Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, your DH needs to see this as the crisis it is and step back from work hours as much as possible. What would be worse…her death or him changing jobs? She is on the road to addiction and death now. This will NOT get better on its own.
You get lots of credit from me for the parenting you have done with her older siblings. It is clear that you are an involved and caring stepmom. But you should not have had to most of your DH’s 50%. Some kids can get by with a lousy dad because they don’t have as many challenges or the have better internal external supports. But his youngest daughter will not survive these year unscathed with an absent and distant dad.
Practical things you both can do if he will actually make parenting his daughter his PRIORITY on all of his days and weekends:
1) If she won’t turn over her devices, turn off your home WiFi and cut off the data plan for the phone
2) Keys stay in a locked safe at all times.
3) Family dinner every night, no devices.
4) Dad and daughter have to do life together. He has to be the one to take her running errands. Shop with her. If he has to go into work on a weekend, she comes to the office and helps. Basically, they need to have a relationship again. That starts with the basics of existing together without devices.
5) is there anything that makes her smile? Anything she likes to do? Anything she is proud of? Anything she looks forward to? Build on her strengths and what she enjoys.
6) the biggest question your DH has to ask himself each day right now - EACH day - is “How and I going to connect with my daughter today? Where can I find chances for connection?” Could be texting her from work, sending her something funny, taking her out to dinner solo, etc.
7) give her an opportunity to earn money in some way, or help her find one. What does she do well? Build on that.
Unfortunately, I’ve talked to my husband multiple times about cutting back on work, but he’s not willing to do it. Over the last 10 years, I’ve taken on most of the parenting, and this is a new situation for us. The other kids weren’t like this, so her mom and I are trying to figure things out. His daughter needs him more than ever, but he’s so focused on work.
I’ve been encouraging him to spend time with her, and I think the suggestion of helping through work or other times is a good idea. —I’ll definitely push for that We already do family dinners and try to keep the devices off.
I’ve tried limiting her devices, but she always finds ways around it (hotspots, borrowing from friends). I can lock up the keys to the car, though, so that’s a good step. She does have things she likes and is good at, but motivation is a big issue. I’ll keep encouraging her to look into a part-time job or hobbies to get her going.
By focusing on protecting our home, finances, and peace, that includes protecting our entire family and my youngest stepdaughter, we’re just so new to this type of rebellion and not sure what else to do.
Why. Did. You. Marry. This. Awful. Man? FFS! She is CRYING OUT for a relationship with her father. That is why she's crashing through boundaries! That is why she is acting out! That is why she is ENDANGERING HER LIFE. If he cannot see that and change his ways, he is a terrible parent. Open your eyes to who you are dealing with! How can you have any respect for someone who is so callous to his own child?
I married him because I love him and think he’s a great person. He’s a bit too focused on work, but with a little nudging, I think I can get him to take a step back a little.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you need to go absolutely nuclear on your husband until he opens his eyes and intervenes. Sex strike, cooking strike, everything strike, total brick wall. If he has to quit his job or take FMLA leave, that's what he should do. Because his daughter's life is more precious than any job could be. And it'll be on your conscience forever if you continue to enable him. You can't do this for him! The child needs her father. Not a stepmother who pities her and grudgingly picks up the slack because her father ignores her.
If she's drinking and drugging and taking the car, HER LIFE IS AT RISK.
PP stepmom here. I agree with this. Every single one of my stepdaughter’s close friends from her heroin years is dead now. Every single one. They were suburban middle class kids. Both of her parents were Feds who work in DC. Escalation from stealing my Percocet from a root canal in HS to IV heroin use was less than 2 years. She is alive today but with years of complete and total hell under her belt…arrests, rapes, jail time, prison time, many people dying around her and literally next to her. It is sheer luck that she is here given the odds.
YOUR HUSBAND CAN PREVENT THAT. He absolutely has to stop what he is doing now. It doesn’t matter what he has refused to do the last 10 years; that’s over. The damage is done. You held your finger in the dyke all those years trying to patch up the parenting he was neglecting and it was enough for the first two but NOT FOR HER. She is in crisis. They never have been.
He needs to take FMLA. If he is a partner, he can take leave. If he’s not a partner, guess what. He needs to make a new plan. This can’t be his life anymore.
If you love this girl, you need to be clear with him that normal is gone. Your marriage and your family have to change now if he wants a live, functional daughter in 5 years. It needs to be his primary job now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, your DH needs to see this as the crisis it is and step back from work hours as much as possible. What would be worse…her death or him changing jobs? She is on the road to addiction and death now. This will NOT get better on its own.
