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PREGNANT: now I resent my SD, need help.

MustangRoxy3814's picture

I'm 25, and happily married. My DH has a 11 month old daughter. We dating before she was born. Her BM wasn't sure who her father was. She was a very careless woman. So I made the decision to be with boyfriend(at that time) no matter the outcome. SD was born 6 months after we had been dating, she was my boyfriends child. At first my boyfriend and the BM had 50/50 custody. I was living with my boyfriend by this time (we were a "why won't they just be together" couple... Everyone always knew we loved each other but were always too shy to talk to each other). We got married when SD was 4 months. BM would ask me to babysit for a few hours which would turn into a day, then several days. She averaged about a week a month of actually seeing her daughter. Well SD started having weight issues and we got a doctor involved. We had proof she wasn't feeding her correctly and leaving her with random ppl. So she agreed to sign over primary custody when SD was 6 months old. Since then she sees her an average of 4-6 days a month. SD has had a dramatic weight gain and is a lot healthier now. I am mommy, have always been and will always be. Since BM won't step up to the plate. DH wants it this way and SD needs a mom. DH has always been supportive of me and thankful to have me in his life, and his daughters. He has never once done me wrong, he really is the perfect husband for me. I love him to death. We are expecting our own child now. She/he was planned, charted for and prayed for. SD will be 17 months when the new baby is born. I have never had an issue with my SD I have always been loving and caring. Proud of her. Well now that I'm pregnant I am having the hardest time. Basically these r the issues:

1. I have never been a "goo-goo ga-ga parent," the kind to baby talk to their child or get on all fours and giggle in a high pitched voice to a baby. The nose nudges and wiggles with a baby have never been my cup of tea, but that doesn't mean I won't tickle, rock to sleep, or play with a child in my own way. Now that I'm pregnant I don't do ANY of this anymore. Frankly, I don't want to, and I really feel awkward when trying to do so. It really has to be forced.

2. Anytime my husband acts like a "goo-goo, ga-ga parent" I find it extremely annoying and almost, no I AM jealous. I'm jealous when he gets on the floor with her, and especially when he holds her. I can't tell him this because he would just tell me to get over it. It's not that easy, but I know I need to fix it...NOW. I can't lose them both because I'm being selfish.

3. I am easily irritated with SD. Her crying fits or getting into things makes me stress out.i have to take deep breaths to keep from screaming right back at her, sounds silly but comforting.

4. I basically do the bare necessities now. Change, bathe, feed, and watch her play and ensure her safety now. I never hold her now. Course she is mobile and normally doesn't want to be held anyways, but I seriously feel DISCONNECTED from her.

5. To sum it up; I'm more affectionate to my cat. Something I just noticed.

6. I get very defensive about my SD to DH. If I think he is being a pushover, or spoiling her I let him know and if it starts a fight a get really mean and hateful. Worried he will treat SD Diffferent than the new baby. Spoil her more.

7. Yes, the fact that she is not my bio child has always been in my mind, but it's been a lot harder to push away now. She is a constant reminder of my husbands past( even though there's not much of one than a one night stand) and now that I am bringing another child into the situation it is so much harder to not think that way.

My DH has pointed out that it's just since I have been pregnant, that he is ready to get this pregnancy over with so he can have his wife back to normal. That how I have become now has crushed his feelings for me and in return our relationship. Things just hit the fan today. This is when he said these things to me; this was a message from him today;

I WANT A LONG AND HAPPY MARRIAGE FOR 100s OF YEARS WITH U BUT CANT WITH THE WAY U ARE ACTING NOW!!!

What I want;

1. To be able to look at my SD as my own.
2. To not see any forms of jealousy when I see my DH interact with her.
3. To be able to be strong in my role as her mom, like I was in the beginning.
4. To not see a threat from SD to the new baby.
5. To not feel feelings of resentment towards SD.
6. To be able to be affectionate with her without feeling awkward(this is a long shot cuz I have never been this way)

Please help. Don't sugar coat it y'all. I need all the blunt advice I can get.
Ty in advance.

Shaman29's picture

Okay.

My blunt advice......

Your SD isn't the problem. You are the problem. Your H is the problem. She only knows what she's learned from him, so any annoying habits are a result of his parenting and your involvment.

Also....you rushed into a relationship, got married to and got pregnant with a man that has a very young child from a previous relationship. On top of that, it sounds like the BM is not involved and you are shouldering the raising of and caring for their baby.

