Anonymous
Post 11/17/2025 09:29     Subject: Re:DH is dismissive of my input about SD(10)

Here we go again with the "resilience". Anyone who doesn't like being buffeted about by the bad choices of others is not "resilient", I guess.


+1. I'm the poster above with the Dad with multiple marriages/kids and this is what I mean by "damn the torpedoes". These kind of parents bulldoze ahead with plans and the expectation that everyone falls is line is written in stone. Noting the fallout of these choices is not an indication of absence of resilience. It's acknowledgement of reality. OP course your teens have no issues with these choices. What if they did? As PP pointed out, the kids aren't in charge. So kids do what everyone else does; they suck it up. SD will do the same, eventually. That's not the same as "having no issues".

I do have empathy for OP however. She brought this up to her H and his suggestions are "stop nagging me" and "work it out with my exW", and in exchange maybe he'll work a bit less (unlikely; they have 4 kids now, soon to be 5). The emotional gymnastics required to then turn around and call this guy "a great husband and father" are impressive.

I wish you luck OP...it's a long road. Your H can keep the blinders on and (maybe truthfully to him) crow to anyone who'll listen that everyone was always fine. As the person holding down the home fort, it will be harder for you to say it and believe it. Work to build a real relationship with your SD. You'll both be in each other's life forever, if all works out. Better that there's real love there; tolerant indifference is the next alternative.
Anonymous
Post 11/17/2025 09:27     Subject: DH is dismissive of my input about SD(10)

So your current husband pays all the expenses for two kids that aren’t even his? He pays your part of their housing, food, living expenses, clothes, vacations etc? And then he is on the hook if 100% of expenses and costs for himself and you and your shared kids and his own daughter.

How talk about taking advantage of someone!
Anonymous
Post 11/17/2025 09:25     Subject: DH is dismissive of my input about SD(10)

Anonymous wrote:PP here. This is the kind of binary thinking that dismisses the lifelong complexity of blended families. No, kids are not the decision makers about adult behavior. They are also not unaffected bystanders. There are not two choices: have a multi-layered blended family and assume everyone thinks it's A-ok, or live alone forever. The fact that you're dumbing it down to these two options makes it likely that while you're an adult COD, you have no idea what the lifelong implications of blended families are, with all the forthcoming holidays, grandkids, inheritance issues, medical care, end of life decisions, and on, and on.

I didn't attack OP. I asked her to stop and consider her SD as a individual who, while she has no say in what's happening now, has and will have important feelings later that will impact the family. This isn't inviting a kid into the marital bed. It's recognizing that there are family ties that should be respected.


"...you have no idea what the lifelong implications of blended families are, with all the forthcoming holidays, grandkids, inheritance issues, medical care, end of life decisions, and on, and on." You are very wrong. Have had to/still do deal with holidays, grandkids, inheritance, medical care, deaths, burial decisions, probate, etc. including grandparents, parents, stepparents, kids, stepkids and on and on. It hasn't been easy but it's worked out in the long run. It's not one or two options, as you seem to think (black or white thinking) it is multi-faceted.

Of course family ties should be respected. Of course kids (children AND adults) should have one-on-one time alone with their biological parent(s) - especially so there can be open communication between parents and kids.

But it is irresponsible and myopic to think that one child is more important than any others because they were "first."
Anonymous
Post 11/17/2025 09:24     Subject: Re:DH is dismissive of my input about SD(10)

Anonymous wrote:OP: To PP’s wondering why we started a new family, We wanted to have kids together now while we were still young enough to. I don’t consider my Ex-H my family, and I do not think having kids with him should’ve stopped me from having kids with my husband. We only talk rarely now for our kids, and if I could, I would choose to never see him again.

My kids understand our family dynamics and do not have any issues with the new kids. I also love being a mom and wanted to have kids with someone that I truly loved. I had a career and worked until our son was born and haven’t gone back to work since, because our kids need a parent at home, and it would’ve been so much more stressful for all of us If I worked so, We decided that me staying home was the best decision for us. I do plan to go back to work though, when our baby girl goes to pre-K.


You missed the point of the question. Why did you have more kids when you already have three? Clearly you are struggling to handle five kids and that is why your DH is irritable, your SD feels neglected, and you are fighting over small things like headphones. You have more kids and more exes than you can handle. Why did you do this to your family?

