Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m looking at maybe making one. We plan to take it super slow. Won’t move in until oldest leaves for college so kids don’t ever have to live together. Will do holidays together.
Give me a break. This is not a blended family. This is an empty nester couple moving in together.
Anonymous wrote:The ones that work have significant age differences between the kids. So her kids are in ES, and his kids are in college. Completely different life stages, with enough time in between that they are not in competition with who is allowed to do what/who gets what/who pays for what. Also, there’s a lot of estate planning and honest discussions about who gets what when the parents die.
The worst is blending kids the same age. And especially after they are about 7. Before then, they can be raised as siblings. After that, you are opening the door to additional stress and competition of tweens/teens. Depending on the circumstances of their other biological parents:
- custody schedules
- activities (cost but also commitment)
- vacations when school calendars don’t align
- friend groups
- expectations for grades/homework
- screen time
- bullying
- getting a phone
- curfews
- expectations for a PT/summer job
- getting a car
- going to college
Also, as PP said, the best parents of blended families are healed, and have decent relationships with their exes. Unfortunately, a lot of the people who rush into blending 10-14 year olds are doing it because they can’t delay gratification, support themselves (financially or emotionally), or feel the need to “prove” that they are “not the problem”.
Or, maybe one or both has an ex who continues to be a problem and will threaten 100 percent custody or make false allegations against the new parent, just to be vindictive. Those problems destabilize the whole family. It’s not fair, but people in those situations should probably just wait until the kids are out of the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There seems to be a heavy trad lean on DCUM that really wants people to never ever divorce, under almost under circumstances.
But people have been developing their own different conceptions of family forever. It just takes letting go of concerns about not satisfying norms, and focusing on what is important for healthy 'family' relationships.
and since forever the “evil stepmother” has been a trope, for a reason!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My stepfather is a nice enough guy but I don't love his kids and never will. I feel like any time my Mom spends with his kids has been taken out of time she could be spending with mine.
Mom married him after I was out of the house so I never shared a roof with him. Still, it's not comfortable to visit their shared home now. Esp when his kids are there too. Way too stressful on everyone.
I would NEVER remarry if DH died.
You sound awful. If one of your parents died you would be OK with them never remarriage because it takes away time from you? So self centered. You know if a parent got sick or another sibling the same would happen. I don't see why you have to do blended family activities but I don't get harboring resentment because someone else remarries.
Anonymous wrote:Was talking to a co-worker recently who said his XW mentioned to him that she and her BF were talking about moving in together. He has 2 kids (10-12 years old) and they have two kids, the same age range. She loves the idea of a big family. He told her that as soon as their kids say a word about not being happy, he will ask for 100% custody. It sounds messy OP....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m looking at maybe making one. We plan to take it super slow. Won’t move in until oldest leaves for college so kids don’t ever have to live together. Will do holidays together.
Give me a break. This is not a blended family. This is an empty nester couple moving in together.
Anonymous wrote:I’m looking at maybe making one. We plan to take it super slow. Won’t move in until oldest leaves for college so kids don’t ever have to live together. Will do holidays together.
Anonymous wrote:There seems to be a heavy trad lean on DCUM that really wants people to never ever divorce, under almost under circumstances.
But people have been developing their own different conceptions of family forever. It just takes letting go of concerns about not satisfying norms, and focusing on what is important for healthy 'family' relationships.