Your H has the unrealistic expectation that you will love your SD as your own. She is not your child. Though you may love her and care for her, she has a mother. Albeit an absent mother.

You have the unrealistic expectation that you will love your SD as your own. You will not, as she is not your own child.

You're going to have deeper feelings of love for your own bio. That is just nature.

Now....firstly.....you started pulling away because I'm assuming you've been given all of the responsibility of a parent but NONE of the authority. The absent BM is not helping matters because you don't know when she's going to pop back into your lives.

Secondly, you're pregnant and your hormones are raging. At this stage you may be nesting and feeling more protective over your home, your own child and your time. You're just now realizing how much time you're taking for a child that isn't yours. You're also more sensitive and emotional, so everything is going to have an affect on your feelings and your current world view.

Thirdly, I'm going to assume that your H is an insensitive jackass. Based on his words to you (I can't wait to get my wife back) and (he can't have a long happy marriage with the way you're acting now). What a freaking shitheel.

Lastly, it sounds like your H moved you in and pushed you into a role you weren't ready to take on. But you took on the "mommy" role to make him happy and secure yourself a little happy family. It doesn't work that way at all. Now you're resenting the arrangement and unfortunately an innocent kid is getting the blame for it.

So stop taking it out on the little baby and take it out on the two jerks that put you in this situation. You and your H.

You need to grow up and accept the blame for biting off more than you can chew. You moved too fast and now a little baby is paying the price for you and your H being too anxious and not slowing down and considering the affect the entire situation would have on all of you.

Sit your insensitive jerk (by the way....don't call your H wonderful or talk about how much in luuuvvvvvv you are with him when he says crappy things to you and makes you his maid and nanny) of a H down and tell him how you feel. Get your dumb butts into marriage counseling and TALK about what is happening in your home. How you're feeling. What your expectations are and where you will compromise in order to make your marriage work.

You both sound too young and too immature to deal with this on your own. Get some help via a counselor that specializes in blended families. Do not do this on your on and do it immediately before your baby arrives. Or your H will be paying CS to two BM and not just one.

And for godsakes, prepare yourself for the BM to come back with a vengeance after your baby is born. At some point she's going to be back and you're going to have to deal with a whole other set of issues.

Shaman29's picture

Oh and as a Post Script....

Last time I checked, it takes two morons to make an unplanned baby happen.

Your freaking H was just as careless as the BM. Had he used a freaking condom that he supplied, he wouldn't have been in the daddy line up with the BM.

Stop blaming the BM as thought she trapped him with a baby. If he didn't want a kid then he should have wrapped it up or not stuck his dick in it in the first place.

Poodle's picture

I agree with Shaman. Here are some more blunt ideas.

"Her BM wasn't sure who her father was. She was a very careless woman... Everyone always knew [DH and I] loved each other but were always too shy to talk to each othe". These two statements don't compute. How come DH was too shy to proposition you but he got BM pregnant within apparently a very casual situation?

"We got married when SD was 4 months. BM would ask me to babysit for a few hours which would turn into a day". This was clearly an aggressive act against the marriage on her part. Not that I don't sympathize with her actually -- the marriage was clearly premature and selfish on your DH part. But the point I really want to make is, this is a precedent for how badly BM will react when you give birth. Shit may very well hit fan, as Shaman has said.

"I am mommy, have always been and will always be". That is only correct legally if you adopt. It is not correct morally or in your DH secret heart. Nor is it in your own heart now.

"I basically do the bare necessities now. Change, bathe, feed, and watch her play and ensure her safety now. I never hold her now. Course she is mobile and normally doesn't want to be held anyways, but I seriously feel DISCONNECTED from her." You chose to make yourself her primary carer. Now whilst I am an advocate and veteran of disengagement to older children, this is a child just at the crucial age of developing attachment. Google attachment theory. To behave as you are is actually child cruelty in my view. It's not intentional on your part and it's perfectly natural biologically but if you are going to continue to drop her emotionally when she is so attuned to you then you have an obligation imo to ensure that DH and BM pick up the baton and take over her primary care.

"1. To be able to look at my SD as my own." Impossible.

"2-6". Highly unlikely without heavy couple counseling.

I would say get professional help on this one, don't just go to a forum. The pair of you acted like kids in a candy store at the beginning of your marriage and now is the time to stop looking through a glass darkly.

Shaman29's picture

Word.