What you wrote reads like your older children don't really count as children because you don't love their father anymore.
Anonymous
Post 11/17/2025 09:21     Subject: DH is dismissive of my input about SD(10)

Anonymous wrote:PP here. This is the kind of binary thinking that dismisses the lifelong complexity of blended families. No, kids are not the decision makers about adult behavior. They are also not unaffected bystanders. There are not two choices: have a multi-layered blended family and assume everyone thinks it's A-ok, or live alone forever. The fact that you're dumbing it down to these two options makes it likely that while you're an adult COD, you have no idea what the lifelong implications of blended families are, with all the forthcoming holidays, grandkids, inheritance issues, medical care, end of life decisions, and on, and on.

I didn't attack OP. I asked her to stop and consider her SD as a individual who, while she has no say in what's happening now, has and will have important feelings later that will impact the family. This isn't inviting a kid into the marital bed. It's recognizing that there are family ties that should be respected.


+ 1 million.
Anonymous
Post 11/17/2025 09:15     Subject: Re:DH is dismissive of my input about SD(10)

Anonymous wrote:OP: To PP’s wondering why we started a new family, We wanted to have kids together now while we were still young enough to. I don’t consider my Ex-H my family, and I do not think having kids with him should’ve stopped me from having kids with my husband. We only talk rarely now for our kids, and if I could, I would choose to never see him again.

My kids understand our family dynamics and do not have any issues with the new kids. I also love being a mom and wanted to have kids with someone that I truly loved. I had a career and worked until our son was born and haven’t gone back to work since, because our kids need a parent at home, and it would’ve been so much more stressful for all of us If I worked so, We decided that me staying home was the best decision for us. I do plan to go back to work though, when our baby girl goes to pre-K.


Me, me, me! What me wants! Me me me! What a out other people FFS?

Sorry but you're deluding yourself that your older children are fine with this. You've bitten off more than you can chew. That's why your DH is unhappy and why your older children will likely distance themselves.
Anonymous
Post 11/17/2025 09:14     Subject: DH is dismissive of my input about SD(10)

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP you remind me of my stepmom. There is a certain kind of blended family that operates like this: our happiness matters most, and damn the torpedoes. Meaning, a bunch of choices get made, usually for life, and the kids are just expected to roll with it. Divorce, new marriages, more babies, changing custody schedules now that there are more babies...the adults adjust everyone's lives with pretty minimal thought to how the kids feel about it. And sure, adults have to run the show. Your scenario about you being more involves with daily details and behavioral issues than your H is common. He's earning big dollars, you stay at home. He's distracted and frankly wants the bumps in the road smoothed out.

But I want to point out what happens on the kids' end while you two are busy negotiating the broken headphones: they very clearly get the message that they have no say. I grew up like this. Remarriages, new kids, lots of money (less each year as new family members got added though, and now I have a gaggle of stepsiblings living on my Dad's dime). It's not great, and I'm not talking about the money, although that does kind of suck. It's my Dad's chronic, never ending guilt and conflict about not being able to be present and connect, in any real way, with all these kids he created, and my stepmom's endless irritation, expressed in both big and small ways, that we still exist, frankly. Kids aren't stupid. You think there's not some pretty deep biology at play here while you're gestating a new baby and SD is trying to sleep in Dad's room? Come on.

I'm probably shouting into the wind here, because parents like this really do view their kids as passengers and life as a trip they're dictating. This is where we're going kids, buckle up, no we're not stopping for snacks. There's worse family situations. But I will remind you as your next baby comes...your SD was around before you were. She's a whole person with a deep biological connection to the man you're now married to, and that isn't changing. Consider seeing her as her own person: of course she's sleeping in her single mom's bed at home at age 10 while you expand your family. Seeing things from her point of view might go a long way.


I am also a COD and while I can understand your position and empathize, the fact is that not all kids feel this way nor do they carry the resentments into adulthood.

What do you consider the alternative? Should your father have consulted you (a child) first before he decided to date? If you said no should he have complied? Should it have been your decision to dictate that he spend the rest of his life alone? Should he have consulted you about his finances and asked what YOU wanted him to do with his money? Should he have consulted YOU before he and his wife decided to have children? (For the record, there are many adult kids who still want to have this kind of control over a parent's life - it's not just small children.)

I certainly agree that people should take care of the children they have, both financially and emotionally, before having more. But I don't think that children should be the ultimate voice on what decisions the parents make. Even in the worst case scenarios, if you ask a child if their parents should split up they will tell you "NO!" Does that mean that someone should stay in a marriage where they are being physically or psychologically abused? Or their spouse is repeatedly cheating on them?

You said, "You think there's not some pretty deep biology at play here while you're gestating a new baby and SD is trying to sleep in Dad's room?"

