Anonymous wrote:Put your kids first, it is hard enough having divorced parents and feeling unwelcome in your mom's home would be awful. You don't have much time left of them living at home and you don't want to regret missing out on their childhoods. Your husband sounds like he is being selfish about it as you said you have plenty of date nights etc and the kids don't need constant attention.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kids are a package deal. He knew that and can get over it.
Then don't get remarried. If your attitude is "kids first period," then you're setting yourself up for a marriage filled with a lot of resentment. Just don't go there. It's not fair to anyone involved. Second marriages only work when people show empathy for all parties involved. All spouses need to feel like they are each other's "number one".
Are you in high school?
Hardly. But I've been married a long time, and in my faith, there is a hierarchy of God --> spouse ---> kids in a family unit, and this hierarchy would still be applicable minus "God". Spouses, even in a blended family like OP's, need to approach parenting together. Never seen a second marriage work where someone took a hard line approach like "Your kids are a package deal. He knew that and can get over it." However, I've seen several fail where that was the prevailing attitude.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kids are a package deal. He knew that and can get over it.
Then don't get remarried. If your attitude is "kids first period," then you're setting yourself up for a marriage filled with a lot of resentment. Just don't go there. It's not fair to anyone involved. Second marriages only work when people show empathy for all parties involved. All spouses need to feel like they are each other's "number one".
Are you in high school?
Hardly. But I've been married a long time, and in my faith, there is a hierarchy of God --> spouse ---> kids in a family unit, and this hierarchy would still be applicable minus "God". Spouses, even in a blended family like OP's, need to approach parenting together. Never seen a second marriage work where someone took a hard line approach like "Your kids are a package deal. He knew that and can get over it." However, I've seen several fail where that was the prevailing attitude.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, when your kids are with you, do you disengage from your marriage? Asking because I have an old friend dealing with this very issue. He went into the marriage with the very best intentions, but whenever her kids stay with them, he becomes invisible, and he's on the verge of ending it because the kids are there most of the time. I honestly feel like their marriage could have been saved if she just carved out time for him and involved him in parenting the children. Second marriages with children are impossibly hard for most people.
Maybe he's a man-baby who needs to take care of himself and not look to his mommy-wife to cater to him like he's an additional child. Oh, attention, me me me needs attention! Can't possibly be an adult, speak up for my needs, and take the initiative to help with parenting.
Anonymous wrote:OP, when your kids are with you, do you disengage from your marriage? Asking because I have an old friend dealing with this very issue. He went into the marriage with the very best intentions, but whenever her kids stay with them, he becomes invisible, and he's on the verge of ending it because the kids are there most of the time. I honestly feel like their marriage could have been saved if she just carved out time for him and involved him in parenting the children. Second marriages with children are impossibly hard for most people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here: When the kids were younger we had a tighter schedule because yes, they needed the structure. But now they are fine going back and forth.
Also they are definitely able to stay home alone while my spouse and I go out for date night, run errands, etc. They also don’t need tons of attention at home as they are teenagers and mainly stay in their rooms all day anyway. Spouse just wants a completely silent and empty house.
I agree that spouses should be a priority, but also feel like I shouldn’t have to make my kids feel unwelcome in my home…
Your spouse is not being reasonable. He married a woman with children-what would have happened if their dad died of Covid? You should shut this down if you want a warm and close relationship with your kids in adulthood. Tell him options are get with the program or get divorced.
Anonymous wrote:Well, if the kids were both your biological children, they wouldn't be going anywhere any night.
When you two got married, he married into the existing family. He needs to deal with it. Those kids should be considered his kids.