MustangRoxy3814's picture

No he did not cheat or anything like that. We weren't involved at all for about a year before she got pregnant and I didn't come Into his life until she was 3 months along. They were never together and it was a simple drunken night and she lied about being on birth control. She also has another child that was taken from her for similiar reasons. I suppose I should have given more details but really this isn't about BM... I only gave a little back history so that readers wouldn't think my husband cheated. This woman offered to let me adopt the child for an amount of money and it was taken to a lawyer and the police. In my eyes no matter how bad a mother she is, it's not my place to take her away. It's her choice when she gets older to not want to see her mom.

Now u can bad mouth my husband all you want, but he is a strong RARE man. He chose to take care of a child instead of walking away, not only that but he wanted what was best for his daughter, regardless the situation. That separates him from the BM dramatically since she couldn't care if she is alive or dead. He has primary custody and doesn't pay child support... He is the custodial parent. You say he treats me like a babysitter and has forced me into his home and made me take care of his child. That's judge mental. I chose all of this. We got married months after the baby was born. No one forced me to. From the day SD was born and we realized that BM was a worthless egg donor that tried to sell her daughter; it was MY choice to step up. IT IS NOT THAT BABYS FAULT THAT HER BIRTH MOM IS THAT WAY. Do not tell me I will never be her mother, wether her BM is here or not, because that baby will know no different. If someone told u at 25 years old that ur Mother wasn't ur birth mom, would u care? As long as u were loved and cared for then u would have nothing to hold against her. Now my husband is used to seeing a happy, loving, caring wife/mother towards his daughter. Now a few weeks into my pregnancy and I am acting this way and it's upsetting to him, so I condone him for being up front and honest with me. There was nothing wrong with what he said, he acknowledged my issues, let me know it bothers him, and told me I need to fix it, in his own way.

Everyone has seen/heard of/ experienced, how men can act like complete whores until they meet that special girl. Now I AM NOT SAYING my husband was a whore, or a saint, but he( like all men) had been to his share of parties drinking and been around sleazy goldigger girls. Finding a woman that plays hard to get and doesn't open her legs for anyone, Ian independent woman gains for respect than one who makes lax decisions.
I agree with the couples counseling, but u all seem to have missed the point.
To the "we moved to fast and jumped Into a relationship and my husband shoved me into it" that's very judge mental. There are couples who get married after months and stay together for years and years. Just because you may not believe in things because it's not accepted in most societies doesn't mean that a couple can't be happy. We got married 10 months after being together. It's not like I married a complete stranger. There are couples who have kids sooner than that and get married and live happy lives. Just because one person goes by the book, dates for several years, is engaged several years, then gets married, (if that's how u see a "perfect" life) is no reason to condone someone who doesn't. I even said that everything was completely perfect UNTIL I GOT PREGNANT. If I hadn't gotten pregnant things would still be fine. We were super happy during the couple months that we were trying to get pregnant, then the pregnancy hormones kicked in.
Ty, it is comforting knowing that I am being silly thinking SD will affect the New baby in a negative way.
Ty for telling me that DH will love each child the same. And that he deserves his time with his D.
Can anyone relate to the pregnancy part? Ripping apart my life when there are no issues (not with Sd/or BM) in my marriage until the pregnancy ... Doesn't help.

Just how I feel y'all. Maybe I'm bad at explaining. Basically I was trying to show that despite all odds and the situation that DH and I went through... We came out strong and in love; until the pregnancy.

SecondGeneration's picture

Ok, I get that these issues have become more apparent to you since you have been pregnant but you really do need to look past the justification of pregnancy hormones to be able to stand a chance at sorting this out, for your benefit and your families.

Now clearly the pregnancy hormones are playing a major role here as just from your original post and your reply you are all over the place. You state that you have always been "mommy" to your SD but in the same post that you now resent her and that affectionate interaction is forced. When people point out you are not your SDs mommy you become defensive.

Legally and biologically you are not your step daughters mother, you were not present or part of her conception and you are not her legal adopter. Now that does not mean that you are any less of her mommy in an emotional sense, you have been the one that has been there 24/7 for her, but it is this very same emotional sense of parenthood that is causing havoc for you now you are pregnant.
It is natural to feel more of a bond with YOUR baby than with your SD, during pregnancy and once the baby is born. It is normal for you to have moments where you have a fleeting wish that SD didnt exist (in the same way we all have fleeting moments of wishing we won the lottery or made a different path in life). It is ok to have these feelings and I honestly think part of the issue here is your inability to accept them. When I read your post I get the sense that you feel terribly guilty for not being able to continue the hands on relationship you enjoyed with your SD before you were pregnant.
You can still have a very healthy, very loving relationship with your SD without this obsessive pressure over the mommy label. This obsession is more sharp as you are on a very special journey of becoming a biological mother yourself. You cannot help but feel anger towards the BM and loss for the SD because she hasnt been wanted, treasured or considered in the way your baby has. Her BM tried to sell her, which you cannot get your head around because you would never dream of doing that to your baby, yet every time you do this to minimalise the importance of the relationship between child and biological mother you are giving yourself additional insecurities for yourself.