Of course there is. But many will have a different opinion than you do. A 10-year-old knowingly inserts herself into the marital bedroom and it should not have been acceptable. Period. I do agree the father here needs to step up and have a conversation with SD about his love and concern for her AND the fact that life is different now, and that it now includes SM and her half-siblings. This is something that SD's mother should also talk about. That life doesn't stay the same, nor the way we always want it to be.

Resilience is a life-long condition that is needed to live the best life you can. Learning that skill early is key.





Here we go again with the "resilience". Anyone who doesn't like being buffeted about by the bad choices of others is not "resilient", I guess.

OP, you have more children and a more complex family than you and your DH can handle. That's the bottom line here. No, children should not get to veto these kinds of decisions, but adults should use some common sense and not create an unmanageable family situation. You did this to yourself.
Anonymous
Post 11/17/2025 09:01     Subject: DH is dismissive of my input about SD(10)

PP here. This is the kind of binary thinking that dismisses the lifelong complexity of blended families. No, kids are not the decision makers about adult behavior. They are also not unaffected bystanders. There are not two choices: have a multi-layered blended family and assume everyone thinks it's A-ok, or live alone forever. The fact that you're dumbing it down to these two options makes it likely that while you're an adult COD, you have no idea what the lifelong implications of blended families are, with all the forthcoming holidays, grandkids, inheritance issues, medical care, end of life decisions, and on, and on.

I didn't attack OP. I asked her to stop and consider her SD as a individual who, while she has no say in what's happening now, has and will have important feelings later that will impact the family. This isn't inviting a kid into the marital bed. It's recognizing that there are family ties that should be respected.
Anonymous
Post 11/17/2025 08:53     Subject: DH is dismissive of my input about SD(10)

Anonymous wrote:OP you remind me of my stepmom. There is a certain kind of blended family that operates like this: our happiness matters most, and damn the torpedoes. Meaning, a bunch of choices get made, usually for life, and the kids are just expected to roll with it. Divorce, new marriages, more babies, changing custody schedules now that there are more babies...the adults adjust everyone's lives with pretty minimal thought to how the kids feel about it. And sure, adults have to run the show. Your scenario about you being more involves with daily details and behavioral issues than your H is common. He's earning big dollars, you stay at home. He's distracted and frankly wants the bumps in the road smoothed out.

But I want to point out what happens on the kids' end while you two are busy negotiating the broken headphones: they very clearly get the message that they have no say. I grew up like this. Remarriages, new kids, lots of money (less each year as new family members got added though, and now I have a gaggle of stepsiblings living on my Dad's dime). It's not great, and I'm not talking about the money, although that does kind of suck. It's my Dad's chronic, never ending guilt and conflict about not being able to be present and connect, in any real way, with all these kids he created, and my stepmom's endless irritation, expressed in both big and small ways, that we still exist, frankly. Kids aren't stupid. You think there's not some pretty deep biology at play here while you're gestating a new baby and SD is trying to sleep in Dad's room? Come on.

I'm probably shouting into the wind here, because parents like this really do view their kids as passengers and life as a trip they're dictating. This is where we're going kids, buckle up, no we're not stopping for snacks. There's worse family situations. But I will remind you as your next baby comes...your SD was around before you were. She's a whole person with a deep biological connection to the man you're now married to, and that isn't changing. Consider seeing her as her own person: of course she's sleeping in her single mom's bed at home at age 10 while you expand your family. Seeing things from her point of view might go a long way.


I am also a COD and while I can understand your position and empathize, the fact is that not all kids feel this way nor do they carry the resentments into adulthood.

What do you consider the alternative? Should your father have consulted you (a child) first before he decided to date? If you said no should he have complied? Should it have been your decision to dictate that he spend the rest of his life alone? Should he have consulted you about his finances and asked what YOU wanted him to do with his money? Should he have consulted YOU before he and his wife decided to have children? (For the record, there are many adult kids who still want to have this kind of control over a parent's life - it's not just small children.)

I certainly agree that people should take care of the children they have, both financially and emotionally, before having more. But I don't think that children should be the ultimate voice on what decisions the parents make. Even in the worst case scenarios, if you ask a child if their parents should split up they will tell you "NO!" Does that mean that someone should stay in a marriage where they are being physically or psychologically abused? Or their spouse is repeatedly cheating on them?

You said, "You think there's not some pretty deep biology at play here while you're gestating a new baby and SD is trying to sleep in Dad's room?"

