I would suggest either he gets them mental health care, he allows you to get them mental health care (if you're willing to let him abdicate as a parent and do the work for him), or you give up on ever having both sets of kids together, or you break up with him and date someone else. Or I guess you can see how things go, maybe they'll get mental health care on their own, anything's possible. As the kid in this situation, I just hate to see my mom's retirement being so consumed with the mental health problems of her partner's adult children. And I'm not willing to bring my own children to my mom's for the holidays because of the mental health behaviors. It's sad. I much prefer my mom to have a partner in life, but I think she would be much better off if she had chosen someone else to date, who didn't bring all these problems to the relationship. It's not his fault that his children have mental health problems, but he's never been willing to deal with it effectively and it's affecting my mom a lot. She's an adult and she made her choice, but I'm not willing to go along with it as if everything's fine. |
I thought OP said he had 100% custody. Probably difficult to only see him both (all?) of his kids are not home. I agree with some of the other posters that there's not really a need to mix the kids together at events. Or, if it's absolutely necessary just accept that his kids and her kids will be doing their own thing which isn't really that big of a deal. I also agree with some of the other posters that OP should lean on him hard about getting them mental health treatment. I mean, while it's not her choice I think it's fair to advocate for a professional opinion regarding whether they need additional help. |
It's hard for me to say your situation is like ours. His kids are well adjusted for the most part--get good grades, on track for college, have friends, have sports, get along with their dad. So there is no "mental health" breakdown except that they have a non-existent, very unwell parent who has convinced them that her failings are all because of their dad (and me/my kids) and like all kids, they're protective of their mom to an irrational extent and behave accordingly. |
OP here--I would not be in a position to get them mental health care. I don't parent them at all. I don't even drive them places. |
His kids tolerate (but don't like) you, and they don't like your kids.
Stop being so selfish, OP. You and your partner have made the decision not to blend, so stop pushing this and harping on it. Leave those kids alone. They are not going to change their feelings about you and your kids, and that's OK. They are under no obligation to accept your brats. |
But what you're saying in this paragraph is that they have a trauma history and possibly hereditary mental health risk. Living with a mentally ill parent before divorce, then divorce, and then the ongoing situation with their mother are all traumatic. And the behavior you describe towards you and your children is not "well-adjusted". If you don't think there's a mental health problem then why do you say you're encouraging him to get them mental health support? |
Okay, and is this "irrational" behavior going to go poof 5 years from now when you move in together? You've said that right now you can't get two family outings a year to go well. So why would you set up a situation where if your children want to come home for a holiday, they have to be around his children? Or is it your hope that his children will not show up? What does parenting adult children look like for him and you and your kids, in this relationship? |
WOW!!!!!!!!! This is shocking. |
I agree with this. It isn’t about you per se or what you have or haven’t done right; it’s a cry for help essentially. |
I don’t understand why disliking someone or the situation in which you happen to be through no fault of your own is suddenly a mental health issue. |
What makes you think they need mental health interventions? |
The Boyfriend needs to handle this by talking to his kids and asking what they need in order to feel they're not being replaced. More one-on-one time with him? For him to not insert your names into every conversation he has with them? Something else? |
Because OP said "I have been encouraging him to get them mental health help". And because they were raised by a mom with a serious mental health problem and now her problem is so bad that she has no custody and not much visiting time. That really places a stress on a child. It's not just that they dislike it, it's that they've been through a traumatic experience which is ongoing. |
They weren't raised by her. They had a divorce early because she refused treatment for her own mental health and she left, not wanting custody because she didn't want it/didn't want to work for it. She currently only visits a couple times a week (does dinner, pickups etc.) |
Ok, that still sounds like a difficult experience for them to go through, and it's been going on for years and years. And there's still the hereditary risk. You can't describe his ex as having a serious mental health problems and not wanting to parent her kids, and then say they haven't been through trauma. That's what trauma means. |