Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Try to wait one year, my uncle was remarried within 1 year , my mom was really pissed
My FIL was married within a year too. I was very surprised because he’d had a long happy marriage, but people do strange things.
Marry in haste, repent in leisure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say - if you meet someone great organically, don’t hold yourself back. But maybe wait a year before doing stuff like online dating.
Also, just because op is dating doesn’t mean the kids lives have to be affected a lot by that at first. I date a divorced dad with teens and we are only slowly starting to have me there at family events etc. I’m fine with waiting to they go to college to get married and move in. There’s a big difference between dating and bringing home a stepdad.
Good luck with that. No matter how old a man's kids are, odds are one (or all) of them will have a problem with you. Including when they marry and have their own kids.
Unless the divorced mother of the kids is welcoming to you and encourages her kids to have a relationship with you, it won't ever be successful.
Maternal loyalty binds are life-long.
I’m not sure what your point is. Are you saying my relationship with their dad won’t be successful because of his kids? Or are you saying the kids won’t accept me as some sort of stepmom figure? My goal is to have a successful happy relationship with their dad (which I do now) and at least a civil relationship with his sons. I don’t expect them to treat me like a second mom. They have parents.
I am saying that the kids MOTHER will have the greatest influence on what kind of relationship you have with his kids, including into their adulthood. Being civil is the bare minimum, most people would like something a bit better than that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Try to wait one year, my uncle was remarried within 1 year , my mom was really pissed
My FIL was married within a year too. I was very surprised because he’d had a long happy marriage, but people do strange things.
Marry in haste, repent in leisure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s up to you and no one else. If it feels like the right time it is regardless of others opinions.
Widower here. I was ready to date before the kids were ready for me to date. Don’t rush them.
My mother died when I was in my late teens. My dad did not date again for years and I would have been fine with him dating again sooner. I never felt like he was trying to replace my mom or anything and that it was hard for him being alone after my brother and I were out of the house. I know even decades later and since his remarriage, he still misses my mom. I think it would be a harder if the marriage had been rocky.
I wanted to add .. my mom's passing was not sudden. at all. So we also processed some of our grief before her actual passing. I think there is some truth to men just needing someone, especially if they've been married a long time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say - if you meet someone great organically, don’t hold yourself back. But maybe wait a year before doing stuff like online dating.
Also, just because op is dating doesn’t mean the kids lives have to be affected a lot by that at first. I date a divorced dad with teens and we are only slowly starting to have me there at family events etc. I’m fine with waiting to they go to college to get married and move in. There’s a big difference between dating and bringing home a stepdad.
Good luck with that. No matter how old a man's kids are, odds are one (or all) of them will have a problem with you. Including when they marry and have their own kids.
Unless the divorced mother of the kids is welcoming to you and encourages her kids to have a relationship with you, it won't ever be successful.
Maternal loyalty binds are life-long.
I’m not sure what your point is. Are you saying my relationship with their dad won’t be successful because of his kids? Or are you saying the kids won’t accept me as some sort of stepmom figure? My goal is to have a successful happy relationship with their dad (which I do now) and at least a civil relationship with his sons. I don’t expect them to treat me like a second mom. They have parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say - if you meet someone great organically, don’t hold yourself back. But maybe wait a year before doing stuff like online dating.
Also, just because op is dating doesn’t mean the kids lives have to be affected a lot by that at first. I date a divorced dad with teens and we are only slowly starting to have me there at family events etc. I’m fine with waiting to they go to college to get married and move in. There’s a big difference between dating and bringing home a stepdad.
Good luck with that. No matter how old a man's kids are, odds are one (or all) of them will have a problem with you. Including when they marry and have their own kids.
Unless the divorced mother of the kids is welcoming to you and encourages her kids to have a relationship with you, it won't ever be successful.
Maternal loyalty binds are life-long.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think more importantly, it’s about what you think about your kids. If their reaction matters to you, talk to them and wait. If not, do what you want.
For minor kids, it's just common sense to wait. No matter what their verbal reaction is, they need time to be supported in their grief. The loss of a parent is worse than the loss of a spouse - a spouse you can replace; a parent you cannot. An adult can choose to cover up or end their grieving by rapidly getting remarried, but a child cannot. The remarriage then puts the child and new partner in an untenable situation of competing loyalties. On the flip side, any person who would go all-in in a super fast new relationship with a recent widower with minor kids doesn't really have their head screwed on straight, either. It's not a good sign of their ability to manage their emotions and relationships.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Try to wait one year, my uncle was remarried within 1 year , my mom was really pissed
None of your mom’s business.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s up to you and no one else. If it feels like the right time it is regardless of others opinions.
Widower here. I was ready to date before the kids were ready for me to date. Don’t rush them.
My mother died when I was in my late teens. My dad did not date again for years and I would have been fine with him dating again sooner. I never felt like he was trying to replace my mom or anything and that it was hard for him being alone after my brother and I were out of the house. I know even decades later and since his remarriage, he still misses my mom. I think it would be a harder if the marriage had been rocky.
I wanted to add .. my mom's passing was not sudden. at all. So we also processed some of our grief before her actual passing. I think there is some truth to men just needing someone, especially if they've been married a long time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s up to you and no one else. If it feels like the right time it is regardless of others opinions.
Widower here. I was ready to date before the kids were ready for me to date. Don’t rush them.
My mother died when I was in my late teens. My dad did not date again for years and I would have been fine with him dating again sooner. I never felt like he was trying to replace my mom or anything and that it was hard for him being alone after my brother and I were out of the house. I know even decades later and since his remarriage, he still misses my mom. I think it would be a harder if the marriage had been rocky.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s up to you and no one else. If it feels like the right time it is regardless of others opinions.
Widower here. I was ready to date before the kids were ready for me to date. Don’t rush them.