Of course there is. But many will have a different opinion than you do. A 10-year-old knowingly inserts herself into the marital bedroom and it should not have been acceptable. Period. I do agree the father here needs to step up and have a conversation with SD about his love and concern for her AND the fact that life is different now, and that it now includes SM and her half-siblings. This is something that SD's mother should also talk about. That life doesn't stay the same, nor the way we always want it to be.

Resilience is a life-long condition that is needed to live the best life you can. Learning that skill early is key.



Anonymous
Post 11/17/2025 07:16     Subject: DH is dismissive of my input about SD(10)

OP you remind me of my stepmom. There is a certain kind of blended family that operates like this: our happiness matters most, and damn the torpedoes. Meaning, a bunch of choices get made, usually for life, and the kids are just expected to roll with it. Divorce, new marriages, more babies, changing custody schedules now that there are more babies...the adults adjust everyone's lives with pretty minimal thought to how the kids feel about it. And sure, adults have to run the show. Your scenario about you being more involves with daily details and behavioral issues than your H is common. He's earning big dollars, you stay at home. He's distracted and frankly wants the bumps in the road smoothed out.

But I want to point out what happens on the kids' end while you two are busy negotiating the broken headphones: they very clearly get the message that they have no say. I grew up like this. Remarriages, new kids, lots of money (less each year as new family members got added though, and now I have a gaggle of stepsiblings living on my Dad's dime). It's not great, and I'm not talking about the money, although that does kind of suck. It's my Dad's chronic, never ending guilt and conflict about not being able to be present and connect, in any real way, with all these kids he created, and my stepmom's endless irritation, expressed in both big and small ways, that we still exist, frankly. Kids aren't stupid. You think there's not some pretty deep biology at play here while you're gestating a new baby and SD is trying to sleep in Dad's room? Come on.

I'm probably shouting into the wind here, because parents like this really do view their kids as passengers and life as a trip they're dictating. This is where we're going kids, buckle up, no we're not stopping for snacks. There's worse family situations. But I will remind you as your next baby comes...your SD was around before you were. She's a whole person with a deep biological connection to the man you're now married to, and that isn't changing. Consider seeing her as her own person: of course she's sleeping in her single mom's bed at home at age 10 while you expand your family. Seeing things from her point of view might go a long way.
Anonymous
Post 11/16/2025 22:44     Subject: Re:DH is dismissive of my input about SD(10)

OP: To PP’s wondering why we started a new family, We wanted to have kids together now while we were still young enough to. I don’t consider my Ex-H my family, and I do not think having kids with him should’ve stopped me from having kids with my husband. We only talk rarely now for our kids, and if I could, I would choose to never see him again.

My kids understand our family dynamics and do not have any issues with the new kids. I also love being a mom and wanted to have kids with someone that I truly loved. I had a career and worked until our son was born and haven’t gone back to work since, because our kids need a parent at home, and it would’ve been so much more stressful for all of us If I worked so, We decided that me staying home was the best decision for us. I do plan to go back to work though, when our baby girl goes to pre-K.
Anonymous
Post 11/16/2025 17:48     Subject: DH is dismissive of my input about SD(10)

I don’t understand why people start new families just because they got divorced. The old family is still there, they just don’t live in the same house.
Anonymous
Post 11/16/2025 17:04     Subject: DH is dismissive of my input about SD(10)

Why in the world did you guys have more kids when you already already have your own kids? Especially two MORE kids??

This is insane.
Anonymous
Post 11/16/2025 16:50     Subject: DH is dismissive of my input about SD(10)

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you have more children and a more complicated household than your DH can handle.


This. So you’ll soon have five children between you two?!

How’d you bag a millionaire? Do you have a prenup?


Especially as a non working mom to what would have been very recently after his divorce (if his DD was 2?) and with kids 7 and 9. What is the point of having more kids so far apart in age? Focus on the ones you have. You have been in SD life she was two?! Did she ever have any time where it was her mom and dad under one roof? Sounds like you might be the issue Op.
Anonymous
Post 11/16/2025 15:54     Subject: Re:DH is dismissive of my input about SD(10)

OP: SD sleeps in another bed in our master bedroom, not in ours, SD’s mom knows she sleeps in our bedroom and we have a civil relationship but, I usually tell DH casually about what SD needs or wants first.

DH and I sat down and spoke about it, and he said that I am a bit too much of a nagger, so it frustrates him when he’s exhausted after work, so he said that we can talk about things related to SD when he isn’t feeling overwhelmed/tired, and I asked him if I should be more in communication with SD’s mom, he said that I should, and that he also plans to cut back a little from work (he does more than he needs to) to feel less stressed and be able to spend more time with the family.

Thanks for a lot of great advice.