You get lots of credit from me for the parenting you have done with her older siblings. It is clear that you are an involved and caring stepmom. But you should not have had to most of your DH’s 50%. Some kids can get by with a lousy dad because they don’t have as many challenges or the have better internal external supports. But his youngest daughter will not survive these year unscathed with an absent and distant dad.
Practical things you both can do if he will actually make parenting his daughter his PRIORITY on all of his days and weekends:
1) If she won’t turn over her devices, turn off your home WiFi and cut off the data plan for the phone
2) Keys stay in a locked safe at all times.
3) Family dinner every night, no devices.
4) Dad and daughter have to do life together. He has to be the one to take her running errands. Shop with her. If he has to go into work on a weekend, she comes to the office and helps. Basically, they need to have a relationship again. That starts with the basics of existing together without devices.
5) is there anything that makes her smile? Anything she likes to do? Anything she is proud of? Anything she looks forward to? Build on her strengths and what she enjoys.
6) the biggest question your DH has to ask himself each day right now - EACH day - is “How and I going to connect with my daughter today? Where can I find chances for connection?” Could be texting her from work, sending her something funny, taking her out to dinner solo, etc.
7) give her an opportunity to earn money in some way, or help her find one. What does she do well? Build on that.
Unfortunately, I’ve talked to my husband multiple times about cutting back on work, but he’s not willing to do it. Over the last 10 years, I’ve taken on most of the parenting, and this is a new situation for us. The other kids weren’t like this, so her mom and I are trying to figure things out. His daughter needs him more than ever, but he’s so focused on work.
I’ve been encouraging him to spend time with her, and I think the suggestion of helping through work or other times is a good idea. —I’ll definitely push for that We already do family dinners and try to keep the devices off.
I’ve tried limiting her devices, but she always finds ways around it (hotspots, borrowing from friends). I can lock up the keys to the car, though, so that’s a good step. She does have things she likes and is good at, but motivation is a big issue. I’ll keep encouraging her to look into a part-time job or hobbies to get her going.
By focusing on protecting our home, finances, and peace, that includes protecting our entire family and my youngest stepdaughter, we’re just so new to this type of rebellion and not sure what else to do.
Why. Did. You. Marry. This. Awful. Man? FFS! She is CRYING OUT for a relationship with her father. That is why she's crashing through boundaries! That is why she is acting out! That is why she is ENDANGERING HER LIFE. If he cannot see that and change his ways, he is a terrible parent. Open your eyes to who you are dealing with! How can you have any respect for someone who is so callous to his own child?
I married him because I love him and think he’s a great person. He’s a bit too focused on work, but with a little nudging, I think I can get him to take a step back a little.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, your DH needs to see this as the crisis it is and step back from work hours as much as possible. What would be worse…her death or him changing jobs? She is on the road to addiction and death now. This will NOT get better on its own.
You get lots of credit from me for the parenting you have done with her older siblings. It is clear that you are an involved and caring stepmom. But you should not have had to most of your DH’s 50%. Some kids can get by with a lousy dad because they don’t have as many challenges or the have better internal external supports. But his youngest daughter will not survive these year unscathed with an absent and distant dad.
Practical things you both can do if he will actually make parenting his daughter his PRIORITY on all of his days and weekends:
1) If she won’t turn over her devices, turn off your home WiFi and cut off the data plan for the phone
2) Keys stay in a locked safe at all times.
3) Family dinner every night, no devices.
4) Dad and daughter have to do life together. He has to be the one to take her running errands. Shop with her. If he has to go into work on a weekend, she comes to the office and helps. Basically, they need to have a relationship again. That starts with the basics of existing together without devices.
5) is there anything that makes her smile? Anything she likes to do? Anything she is proud of? Anything she looks forward to? Build on her strengths and what she enjoys.
6) the biggest question your DH has to ask himself each day right now - EACH day - is “How and I going to connect with my daughter today? Where can I find chances for connection?” Could be texting her from work, sending her something funny, taking her out to dinner solo, etc.
7) give her an opportunity to earn money in some way, or help her find one. What does she do well? Build on that.
Unfortunately, I’ve talked to my husband multiple times about cutting back on work, but he’s not willing to do it. Over the last 10 years, I’ve taken on most of the parenting, and this is a new situation for us. The other kids weren’t like this, so her mom and I are trying to figure things out. His daughter needs him more than ever, but he’s so focused on work.
I’ve been encouraging him to spend time with her, and I think the suggestion of helping through work or other times is a good idea. —I’ll definitely push for that We already do family dinners and try to keep the devices off.
