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What to do when the kids hate coming to our house...(long, sorry)

TryingToParent's picture

A little background.....DH and I have been married a year (this week) together two. When we met we were both very unhappily married and it was one of those, it just happened, kind of things, we were friends first and it progressed into more, though we never cheated. While we know everything moved fast for the kids (separated from ex's in January, introduced as dating partners in March, engaged in April, bought a home in August, married in October) we have tried to provide stability to the kids with regular schedules and rules as much as possible. I have 3 bio kids; bd15,bs13,bs9 and 2 sk; ss8, sd5, I have sole custody of my three bks with the youngest doing the eow thing with his dad (older bks from my first marriage)and the teenagers visiting their father maybe once to twice a month (though my bd hasn't seen her father for more than an hour in a year, long back story there). We share 50/50 custody with DH's ex of sks. For the last year we have been tweaking the custody arrangement. When DH left it was a straight EOW as well as two evenings a week. We continued that when we bought our home and were married. It worked well, there were little complaints, and things seemed to settle into a routine. I really love his children and they me, they cuddle up to me and make cards for me and tell me they love me all the time. I pick them up from school, clothes shop and are involved in all aspects of their life and education (DH's ex and I actually get along well because we both have the same goal, the health and well being of the children in mind). My ss however has serious control issues, food, chores, television, ect. that were present long before I entered the picture. When we began trying to harmonize our families I realized that ss would be a challenge. There were different meals made for him (he was 7 at the time), restaurants were selected based on if there was something he would eat, if the wait was too long at a restaurant my DH would leave looking for another place to eat. I had to put my foot down with theses behaviors as my bson has ADHD and had also exhibited many of these behaviors which I found unacceptable and did not cater to. Because of this it has been a difficult melding process. Also,I as an RN, I noticed some behaviors in ss that I believed were problematic and was instrumental in getting him evaluated and subsequently diagnosed with ADD. Beginning last summer DH, myself and his ex agreed that there was no reason for the sks not to spend the nights since they were already home with us in the evenings (she would pick them up at 8 or nine at night on the two evenings). That worked well through the summer. My bio son 13 decided at around the same time that he wanted to try living with his father for the summer, which was a struggle for me as he had never been away for more than 3 days at a time, but I agreed, as it was his decision. The summer progressed as any would with five kids, a multitude of parents and summer vacations abound. When the school year started we all discussed the custody arrangement and agreed to again tweak it slightly. The sks were going to continue to spend the night twice weekly, the only change was that instead of Mon, Thurs, it would be Mon Tues, continuing with EOW. As I mentioned before there are rules in our house, dinner table expectations, chores (unloading the dishwasher, bringing dirty clothes down, picking up their toys), sharing of resources (tv, wii, ect.), no temper tantrums, any parent knows what I am talking about, we run our house not our kids (hard when you are out numbered I assure you). When school began this year and the days of the week changed now having sks home with us 5 nights in a row I began to notice little comments here and there from the skids about mommy’s house. We had always known that our house ran differently, how could it not, 3 extra kids and two parents, but the kids started to provide comparisons to us. At mommy's house they eat what they want, frequently hotdogs and applesauce, chicken nuggets, you know what I mean; at mommy's house there are two tv's one for each of them; at mommy's house they don't have chores, she does everything; at mommy's house blah blah blah blah. I got it. Now everyday they are asking when they're going to mommy's house, even though they know the schedule and can recite it on command. Last Wednesday I was taking them to school and ss said, "oh thank god it's wednesday, we go home tonight" and today sd said "oh ss, tomorrow is wednesday, we go back to mommy's house". I said "Do you not like being home with us sd?" and ss says "it's not that, it's just easier at mommy's house". So here we are, knowing we are trying to parent them and not just getting by, but for five days in a row every other week they have NO responsibility and no accountability and there is NOTHING we can do about it. I am losing hope, faith and energy rapidly....any suggestions?

