Anonymous wrote:I always find it fascinating when step parents assume that their partner's children should automatically have a sibling like bond with their half-siblings. That's not a given, and considering the age difference between the step-daughter and your son, it's not surprising. Your expectations of her are off the mark.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
So she was a teen when her divorced father met someone else, got married, had another child with the new wife, and was ill and died?
Excuse me, but that is COMPLETELY TRAUMATIZING for a teenager to go through. Normal teens with happy home lives can be impossible, but this???
I would forgive her and start afresh. Truly. You have no idea what she suffered during those years. You have no idea how that teen period affected her college years and young adulthood. She's probably scarred for life.
+1 although this perspective is probably too generous for the internet crowd
Anonymous wrote:
So she was a teen when her divorced father met someone else, got married, had another child with the new wife, and was ill and died?
Excuse me, but that is COMPLETELY TRAUMATIZING for a teenager to go through. Normal teens with happy home lives can be impossible, but this???
I would forgive her and start afresh. Truly. You have no idea what she suffered during those years. You have no idea how that teen period affected her college years and young adulthood. She's probably scarred for life.
Anonymous wrote:NP. I have a lot of trouble processing these posts because I think many of them completely invalidate OP's feelings about her late husband's child. Yes, the child was young and was behaving terribly. But what's wrong with OP simply ignoring her requests for contact? It's not like they had lived in the same house or had any relationship. If OP didn't have a child with her late husband, would this person still want to be in touch? What exactly does she want? She still has her bio mom so I don't buy all these PPs lamenting about her "trauma". There are people in worse circumstances and this person needs to learn to not harrass the OP.
Anonymous wrote:THe house is gone and the deed was in my name. She is a trust fund baby. His exDW got his life insurance and 401K.
When she writes to me, she asks me how I am doing, if I have met anyone, what grade MY son is (she doesn't call him "my brother", she calls him "MY SON"). She puts a lot of stupid emoticons.
Anonymous wrote:NP. I have a lot of trouble processing these posts because I think many of them completely invalidate OP's feelings about her late husband's child. Yes, the child was young and was behaving terribly. But what's wrong with OP simply ignoring her requests for contact? It's not like they had lived in the same house or had any relationship. If OP didn't have a child with her late husband, would this person still want to be in touch? What exactly does she want? She still has her bio mom so I don't buy all these PPs lamenting about her "trauma". There are people in worse circumstances and this person needs to learn to not harrass the OP.
Anonymous wrote:I am a PP who said you should be nice, respond and set appropriate boundaries. I also am a stepmom. My stepdaughter at 16 had a HORRIBLE reaction to our pregnancy and BTW she was also extremely high maintenance as a teenager. I still showed love and maturity and didn't reflect back whatever she chose to dish out. She was... a teenager. THAT'S WHAT (some of/ many of) THEY DO. She is now 22 and a thoughtful, loving doting big sister and my children cherish their relationship with her even though we don't live close.
Give her a chance OP. You sound pretty terrible. Some teenagers are rough, and its up to adults to...be the adults.