Anonymous wrote:"Step mom refusing to let stepdaughter have her Christmas tree is anything but making step daughter feel comfortable and loved. In fact, it is the complete opposite and sends a clear message that this is NOT stepdaughter's home and her traditions are not welcome in the family."
It is a difficult situation, and fact specific. If H had prior custody and raising his DD with a tree and then remarried and step mom banned it,of course I would agree with above poster that should make SD feel rejected. But, that is not OP's situation. Would you feel it is OK for SD to eat ham and shrimp in the house if those are her favorite foods? I was a kid whose mother remarried a man who kept a kosher home. Although I was raised Jewish, I knew almost niching about this -- no ice cream / dairy after dinner with meat, no milk in coffee, confusing rules about dishes, schlepping to orthodox services that were entirely in Hebrew that meant nothing to me, etc. BUT, NEVER for a moment did I not feel completely loved and welcomed by my stepfather. I had my issues with my mother for marrying him-- i did not like the rules -- and perhaps the SD will have
issues with her father marrying OP, but an 18 year old has to realize you don't walk into a home you have never lived in and expect the rules to change for you especially when there are younger children being raised differently. Frankly, I suspect this is much about Dad's belated guilt trip relating to not living with his daughter - assuming likely because of a divorce-- and I suspect this is much less important to the SD. I get that Christmas is a wonderful warm holiday and trees can be great, but an 18 year old should get it also if OP does not want to go there. Focusing here on OP's situation. Details matter.
How did you get all of this from OP's post? Honestly I had the sense she was not flat out banning the tree but rather trying to get comfortable with it. Not sure we have any real details about why SD is now living there, and what her circumstances are (ie: will she celebrate separately with her mom's family or is whatever she does with her dad the only celebration she gets). Details def matter but I don't think we know any of the relevant ones here ...
Anonymous wrote:I guess for me, as a Jewish person, the difference comes down to participating in someone else's holiday vs actually celebrating. Our household, as well as many other Jewish households, don't have a tree because we would consider that as celebrating the holiday of Christmas. However, I'd have zero issue being invited to someone else's house to share in their holiday traditions. However, now you are talking about having the tradition actually occurring in your home. This can be confusing for younger kids.
I'm also a stepmom, so I understand how this is a tricky situation. Your stepdaughter is now part of the household, and she's not Jewish. So, she should be able to have her own traditions. It's not going to be the same as if she were living in a completely Christian house. But perhaps you can discuss with your husband how the holiday can be special and personal for your stepdaughter while still clearly being cultural sharing, rather than celebrating for your kids.
Maybe your husband and his daughter buy the tree and decorate the tree. Maybe on Christmas there is a special meal, she gets gifts, but your whole family gathers while she opens them. Then on Hanukah, the little kids get their gifts and she can participate in the meal and just watch the menorah lighting
Just throwing some stuff out there. But mainly just approaching this as sharing each other's traditions.
Anonymous wrote: It is different. A shelf in a fridge is an accommodation. A six foot tree in a living room with decorations and lights is a statement in some way about the owners of the home. There is no way around that even if different folks have different ideas as to what statement it makes. My guess is this situation was not contemplated by OP and DH. SD is 18, OP and DH have been involved 10 years. We don't why SD moved in or how long she will stay, we don't know the ages of OPs kids. For many Jews -- obviously not all -- part of their identiy is not signalling they may be something else; not assimilating beyond a certain point in a dominant Christian society. I am not religous - I am a bit spiritual -- but I am definitely Jewish culturally and in my identity and the thought of having a tree in the house when my kids
were small was something I would not do (I may be able to contemplate a small one now that my kids are older for the reasons others above note). There are many more important ways OP can make SD comfortable and feel loved
without a tree. This gets back to the other kids' ages and whatever deal OP and DH struck in their marriage. They can change the deal, of course, for SD's benefit, but know that the tree could have other family consequences. Do OP's kids acknowledge Christmas at home now at all or not? Gifts? If kids are older and OP wants to expose them more to Christmas and show respect for SD, she can take the family to mass on Christmas. Or the family can do volunteer work on Christmas for children or the elderly. There are many better ways to show an embracing of the Christmas spirit for the whole family than cutting down a tree this first year with SD.
Anonymous wrote: It is different. A shelf in a fridge is an accommodation. A six foot tree in a living room with decorations and lights is a statement in some way about the owners of the home. There is no way around that even if different folks have different ideas as to what statement it makes. My guess is this situation was not contemplated by OP and DH. SD is 18, OP and DH have been involved 10 years. We don't why SD moved in or how long she will stay, we don't know the ages of OPs kids. For many Jews -- obviously not all -- part of their identiy is not signalling they may be something else; not assimilating beyond a certain point in a dominant Christian society. I am not religous - I am a bit spiritual -- but I am definitely Jewish culturally and in my identity and the thought of having a tree in the house when my kids
were small was something I would not do (I may be able to contemplate a small one now that my kids are older for the reasons others above note). There are many more important ways OP can make SD comfortable and feel loved
without a tree. This gets back to the other kids' ages and whatever deal OP and DH struck in their marriage. They can change the deal, of course, for SD's benefit, but know that the tree could have other family consequences. Do OP's kids acknowledge Christmas at home now at all or not? Gifts? If kids are older and OP wants to expose them more to Christmas and show respect for SD, she can take the family to mass on Christmas. Or the family can do volunteer work on Christmas for children or the elderly. There are many better ways to show an embracing of the Christmas spirit for the whole family than cutting down a tree this first year with SD.
Anonymous wrote:It's a tree people. A decoration. Not a symbol of faith if you don't want it to be. In other words you dont need to feel threatened by this.
If a non-Jew posted similar concern about a Menorah all hell would break loose on here - it would be seen as anti-semetic and i think we all know this.
Op, your kids won't be less Jewish because of a tree in the house. They will probably love it. Enjoy the holidays (all of them)!