Comments

stpmommyof2's picture

Keep up the good work. Ignore the snide remarks from the skids. One day they will recognize what a great father and SM they have and be grateful that you took the time to instill values in them. Smile

mumzy79's picture

I am going to put on my BM hat here...I did some of the same things as I was guilt parenting. Although my kids always were expected to treat me with respect, I often was feeling "bad" for what had happened to them. Also, I went back to work after being a SAHM their entire lives. If she gets along well with you and isn't PASing the kids, then what it seems like is she feels guilty for her own actions. This will come back to bite her on the rear as it did me. After about 2 years, I realized they were expecting me to slave around for them and I nipped my own actions in the bud. If they generally are ok with being there, I really wouldn't do anything yet. In time, IMO, she will begin instituting the same things at her house that you are, afterall you aren't doing anything that most homes do. I expect all kids (BD13, BS7, BD6, SS6, SS5) to do the same things tailored to their age. I am curious though, have you asked DH what was expected of the skids when he and BM were married?

TryingToParent's picture

When they were married my DH was a SAHD. There weren't as many expectations, but he had more time to do things around the house. We both both work full time and the kids have more expectations. Also, DH and BM never thought there was anything wrong with ss and his behaviors until I came into the picture and said, uh, wait, we love him, so we need to help him.

buttercookie's picture

I was a step kid, actually my step dad adopted me. My dad, SD, had two kids that lived with us and went on visitation similar to this.
Here's how my mom handled it. If they didn't want to behave or do chores they didn't reap the benefits of the household meaning if we were having dessert and they didn't get any if they acted like that or if an "fun" outing like Six flags was planned they didn't go. Actually that went for all of us. I even suffered the consequence once when I got lippy. My Step brothers carried on longer than my brothers and I did but they finally stopped. What helped the most was that both of my parents were on the same page. My mom would have adopted them too but their mom was crazy not that my mom isn't LOL. She'd,their BM, promise them the world and would disappoint them but they always backed their mom until we all got older. Shame that it had to be that way and my dad died before he saw them treat his wife right. Now they are close to my mom actually closer to her than I am.

Kb3Hooah's picture

They are greatly benefiting now and in the future for the structure, stability, and discipline that you and DH provide in your home. They may not see it now, I don't think most teens really recognize the benefit from this at their age, but hopefully when they become mature, responsible adults, they will look back and realize that all of those "rules" helped them become who they are, mature, productive adults who will pass those same values down to their own children one day. You are making a life long difference in these children's lives.

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“Unless commitment is made, there are only promises and hopes; but no plans.”

onehappygirl's picture

I think you and I live parallel lives. The same issue with unhappy marriages, mom's house versus our house, the same chores, the same type of BM who doesn't make them do anything.

Just know this. In our case, BM lives with her brother who lives next door to their mommy. Their mommy fixes all their meals and pays their house payment. BM and her brother are in their late 40s to early 50s. Quite sad if you ask me.

DH and I have rules in our house, we give the kids chores, we teach them how to do the things they need to do to eventually live their own lives. We don't want them living in our house when they are in their 40s.

My parents heaped chores on me, and I HATED it - but now, I am soooooo thankful they did that. One day, your s-kids will appreciate what you and your DH are teaching them.

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Love me or hate me, I'm still gonna shine!!!

TryingToParent's picture

The funny thing about BM is that she is very successful, she has a high paying stressful job. She knows the importance of self discipline, so it perplexes me to no end that she can't see what she id doing to the kids. She has even told DH that she hated her mother for making her do chores when she was a kid but is now thankful she did, WTF????

justwantpeace2's picture

Well, your skids are just 8 and 5. That's pretty young to have to do a bunch of chores. My kids were just responsible for their messes at that age. We did the hot dogs and applesauce thing frequently. I just felt that it was my job to take care of the rest of the house/chores.
Now that they are teenagers, it's a different story.