Anonymous wrote:My best guy pal (widower) who married his new wife had 2 kids. New wife (divorced) had 3 kids. All kids were under 6. The kids have little/no memory of ever being without each other. The word "step" hasn't really been used in their household. 5 is enough. No children together. Very smart.
Anonymous wrote:My best guy pal (widower) who married his new wife had 2 kids. New wife (divorced) had 3 kids. All kids were under 6. The kids have little/no memory of ever being without each other. The word "step" hasn't really been used in their household. 5 is enough. No children together. Very smart.
Anonymous wrote:I’m sure there must be some family out there where it worked. The only one I know of was when the mom had one child from her first marriage and dad was not in the picture. Mom married her 2nd husband and they had one child when the first child was about 10. They seemed to do OK, but note-the first child was not going back and forth for visitation, and the new husband did not have kids of his own. So this situation was much simpler than others.
I have never seen it go well when both partners already came into the marriage with children. The divorce rate for that configuration is 70%, so......
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a more apt question would be, does anyone have a GOOD story about a blended family? I've never heard of one, frankly, that didn't create more problems than it solved. Im a single parent and wont be considering anything long term until my kids are out of the house. Kids of divorce have been through enough and no they are not as "resilient" as people like to claim.
According to this thread, it does not matter how old your kids are. Even if they are adults when you remarry they will resent you, hate your spouse, hate your spouse's family, etc. According to this thread, you are selfish if you remarry because your adult children will be uncomfortable.
Anonymous wrote:I think a more apt question would be, does anyone have a GOOD story about a blended family? I've never heard of one, frankly, that didn't create more problems than it solved. Im a single parent and wont be considering anything long term until my kids are out of the house. Kids of divorce have been through enough and no they are not as "resilient" as people like to claim.
Anonymous wrote:Read this thread if you are ever tempted to remarry and start a blended family.
https://www.steptalk.org/forum/parenting/blended-family-issues/i-hate-my-step-kids-and-i-am-starting-hate-my-husband-80473
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Um, OP’s kids are 4 and 9. They aren’t being forced into a family as adults nor do they have competing priorities.
They are being forced into it now when they have no autonomy, and they will be forced into it still, when they are adults. Take the long view.
Now THIS is the selfish beotch a PP was talking about. Kids are 4 and 9. Just keep repeating that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Um, OP’s kids are 4 and 9. They aren’t being forced into a family as adults nor do they have competing priorities.
They are being forced into it now when they have no autonomy, and they will be forced into it still, when they are adults. Take the long view.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that there will never be a "family" in most of these instances. There should never be force or demands to try and make it so. But.
Why is it so hard to simply be welcoming to new spouses? Why doesn't the Golden Rule ("Do Unto Others...") apply in both directions?
You may not like your parents new partners. And they may not like yours either. A little respect for the important roles they play would be a simple step in the right direction.
My DH's Son In Law takes financial advantage of his daughter, likes to gamble, likes to drink, has a family with felons and a history of domestic violence, is extremely political, has an entire cache of guns and can't string together a cohesive sentence on anything of importance.
SIL is not the kind of person my DH thinks is a good partner but his daughter picked him whatever her reasons. My DH has been welcoming, has conversations with SIL as best he can, has had some one-on-one time with him, speaks to him on the phone, asks his daughter how he is doing when he is not there, and always remembers his birthdays.
In other words he shows respect for the fact that this is who his daughter chose even though he doesn't care for him.
Why is it so difficult for many adult children to do the same for their parents' choices?
Because some of our parents are asking for a lot more than that-- they want us to actually be "family" not just with the person they married, but with that person's adult children and that person's parents. It's a huge time commitment to actually do that. (Not so much if all they want is for us to lie and say we're a big happy family without actually being one, but that's annoying.) And because some of us were forced against our will to live in the same house with objectionable people, which is far more difficult. This isn't about being polite or showing respect. It's about priorities and the fact that the logistical burden on adult children of divorce is a lot already.
Also, an aging parent is vulnerable in ways that an adult child is not. We have to keep our eyes open for elder abuse and financial exploitation.