I’ve tried limiting her devices, but she always finds ways around it (hotspots, borrowing from friends). I can lock up the keys to the car, though, so that’s a good step. She does have things she likes and is good at, but motivation is a big issue. I’ll keep encouraging her to look into a part-time job or hobbies to get her going.
By focusing on protecting our home, finances, and peace, that includes protecting our entire family and my youngest stepdaughter, we’re just so new to this type of rebellion and not sure what else to do.
Why. Did. You. Marry. This. Awful. Man? FFS! She is CRYING OUT for a relationship with her father. That is why she's crashing through boundaries! That is why she is acting out! That is why she is ENDANGERING HER LIFE. If he cannot see that and change his ways, he is a terrible parent. Open your eyes to who you are dealing with! How can you have any respect for someone who is so callous to his own child?
Anonymous wrote:OP, you need to go absolutely nuclear on your husband until he opens his eyes and intervenes. Sex strike, cooking strike, everything strike, total brick wall. If he has to quit his job or take FMLA leave, that's what he should do. Because his daughter's life is more precious than any job could be. And it'll be on your conscience forever if you continue to enable him. You can't do this for him! The child needs her father. Not a stepmother who pities her and grudgingly picks up the slack because her father ignores her.
If she's drinking and drugging and taking the car, HER LIFE IS AT RISK.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, your DH needs to see this as the crisis it is and step back from work hours as much as possible. What would be worse…her death or him changing jobs? She is on the road to addiction and death now. This will NOT get better on its own.
You get lots of credit from me for the parenting you have done with her older siblings. It is clear that you are an involved and caring stepmom. But you should not have had to most of your DH’s 50%. Some kids can get by with a lousy dad because they don’t have as many challenges or the have better internal external supports. But his youngest daughter will not survive these year unscathed with an absent and distant dad.
Practical things you both can do if he will actually make parenting his daughter his PRIORITY on all of his days and weekends:
1) If she won’t turn over her devices, turn off your home WiFi and cut off the data plan for the phone
2) Keys stay in a locked safe at all times.
3) Family dinner every night, no devices.
4) Dad and daughter have to do life together. He has to be the one to take her running errands. Shop with her. If he has to go into work on a weekend, she comes to the office and helps. Basically, they need to have a relationship again. That starts with the basics of existing together without devices.
5) is there anything that makes her smile? Anything she likes to do? Anything she is proud of? Anything she looks forward to? Build on her strengths and what she enjoys.
6) the biggest question your DH has to ask himself each day right now - EACH day - is “How and I going to connect with my daughter today? Where can I find chances for connection?” Could be texting her from work, sending her something funny, taking her out to dinner solo, etc.
7) give her an opportunity to earn money in some way, or help her find one. What does she do well? Build on that.
Unfortunately, I’ve talked to my husband multiple times about cutting back on work, but he’s not willing to do it. Over the last 10 years, I’ve taken on most of the parenting, and this is a new situation for us. The other kids weren’t like this, so her mom and I are trying to figure things out. His daughter needs him more than ever, but he’s so focused on work.
I’ve been encouraging him to spend time with her, and I think the suggestion of helping through work or other times is a good idea. —I’ll definitely push for that We already do family dinners and try to keep the devices off.
I’ve tried limiting her devices, but she always finds ways around it (hotspots, borrowing from friends). I can lock up the keys to the car, though, so that’s a good step. She does have things she likes and is good at, but motivation is a big issue. I’ll keep encouraging her to look into a part-time job or hobbies to get her going.
By focusing on protecting our home, finances, and peace, that includes protecting our entire family and my youngest stepdaughter, we’re just so new to this type of rebellion and not sure what else to do.
Why. Did. You. Marry. This. Awful. Man? FFS! She is CRYING OUT for a relationship with her father. That is why she's crashing through boundaries! That is why she is acting out! That is why she is ENDANGERING HER LIFE. If he cannot see that and change his ways, he is a terrible parent. Open your eyes to who you are dealing with! How can you have any respect for someone who is so callous to his own child?
Anonymous wrote:Im a stepmom and I dont understand why the solution was to send her to her moms. If its dads custody time, she should be at your house.
Anonymous wrote:Protecting home, finances and peace: sounds like you want to pursue legal steps for her to become an emancipated minor. Otherwise, you're on the hook.
Anonymous wrote:Protecting home, finances and peace: sounds like you want to pursue legal steps for her to become an emancipated minor. Otherwise, you're on the hook.