Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is hard to answer. My DH is a wonderful man, and my DS genuinely loves him. However, the level of conflict between DS and his step brother is really difficult for all of us. They just do not get along and are very different people.
Why should they get along with each other?
Just because it's more convenient for the parents?
You married the other kid's father. Your kid did not marry the other kid.
Putting your child in the position of calling the shots in any of your dating life or any life decisions for that matter is not psychologically healthy. Haven't you ever heard the term "mini-spouse"? It's more damaging to a kid to let them be the ruler of your household than it is to say "Hey Larla, please try and be kind to Larlo".
It's not psychologically healthy to let your child have any say in how he or she will get to live his or her life? After you and/or your ex spouse have messed it up bigtime already?
Your kind of attitude is why step families fail. You just don't give two shits about what the kids think about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is hard to answer. My DH is a wonderful man, and my DS genuinely loves him. However, the level of conflict between DS and his step brother is really difficult for all of us. They just do not get along and are very different people.
Why should they get along with each other?
Just because it's more convenient for the parents?
You married the other kid's father. Your kid did not marry the other kid.
I didn't say they had to get along. I said it was a difficult situation.
A difficult situation, created by you, your ex, and your new spouse. Not by the children.
But they are given no choice in the matter.
What if my spouse cheats and leaves me ? I didn't have a choice ! So by that logic my kids will end up with depressed parent because I got screwed over by cheating DW and now I'm supposed to eat yet another shit sandwich and stay single until such time as they are okay with ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is hard to answer. My DH is a wonderful man, and my DS genuinely loves him. However, the level of conflict between DS and his step brother is really difficult for all of us. They just do not get along and are very different people.
Why should they get along with each other?
Just because it's more convenient for the parents?
You married the other kid's father. Your kid did not marry the other kid.
Putting your child in the position of calling the shots in any of your dating life or any life decisions for that matter is not psychologically healthy. Haven't you ever heard the term "mini-spouse"? It's more damaging to a kid to let them be the ruler of your household than it is to say "Hey Larla, please try and be kind to Larlo".
It's not psychologically healthy to let your child have any say in how he or she will get to live his or her life? After you and/or your ex spouse have messed it up bigtime already?
Your kind of attitude is why step families fail. You just don't give two shits about what the kids think about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is hard to answer. My DH is a wonderful man, and my DS genuinely loves him. However, the level of conflict between DS and his step brother is really difficult for all of us. They just do not get along and are very different people.
Why should they get along with each other?
Just because it's more convenient for the parents?
You married the other kid's father. Your kid did not marry the other kid.
I didn't say they had to get along. I said it was a difficult situation.
A difficult situation, created by you, your ex, and your new spouse. Not by the children.
But they are given no choice in the matter.
What if my spouse cheats and leaves me ? I didn't have a choice ! So by that logic my kids will end up with depressed parent because I got screwed over by cheating DW and now I'm supposed to eat yet another shit sandwich and stay single until such time as they are okay with ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is hard to answer. My DH is a wonderful man, and my DS genuinely loves him. However, the level of conflict between DS and his step brother is really difficult for all of us. They just do not get along and are very different people.
Why should they get along with each other?
Just because it's more convenient for the parents?
You married the other kid's father. Your kid did not marry the other kid.
I didn't say they had to get along. I said it was a difficult situation.
A difficult situation, created by you, your ex, and your new spouse. Not by the children.
But they are given no choice in the matter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is hard to answer. My DH is a wonderful man, and my DS genuinely loves him. However, the level of conflict between DS and his step brother is really difficult for all of us. They just do not get along and are very different people.
Why should they get along with each other?
Just because it's more convenient for the parents?
You married the other kid's father. Your kid did not marry the other kid.
Putting your child in the position of calling the shots in any of your dating life or any life decisions for that matter is not psychologically healthy. Haven't you ever heard the term "mini-spouse"? It's more damaging to a kid to let them be the ruler of your household than it is to say "Hey Larla, please try and be kind to Larlo".
Anonymous wrote:None of the step parents have answered why they even need to get re-married in the first place.
You can have a relationship with the other parent and even move in together, but there's no reason to get married.
You've already demonstrated that marriage as a formal institution is let's say "disposable." What is the point in getting re-married at all?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is hard to answer. My DH is a wonderful man, and my DS genuinely loves him. However, the level of conflict between DS and his step brother is really difficult for all of us. They just do not get along and are very different people.
Why should they get along with each other?
Just because it's more convenient for the parents?
You married the other kid's father. Your kid did not marry the other kid.
This is hard to answer. My DH is a wonderful man, and my DS genuinely loves him. However, the level of conflict between DS and his step brother is really difficult for all of us. They just do not get along and are very different people.
Why should they get along with each other?
Just because it's more convenient for the parents?
You married the other kid's father. Your kid did not marry the other kid.
This is hard to answer. My DH is a wonderful man, and my DS genuinely loves him. However, the level of conflict between DS and his step brother is really difficult for all of us. They just do not get along and are very different people.
What is the age difference? Ours are 4 yrs apart and this seems just to be enough to cause conflict.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am very surprised to see the vitriol toward remarried parents here.
I have an original family and have never been, nor do I think I will ever be, divorced. But I still think that post-divorce, if someone wants to get remarried there isn't really anything selfish about that, provided the new spouse is a good person. It almost seems to me like people are looking at the wrong variable here - of course divorce is sad and hard and children bear the brunt of it. But a child of divorce with a single parent or parents doesn't seem like they'd be happier than the child of divorce with a nice step-parent. The kids I knew growing up with divorced parents could be emotional messes with messy lives, but having a step-parent didn't make that worse automatically. I guess I don't get the hate toward parents who fall in love again?
Agreed. I think the best thing is not to divorce. The posters saying the issues are carried into the next relationships are spot on. But....if you do divorce, or your spouse walks out on you with his AP and divorces you as mine did, then you deserve to remarry and be happy. Your kids have the stain of divorce on their childhoods whether or not you remarry.
First your kids deserve to be happy. Their needs come first...certainly...before your next husband. It all depends on how your child feels, if he/she likes your new bf. Would he/she want him to move in or both of you move to his home with his kids?