Some parents. Some. Not all. There are also many more parents who have spouses/partners that are endlessly trying to refrain from making any kind of misstep. It can be a damned if you do, damned if you don't. Try to reach out to adult kids and you might be damned for interfering, placing pressure and being burdensome. Don't reach out and you are cold, distant and disinterested.
Financial exploitation goes both ways too. Many stepparents may provide significant resources yet are rarely acknowledged for doing so. Second spouses during the latter part of a person's life are usually the ones who are expected to be there to physically provide support when their spouse is ailing, too. Doctors appointments, sleepless nights, serious illnesses. I find it hard to believe that an adult child would need to "keep [their] eyes open" because they think a parent's spouse would be exploitative after decades of marriage. Often longer than original marriages, BTW.
While adult COD can certainly look at it solely from their perspective, it bears mentioning that statistically you will also be in this same situation yourself some day as you will have another spouse/partner. Food for thought.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that there will never be a "family" in most of these instances. There should never be force or demands to try and make it so. But.
Why is it so hard to simply be welcoming to new spouses? Why doesn't the Golden Rule ("Do Unto Others...") apply in both directions?
You may not like your parents new partners. And they may not like yours either. A little respect for the important roles they play would be a simple step in the right direction.
My DH's Son In Law takes financial advantage of his daughter, likes to gamble, likes to drink, has a family with felons and a history of domestic violence, is extremely political, has an entire cache of guns and can't string together a cohesive sentence on anything of importance.
SIL is not the kind of person my DH thinks is a good partner but his daughter picked him whatever her reasons. My DH has been welcoming, has conversations with SIL as best he can, has had some one-on-one time with him, speaks to him on the phone, asks his daughter how he is doing when he is not there, and always remembers his birthdays.
In other words he shows respect for the fact that this is who his daughter chose even though he doesn't care for him.
Why is it so difficult for many adult children to do the same for their parents' choices?
Because some of our parents are asking for a lot more than that-- they want us to actually be "family" not just with the person they married, but with that person's adult children and that person's parents. It's a huge time commitment to actually do that. (Not so much if all they want is for us to lie and say we're a big happy family without actually being one, but that's annoying.) And because some of us were forced against our will to live in the same house with objectionable people, which is far more difficult. This isn't about being polite or showing respect. It's about priorities and the fact that the logistical burden on adult children of divorce is a lot already.
Also, an aging parent is vulnerable in ways that an adult child is not. We have to keep our eyes open for elder abuse and financial exploitation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, is is obvious who is answering based on experience and who is answering based on fantasy. Good luck OP, don't say you weren't warned.
So because you are miserable everyone should be?
Anonymous wrote:Again, is is obvious who is answering based on experience and who is answering based on fantasy. Good luck OP, don't say you weren't warned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that there will never be a "family" in most of these instances. There should never be force or demands to try and make it so. But.
Why is it so hard to simply be welcoming to new spouses? Why doesn't the Golden Rule ("Do Unto Others...") apply in both directions?
You may not like your parents new partners. And they may not like yours either. A little respect for the important roles they play would be a simple step in the right direction.
My DH's Son In Law takes financial advantage of his daughter, likes to gamble, likes to drink, has a family with felons and a history of domestic violence, is extremely political, has an entire cache of guns and can't string together a cohesive sentence on anything of importance.
SIL is not the kind of person my DH thinks is a good partner but his daughter picked him whatever her reasons. My DH has been welcoming, has conversations with SIL as best he can, has had some one-on-one time with him, speaks to him on the phone, asks his daughter how he is doing when he is not there, and always remembers his birthdays.
In other words he shows respect for the fact that this is who his daughter chose even though he doesn't care for him.
Why is it so difficult for many adult children to do the same for their parents' choices?
Because some of our parents are asking for a lot more than that-- they want us to actually be "family" not just with the person they married, but with that person's adult children and that person's parents. It's a huge time commitment to actually do that. (Not so much if all they want is for us to lie and say we're a big happy family without actually being one, but that's annoying.) And because some of us were forced against our will to live in the same house with objectionable people, which is far more difficult. This isn't about being polite or showing respect. It's about priorities and the fact that the logistical burden on adult children of divorce is a lot already.
Also, an aging parent is vulnerable in ways that an adult child is not. We have to keep our eyes open for elder abuse and financial exploitation.