Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At those ages I would invite them to spend time with you during vacations/school breaks/holidays. Encourage your kids to reach out to their cousins independent of you.
Oh my kids are good cousins to them, they all hang out. There's a cousins chat, that's how we all found out "If Dad is coming with SD, count us out". We (myself and 2 other siblings) also visit/ed them in college, sent care packages.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope - OP should not invite her brother and his family. She can let him know that of course he is welcome but she can’t host his new family at this time, she understands he will need to spend it with his wife and her/their (can’t tell if they are step or young kids) kids.
Here’s why …the drama between the dumped original kids and the do over kids is always a mess. DH’s father and his siblings all had divorces and second families. There is one expansive set of original cousins and one expansive set of do over cousins. As an observer its pretty clear that the originals are still hurt years later getting dumped by one parent and then seeing them dote on the do over kids.
Step kids are even weirder. The original kids are seeing their dad’s time and resources go to some other women’s kids.
Holidays are stressful enough don’t invite the clown car over and not expect a circus.
The "clown" is her brother. I want to see where you're coming from, but I simply can't imagine inviting my brother's kids and not my brother to a family event, short of finding out my brother abused them. But, I actually love my brother.
Anonymous wrote:Nope - OP should not invite her brother and his family. She can let him know that of course he is welcome but she can’t host his new family at this time, she understands he will need to spend it with his wife and her/their (can’t tell if they are step or young kids) kids.
Here’s why …the drama between the dumped original kids and the do over kids is always a mess. DH’s father and his siblings all had divorces and second families. There is one expansive set of original cousins and one expansive set of do over cousins. As an observer its pretty clear that the originals are still hurt years later getting dumped by one parent and then seeing them dote on the do over kids.
Step kids are even weirder. The original kids are seeing their dad’s time and resources go to some other women’s kids.
Holidays are stressful enough don’t invite the clown car over and not expect a circus.
Anonymous wrote:Nope - OP should not invite her brother and his family. She can let him know that of course he is welcome but she can’t host his new family at this time, she understands he will need to spend it with his wife and her/their (can’t tell if they are step or young kids) kids.
Here’s why …the drama between the dumped original kids and the do over kids is always a mess. DH’s father and his siblings all had divorces and second families. There is one expansive set of original cousins and one expansive set of do over cousins. As an observer its pretty clear that the originals are still hurt years later getting dumped by one parent and then seeing them dote on the do over kids.
Step kids are even weirder. The original kids are seeing their dad’s time and resources go to some other women’s kids.
Holidays are stressful enough don’t invite the clown car over and not expect a circus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure if this is "right", but:
If the gathering is you, your children, your parents and your nieces and nephews - the new wife and her children aren't really of the same "family". They can gather with her family, also the family of the step kids.
I think when you break apart a family you have to prepare for such things. So I guess I'd rather have the nieces and nephews present, than the brother + new wife + new fam.
The grandparents are hosting their kids (including the dad in this story) and their grandkids (the college boys in this story). You can’t really think they’re going to say their son isn’t welcome because he got divorced 5 years ago and his college aged kids don’t want his new wife there. Merry Christmas?
I think you could actually. Or host them separately. But new wife+children don't need to crash the rest of the family gathering.
What I wouldn't agree with is saying brother/son can come, but you must leave your wife+new kids at home. So I think do a big gathering with the rest of the family, and then they can come over another time.
A wife and kids aren’t “crashing the family gathering.” I married a man as a single mom: if his family excluded me based on the notion that we’re not *really* family I would be heartbroken and reconsider my marriage. That is not at all normal.
This is where my close friend is at right now. She married someone who had been previously married - they met over 5 years after the divorce. The mom of her husband's adult kids has been cohabitating with her boyfriend for many years. Still, the older kids have shunned her, and as a result, so his the rest of his family, to a lesser degree. She told me she feels like a mistress that can't be a part of his family even though they have young children together. She's been in a lot of therapy to try to deal and she's finally getting divorced over it. She is a ghost of the person I knew before all of this, and I hope after she's through the worst of it, my once vibrant, bubbly, happy friend comes back.
Why on earth did she marry into this situation?
Did you ever think maybe they do have their reasons? If the entire family is shunning her, there might be more going on. I know it's hard to imagine that about your friend, but sometimes there are things you don't know about.
OP says they met five years after the divorce. Not every second wife is an affair partner . You can’t pretzel your way into assuming she is. (NP)
No, OP said the "painful" divorce was 5 years ago, not that they met 5 years after the divorce. She hasn't yet stated if new wife was an affair partner who broke up their family after (presumably) 20+ years.
Anonymous wrote:Blended family blunder. My brother remarried to a woman with children. His own children do not accept his new family, his ex chose to stay out of it. Holidays are coming, our parents always gather kids and grandkids at Thanksgiving. His kids said "we are not coming if Dad's new family are there". We don't feel one way or the other about his new wife or her kids but it is all around awkward.
WWYD? Do we tell him "dear brother, please come but do not bring your wife and stepkids"? We do, however, want to see our nieces and nephew.