focusing exclusively on the family. Make alone time with your spouse consistently. Nurture your marital relationship. Raising children is a challenge under any circumstances. Raising other peoples children is a special challenge. Having a strong marriage will help you blend your families together.
9. Do spend some time alone with each child and stepchild. Set aside time each day to connect one-on-one with all the children in your new family.
10. Do hold family meetings.
11. Do establish new traditions. The new step family has no shared family history, no shared ways of doing things, and they may have very different beliefs. You will want to honor some existing traditions and rituals and develop others in the new family setting.
12. Do respect former spouses parenting. Make sure he has quality time with his child/children.
Perhaps digressing but I do have an aside. It is my opinion only. If our children are to be taught morals and about committment, we must model the behaviors. Though dating is an old-fashioned word, single parents should participate in this practice. Evenings end and respective parties adjourn to to their own homes. It is not acceptable to entertain overnight guests with ones children in the next bedroom. (I assume my opinion on single parents living together without benefit of marriage is an obvious one.)
4. Don't push your children into creating relationships. Allow bonds to evolve slowly and naturally.
5. Don't expect your stepchildren to call you mom or dad. Let them decide what they want to call you. Their comfort level is important here.
6. Do expect and accept different feelings between parent, child, stepparent, and stepchild.
7. Do establish a unified parenting approach that is evenly applied to everyone in the family. Create a solid bond that demonstrates stability and a sense that the new couple is in charge. Reach agreement with your new partner on how to address the important, unanticipated parenting situations that arise.
8. Don't forget your marriage by focusing exclusively on the family. Make alone time with your spouse consistently. Nurture your marital relationship. Raising children is a challenge under any circumstances. Raising other peoples children is a special challenge. Having a strong marriage will help you blend your families together.
9. Do spend some time alone with each child and stepchild. Set aside time each day to connect one-on-one with all the children in your new family.
10. Do hold family meetings.
11. Do establish new traditions. The new step family has no shared family history, no shared ways of doing things, and they may have very different beliefs. You will want to honor some existing traditions and rituals and develop others in the new family setting.
12. Do respect former spouses parenting. Make sure he has quality time with his child/children.
Perhaps digressing but I do have an aside. It is my opinion only. If our children are to be taught morals and about committment, we must model the behaviors. Though dating is an old-fashioned word, single parents should participate in this practice. Evenings end and respective parties adjourn to to their own homes. It is not acceptable to entertain overnight guests with ones children in the next bedroom. (I assume my opinion on single parents living together without benefit of marriage is an obvious one.)
sometimes divorce is the only answer but you should not get one thinking something better is around the corner it's not. just a different set of adjustments and expectations.
ReplyDeleteWhen my parents got a divorce, i thought the world was going to end. My world did. I hated going between two houses. I hated the girlfriends and the boyfriend. It was creepy to have strangers in my house. I knew they did not like me and thought my brother and I were spoiled and in the way. I am 19 years old now and it is still awful.
ReplyDeletemy parents get mad at me for everything
ReplyDeleteif i seem like i want to go with the other one
if i don't want to go somewhere they have planned becasue hello...i do have a life that goes on evry day, no matter where the court says i am supposed to be.
if i am not "glad" to see them
if i am glad to see them
I don't appreciate the sacrifices they make for me and the other one doesn't make the sacrifices and...
splitting up for holidays cuz we have to and my Mom crying as I walk out the door. It's not my fault they got the divorce, why do I feel guilty all the time?
I know it's hard.........my parents divorced right after I was married and it was extremely difficult, younger and still in the same house would even be worse.
ReplyDeleteWe all can chose how we accept what happens in life, so make a choice to grieve for the loss but don't lose yourself and your choices to the situation.
one other thing I should have mentioned. If you are still feeling angry, sad, frustrated, WHATEVER you feel...if it doesn't feel good, ask for help. Talk to your parents about needing family counseling for deal with the divorce, it helps and gives you some perspective. There also may be children of divorce support groups in your community and the counselor can help you find them.
ReplyDeleteALso, share with your parents about how you are feeling. Don't hold it all in.