Anonymous wrote:My husband still puts his adult children from his first marriage first and loves them more than our adult son we have together. It is what it is. If I had known how hard this would be and knew then what I know now I most definitely wouldn't marry into a step family situation. We have been married 37 years now and I can still say it's something I wouldn't do again.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is more common that older men marry younger second wives, when they have more money. Often they dote over the younger set of kids and neglect the first set, to please the young woman they bought, uh sorry I meant married. 😉
Anonymous wrote:My husband still puts his adult children from his first marriage first and loves them more than our adult son we have together. It is what it is. If I had known how hard this would be and knew then what I know now I most definitely wouldn't marry into a step family situation. We have been married 37 years now and I can still say it's something I wouldn't do again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think once you have kids, you cannot be selfish anymore. And it's selfish to pursue a new romance and put a new spouse ahead of your kids. We pursue romance to make our selves happy. Our personal happiness is no longer the top priority once kids come along.
It is not selfish to focus on your marriage to the parent of your children. The hope is that a stable marriage is the bedrock of a stable family for the kids.
I think it's unwise to remarry if you are divorced with young kids. It does indeed create conflicts that everyone is better off without.
Oh please. Kids want their parents to be happy. And it's not good for any kids to be treated as the "mini spouse" of their single parent. It's definitely better for my stepchildren that their Father is no longer a single man feeding them cereal 3 x a day in an apartment. They have a family on our side with siblings, family vacations, activies, etc. Meanwhile their Mother drops them on her parents to go party. At least they have some semblance of a normal life since their Dad remarried.
So why would you marry a guy who thinks it is okay to feed kids cereal 3x a day, and had multiple kids with a second bad parent?
You see yourself as the family savior but it sounds like those kids are surrounded by irresponsible losers.
Anonymous wrote:Prioritizing the marriage over the kids is often seen as something done for the benefit of the entire family. Keeping the original nuclear family together is the goal so mom and dad investing the time and energy they need into maintaining their own relationship directly benefits the children involved.
There isn't such of a direct benefit to the children for the parents and step-parents to stay together. The benefits of mom and dad not splitting up and having the family not break up have already been lost so now the kids need to come first.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think once you have kids, you cannot be selfish anymore. And it's selfish to pursue a new romance and put a new spouse ahead of your kids. We pursue romance to make our selves happy. Our personal happiness is no longer the top priority once kids come along.
It is not selfish to focus on your marriage to the parent of your children. The hope is that a stable marriage is the bedrock of a stable family for the kids.
I think it's unwise to remarry if you are divorced with young kids. It does indeed create conflicts that everyone is better off without.
Oh please. Kids want their parents to be happy. And it's not good for any kids to be treated as the "mini spouse" of their single parent. It's definitely better for my stepchildren that their Father is no longer a single man feeding them cereal 3 x a day in an apartment. They have a family on our side with siblings, family vacations, activies, etc. Meanwhile their Mother drops them on her parents to go party. At least they have some semblance of a normal life since their Dad remarried.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the error is in thinking it's a hierarchy. Spousal relationships are important. Relationships with children are important. My relationship with my husband is just as important to me as my relationship with my child, but when those two relationships are in competition for attention/money/time/etc., I prioritize the child because my husband is an adult who understands that the child has a greater reliance on me, while he is an adult who can largely do for himself.
In the situation you're referencing, I think that the OP's husband should certainly discuss these kinds of spending with his new wife, but the new wife does not get to decide what is and is not appropriate for the children in question. That's between their mother and father. Father should definitely consult his new wife and respect her opinions, but if there is a conflict between what ex-wife wants for her children and what new wife thinks is reasonable for those children, ex-wife's opinion carries more weight.
Note: in functional, healthy coparenting relationships between divorced people, it doesn't come down to this very often. I'm divorced and remarried and I've never had a conflict with either my ex or my new husband about anything like this.
Completely disagree. If this is what people think, no wonder second marriages have a high rate of divorce. I would never marry a man who put another woman's feelings over mine.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. I hope none of you ever get divorced. Good luck on your second marriage being married to someone who "puts his first family first" above all else.
Sorry, but that's not reality. The second family goes on to have kids and they matter as well. The second family includes the first child and all children are considered in decision making. Not just the first.