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Reply to "Stepdaughter (16) is out of control "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I’m a step mom PP. Unless you have been in a blended family you really can’t judge. What you are missing here is the step parent/step child, guilty parents, new wife dynamic. Most of the time a step parent that comes into a situation like this wants to do what they think is best for the child, but boundaries have to be respected. If the bio parents aren’t aligned with you — and I say this with the most grace for them— going against your husband AND a typically delicate dynamic with another woman who is the ex and actual mom, AND a child who is against any authority… it’s just not the same. And yes, this is what we “signed up for”, just like you “signed up for” every challenge that came with your spouse. We went through this with my step daughter 8-10 years ago and she is doing better than most at 25, marriage is stronger than ever with this behind us, and I actually learned a lot as a parent to my own kids so I’m glad I signed up for this!! [quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]My husband works long hours in law, and I’m busy too, so between our schedules we don’t have time to constantly manage my 16-year-old stepdaughter’s behavior. She is with us 50% of the time and is out of control. This past weekend was the tipping point. She came home drunk, was vaping cannabis in our house, stayed up most of the night making noise, and took my credit card to spend over $200 on takeout to send to a boy’s house at 3 a.m. This isn’t isolated. In the past, she has been drunk and smoked before, regularly sneaks out to boys’ houses, and has tried to bring boys into our home without permission. She has stolen our credit cards and taken our cars without permission, racking up thousands of dollars in charges (we involved police previously). She has also been suspended from school for vaping and continues to skip class, vape, and hang around school. At home, she does nothing but sit on TikTok and YouTube, doesn’t clean up after herself, and refuses to make food. We have to lock up alcohol because she will steal it and give it to friends. We’ve tried consequences like removing her phone, car access, and outings, but she refuses to hand things over, throws huge tantrums, and finds ways around restrictions (finding hidden keys, etc.). It feels like constant power struggles and chaos. [b]At this point, our main goal is protecting our home, finances, and peace[/b]. We told her she needs to stay at her mom’s now after what she did this weekend, while we regroup, and she had a massive meltdown and told her dad he must hate her. We’re already feel a little More at ease. Has anyone dealt with something like this? What actually helped? [/quote] You, you, you. Is protecting his daughter's health and well-being-- and potentially her life-- not the main goal? What kind of man did you marry?!?!? [/quote] As a parent who has a difficult child (and he probably makes your daughter look like child's play), there are two things that stood out to me. This is one. There is not a single mention of how you help your child to grow up to be an independent and successful adult. Just how to protect yourself. The second is that all you've done is punish and you're looking for new ways. When our child started down the path towards mutual destruction (him and the family), our entire focus shifted to what do we need to do to make him successful. And, all of us (other kids included) were a part of the solution. We protected ourselves too - like locking credit cards, which is so obvious that I can't believe someone had to say it, and locking car keys. We got him therapy and medication, worked with the school to provide services so that he could be successful there, helped him get a job and then drove him there and home for every single shift. I could keep going. And you might think I want to pat myself on the back, which I sometimes do because it is a freaking lot of work to help a troubled kid successfully turn life around. But what I'm trying to say is that I think you have the wrong mindset. As the grown up - the parents - it's your obligation to get your kid to be successfully independent. And some kids take longer than others - mine is 23 and only halfway through college, but he's halfway through college. And, you might be the step mom. But you accepted that role when you married dad with a kid. So you need to own your obligations here. I hope you all figure out how to change your dynamics. [/quote][/quote] I don't think the dynamic is the issue. I think the focus is. The most important thing is doing what it takes to help the child grow up to be a successful, independent and productive adult. And OP's post focused on her and on punishment. And your post is focusing on the problems the adults created for themselves - which they are using as an excuse for not focusing on how to help the child grow up to be independent and successful. If OP had made a hint of trying to do the right thing but being blocked, then I may have a different view. But OP expressed concern about allowing dad to keep a crazy schedule that excludes any responsibility for teen. And OP wants to protect herself and punish kid. And no one is looking at helping teen to grow up. FWIW, I don't have a traditional family. But it doesn't matter. What counts is what you do to help the kid be successful - not what you do to punish for the problems they cause you. [/quote]
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