Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
No new kids WAS smart. 5 IS plenty, especially when they have all already suffered a family trauma.
And yeah, you really dont know how this all turns out for the kids until everyone’s 40 and has kids of their own. While the kids may feel like they’re all in it together for awhile, the fact is that they are going to have radically different experiences than their step siblings. This is an example of parent-driven narratives that the adult children in these situations really grow to resent. These 5 kids may grow up together, but two of them have a dead parent and 3 of them have lord knows what shared custody and stepsiblings on bio dad’s side to navigate. These kids are NOT growing up with the same story. That doesnt mean it cant turn out well, that doesnt mean they wont be happy, but their experience in this new family unit will never be truly shared or the same, and it’s invalidating to pretend otherwise. If someone who’s parent divorced ever told me it was basically the same as growing up without a parent who died, they would get punched.
Yup. You don't really know until they're grown. The really hard parts of this come when it's time for elder-care, btw.
But I guarantee you, trying to stifle their speech and their feelings and insist that they validate your rosy scenario is only going to cause resentment. They are stepsiblings, that's the fact of the matter. Banning the word will only make it seem like a bad thing that the adults are insecure about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are nuts. I showed this post to them. This thread is full of very angry ex-wives and adult children who never grew up.
Completely agree. It's a broken record of screeching by angry ADULTS who can't emotionally process that their mommy and daddy are no longer married, and oh the horror! the parents have moved on to other relationships.
Wait till they go through their own divorces, which they will. A different story then.
I have to agree that there’s some weird fixation on the past here. And I say that as someone whose stepmother was and is positively terrible. But it was terrible because I was a CHILD, based on how the adults treated me. My step and half sibs were fine - we were all in that mess together (ironically we blended because our parents were such a sh*tshow.) Now I am and adult and I don’t gaf. I go where I want on the holidays and ignore the rest. Y’all need to grow up and live your own lives. If you get divorced/widowed and remarried, do a better job.
So to answer the OP's original question, here is a blended family that did not "work" and one reason for that is that adult children DGAF.
no, my point is a) if you act like a reasonable adult and put the kids first, a blended family can be fine. despite mine being awful, that had nothing to do with my step and half sibs, and everything to do with immature and abusive adults. and b) if you are and adult and still fixated on your bad blended family, see (a) and start acting like and adult and do what is best for yourself and your own kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are nuts. I showed this post to them. This thread is full of very angry ex-wives and adult children who never grew up.
Completely agree. It's a broken record of screeching by angry ADULTS who can't emotionally process that their mommy and daddy are no longer married, and oh the horror! the parents have moved on to other relationships.
Wait till they go through their own divorces, which they will. A different story then.
I have to agree that there’s some weird fixation on the past here. And I say that as someone whose stepmother was and is positively terrible. But it was terrible because I was a CHILD, based on how the adults treated me. My step and half sibs were fine - we were all in that mess together (ironically we blended because our parents were such a sh*tshow.) Now I am and adult and I don’t gaf. I go where I want on the holidays and ignore the rest. Y’all need to grow up and live your own lives. If you get divorced/widowed and remarried, do a better job.
So to answer the OP's original question, here is a blended family that did not "work" and one reason for that is that adult children DGAF.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are nuts. I showed this post to them. This thread is full of very angry ex-wives and adult children who never grew up.
Completely agree. It's a broken record of screeching by angry ADULTS who can't emotionally process that their mommy and daddy are no longer married, and oh the horror! the parents have moved on to other relationships.
Wait till they go through their own divorces, which they will. A different story then.
I have to agree that there’s some weird fixation on the past here. And I say that as someone whose stepmother was and is positively terrible. But it was terrible because I was a CHILD, based on how the adults treated me. My step and half sibs were fine - we were all in that mess together (ironically we blended because our parents were such a sh*tshow.) Now I am and adult and I don’t gaf. I go where I want on the holidays and ignore the rest. Y’all need to grow up and live your own lives. If you get divorced/widowed and remarried, do a better job.
Anonymous wrote:You people are nuts. I showed this post to them. This thread is full of very angry ex-wives and adult children who never grew up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are nuts. I showed this post to them. This thread is full of very angry ex-wives and adult children who never grew up.
Completely agree. It's a broken record of screeching by angry ADULTS who can't emotionally process that their mommy and daddy are no longer married, and oh the horror! the parents have moved on to other relationships.
Wait till they go through their own divorces, which they will. A different story then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are nuts. I showed this post to them. This thread is full of very angry ex-wives and adult children who never grew up.
Completely agree. It's a broken record of screeching by angry ADULTS who can't emotionally process that their mommy and daddy are no longer married, and oh the horror! the parents have moved on to other relationships.
Wait till they go through their own divorces, which they will. A different story then.
Anonymous wrote:You people are nuts. I showed this post to them. This thread is full of very angry ex-wives and adult children who never grew up.
Anonymous wrote: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.
No new kids WAS smart. 5 IS plenty, especially when they have all already suffered a family trauma.
And yeah, you really dont know how this all turns out for the kids until everyone’s 40 and has kids of their own. While the kids may feel like they’re all in it together for awhile, the fact is that they are going to have radically different experiences than their step siblings. This is an example of parent-driven narratives that the adult children in these situations really grow to resent. These 5 kids may grow up together, but two of them have a dead parent and 3 of them have lord knows what shared custody and stepsiblings on bio dad’s side to navigate. These kids are NOT growing up with the same story. That doesnt mean it cant turn out well, that doesnt mean they wont be happy, but their experience in this new family unit will never be truly shared or the same, and it’s invalidating to pretend otherwise. If someone who’s parent divorced ever told me it was basically the same as growing up without a parent who died, they would get punched.
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: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: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.
yeah sure my stepmother would claim a similar story for our blended family ... all totally fake.