Many women become hormone enraged man-hating beasts during pregnancy, regardless of whether they have other biologically children or not, but being part of a step family dynamic just makes everything that bit more delicate. But you can learn from every scenario and you need to take heed and learn things from this.
What do you need to learn?

1. It is ok not to feel the same for your SD as your bio. You can still have a loving, close relationship without the important status of "mother". If it helps try to think of yourself as an auntie, give yourself and your SD the ability to create a relationship that is just between the two of you. You dont have to conform to normal mum labels because you married her father.

2. Be cautious of BM. There was one part of your post that caused me concern; " If someone told u at 25 years old that ur Mother wasn't ur birth mom, would u care? As long as u were loved and cared for then u would have nothing to hold against her" This is very dangerous. There are many many children that are adopted and dont find out until they are adults that their parents arent their parents, it creates all kinds of identity issues for some people. My own BM was adopted but she always knew and she has always been convinced that had she not, the damage is not to be underestimated. There is no problem with SD calling you mum if she chooses to do so when she is old enough to understand but that child needs to grow up knowing her parentage. Yes that means she will grow up with questions like "why do I live with dad and not mum? where is my real mum then?" but that is alot better taking the effort to deal with these questions when she is young and her growing up knowing who she is, rather than turning around to her later if her BM does get back in contact and basically telling her that her entire life so far has been a lie.

3. You and your husband need to be able to communicate better. You state that your marriage was pretty perfect before your pregnancy, yet during your pregnancy he has made comments that have hurt you (Im sure you have made some back to hurt him too!) but in particular the whole "I want my wife back/ a long marriage but not with you like you are now" these are not helpful. You both really need to sit down and have a heart to heart and if during the pregnancy you feel unable to do so then you need third party help with a counsellor. Marriage has stages, becoming parents to an US baby can be really difficult, particularly when the "other" child is still so young, every family has its own dynamic, dont be afraid to seek help during difficult periods.

AllySkoo's picture

I'll add to the counseling vote. (Try to find someone who has experience in blended families though - SERIOUSLY. If you go to same random guy who's never dealt with a step situation you are going to get some awfully bad, and sometimes actually harmful, advice.)

Some points:
1. Yes, you are being emotionally abusive to an 11 month old baby. You treat the fucking CAT better? I don't care what you FEEL, your ACTIONS should be better than that. If you are this girls "mommy" then you damn well better treat them the same no matter what you feel. An if you could withhold affection from a baby who depends on you and who did nothing to deserve it, even knowing how wrong it is, you need some SERIOUS therapy. Not even kidding. Not marriage counseling either - this is on YOU.

2. I don't care what he claims BM told him. He is equally responsible and just as careless. Does he live under a rock? What man in this day and age has some drunken one night stand and believes he has zero responsibility for the birth control as long as the random chick he doesn't even know claims she's on the pill?!? And condoms prevent more than just unplanned pregnancies, so not using one WAS irresponsible even if he'd watched her take her damn pills in person.

3. If I were 25 and found out my "mother" had lied to me my entire life and there was some other woman out there who'd given birth to me? Damn straight I would care. And it *would* affect what I thought of her, yes. However, I assume you're not actually planning on lying to the kid, since you said her BM DOES see her a few times a month. So I'm not sure what your point was there.

4. This is your child's SISTER. His or her BLOOD. They will have a bond for life that is completely independent of you. Don't screw this up for your baby and it will be a good bond, one that both of them can depend on and draw strength from for the next 80+ (hopefully) years even after you're dead and gone. But if you screw it up by playing favorites and ignoring your SD, you're going to set up YEARS of bad feelings between the two of them and that relationship will be something that brings them down and hurts them instead. By treating your SD the way you have been, you are hurting your baby's future. How's that for motivation?

