Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the child of divorce is older than your bio kids, OP, the best thing you can do is learn about age-appropriate behavior and parenting. So many stepmothers make the mistake of getting judgey and blamey and resentful about what is really just normal teen behavior. The substance of your parenting ability is far more important than whether you spend time together socially.
This has nothing to do with OP’s post.
Anonymous wrote:If the child of divorce is older than your bio kids, OP, the best thing you can do is learn about age-appropriate behavior and parenting. So many stepmothers make the mistake of getting judgey and blamey and resentful about what is really just normal teen behavior. The substance of your parenting ability is far more important than whether you spend time together socially.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It really just depends. Personally, as an ACOD with steps on both sides, I prefer less contact. If they're in the same place it's very fake. I appreciate that they can maintain basic courtesy, but I know that after any event I'll have to listen to my dad and his wife talk about my mom's infidelity and her loser AP. And I'll have to listen to my mom's thirsty "Wasn't that NICE? Oh, it was soooo NICE!" and if I don't validate it, she gets annoyed at me. It's all really fake.
When considering this stuff, I suggest you ask yourself who it's truly for. If the kids actually want it, okay. But if it's a show you're putting on to convince yourselves or the neighbors that your family is more functional than it actually is, don't. It's embarrassing and fake and burdensome to the children.
OP here. This is really helpful and I often wonder about the fakeness. I know DH and I are genuine, plus all of the kids truly adore each other, so it works easily on that front. I am still getting to know bio mom and stepdad, but both appear very likable and, as humans, I could see them as our friends. We’ve even done an event or two without the kids (not double dates, but like game nights, adult events with a large group). The other side of me wonders if they just talk crap about us after being together and are just faking it 😂 like I said, it’s all new, and we’ll obviously do what’s best for our own situation. Just curious about others’ experiences.
In my experience it's more like a professional co-worker relationship, and it's for the best that way. When kids are little and have little-kid problems, it may seem easy enough, but you're going to be raising (and paying for) teenagers together, and might have some major disagreements. But if you've set a precedent of lots of friendly social time, the kids will notice when there's tension. If it's a little more professional and impersonal, then that will be easier to maintain when you hit a rough patch. And PS the kids might not always get along as well as they do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It really just depends. Personally, as an ACOD with steps on both sides, I prefer less contact. If they're in the same place it's very fake. I appreciate that they can maintain basic courtesy, but I know that after any event I'll have to listen to my dad and his wife talk about my mom's infidelity and her loser AP. And I'll have to listen to my mom's thirsty "Wasn't that NICE? Oh, it was soooo NICE!" and if I don't validate it, she gets annoyed at me. It's all really fake.
When considering this stuff, I suggest you ask yourself who it's truly for. If the kids actually want it, okay. But if it's a show you're putting on to convince yourselves or the neighbors that your family is more functional than it actually is, don't. It's embarrassing and fake and burdensome to the children.
OP here. This is really helpful and I often wonder about the fakeness. I know DH and I are genuine, plus all of the kids truly adore each other, so it works easily on that front. I am still getting to know bio mom and stepdad, but both appear very likable and, as humans, I could see them as our friends. We’ve even done an event or two without the kids (not double dates, but like game nights, adult events with a large group). The other side of me wonders if they just talk crap about us after being together and are just faking it 😂 like I said, it’s all new, and we’ll obviously do what’s best for our own situation. Just curious about others’ experiences.
Anonymous wrote:My dd was on a team one year with a girl whose parents were divorced and mom was remarried. Mom and stepdad had another (much younger) daughter. Mom and dad were two of the coaches and got along swimmingly. Stepdad and dad were always chatty before and after games and at halftime. Little sister was always going up to her big sister’s dad for a hug or a high five (remember, no biological relation). It all seemed very healthy and mature (at least from the outside).
Anonymous wrote:It really just depends. Personally, as an ACOD with steps on both sides, I prefer less contact. If they're in the same place it's very fake. I appreciate that they can maintain basic courtesy, but I know that after any event I'll have to listen to my dad and his wife talk about my mom's infidelity and her loser AP. And I'll have to listen to my mom's thirsty "Wasn't that NICE? Oh, it was soooo NICE!" and if I don't validate it, she gets annoyed at me. It's all really fake.
When considering this stuff, I suggest you ask yourself who it's truly for. If the kids actually want it, okay. But if it's a show you're putting on to convince yourselves or the neighbors that your family is more functional than it actually is, don't. It's embarrassing and fake and burdensome to the children.