MustangRoxy3814's picture

Ty for all the support... For those of u that keep picking at us "moving so quickly" ... We are happy. And ur comments like that aren't gonna harm us just because u think it's outta the norm. So can it. That's nothing but destructive replays because THAT WAS NEVER A PROBLEM. For those that keep calling him an asshole... U can can that too. The lady who said she understands why he is so upset because it affects his child. U are 100% correct and the rest of u are only trying to move the blame from me to him.
I believe it is a lot based off my pregnancy hormones and realizing the other side of the spectrum as a BM. A nesting effect. Someone said to see it in my eyes as though I was seeing someone treat my own child that way... U woke me up. The person who said I have been given two gifts.... Ur 100% right. I need to apply this attitude and suck it up. If I was once a great mother, simply getting pregnant won't change that.

NOW TO ALL OF YOU WHO SAY WE ARE IN A CARELESS RELATIONSHIP AND I NEED TO GET OUT;
I am appalled at how many NONCHRISTIAN thinking ppl there are. I am a Christian 100% percent, I don't believe in "fairy tales" as someone put it, no I believe in god placing ppl in ur lives for a reason, and I also believe he will never give a person more than they can handle. I was raised where if something is broken, u fix it, not throw it away. If u ppl believe that one bump in the road; that seems to be fairly common with blended family's; is going to make me tuck my tail and run, y'all must give up on a lot if things in ur lives. I started this forum asking for help to accept my sd now that I am pregnant, instead the basis of this has been on how judge mental some ppl are about us getting married so quickly and having a child together after a year of being together. We are in love, happy, and married, and according to the bible and god; that's the perfect way to have a family. Just because society can frown upon it; doesn't mean u can attack me for it. Especially when I never stated that any of that was a problem. NO, U PPL PICKED THAT PART OUT AND MADE IT A PROBLEM FOR URSELVES, NOT ME. God help u all.

Now yes, I am extremely guilty for feeling this way and I do want it changed.
The best advice I got was in my opinion:
1. Apparently I'm not alone, this is a common thing when a women becomes a step mom before a birth mom.
2. Things will get better now that I have addressed it.
3. I need to just suck it up and be the person I was.
4. It is healthy to let my DH know what I am going through and ask for encouragement rather than leaving him in the dark to spectate.
5. I am the issue, it's not my SD choice.

I need to realize that just because I am having my own child does not mean that I can't still love my SD equally the same(as I was) and still have all the love I need for my own. Having a new baby when I already have a SD is a blessing, in a sense I should think of it as great practice run. Not a reason to despise my SD, because she isn't here first or going to take away from my first child experience, or even from my relationship with DH once the baby is here, she only brightens the view.

MustangRoxy3814's picture

Amazes me how y'all attack peoples faith too, disrespectful.. I do believe I will be finding a Christian forum. I pray for u all.

Disneyfan's picture

How do you know the posters responding aren't Christian? If a Christian can treat a cat better than a baby, then it's possible for other Christians to call her out.

Funny how it's OK for you to judge BM, but judging you and your husband is wrong

twoviewpoints's picture

Who let the crew in?

"Please help. Don't sugar coat it y'all. I need all the blunt advice I can get"

Disneyfan's picture

The OP said she treats the cat better than she treats the 11month old baby. That is not something a loving mother does. Rags (and the other posters here who treat their SKs likebtheir own)has never once posted about mistreating his son.

The OP's feelings are normal but her actions aren't.

AllySkoo's picture

Seriously, right? If Rags ever posted this crap people would have been all over him too. Don't drag him into it - he IS a father. His actions towards his SS have made him one. The OP's actions towards that poor baby, on the other hand, DESERVE criticism. I stand by what I said, and all her blathering about being "Christian" doesn't change a thing.

Disneyfan's picture

Most posters here are dealing with SKs who are 4-17. Some have toddlers but very few are dealing BABIES. Not being affectionate with a 5th grade kid is not the same as withholding affection for a baby.

Yes, dad should abandon his wife if her actions can harm his child.

Decade's picture

Why is it not okay for OP to disengage when so many SMs on this site even recommend it?
Doesn't matter how old SD is. DH should be the one taking on the parental role.

A very blanket statement type of response, but I don't have anything else to comment for OP.

Disneyfan's picture

The SMs here who disengage are not dealing with infants. That makes a huge difference.

Disneyfan's picture

What the OP is doing to that BABY isn't normal. It can screw a kid up for life. Several SMs here are dealing with SDs who have RAD. Their basic needs were met, but they did not receive affection.

Totalybogus's picture

Mustang, you have taken the first step. You are able to admit the feelings you have and to understand that you need to change them in some form or fashion.

I really think you should get some counseling for yourself. Your feelings regarding your new child are normal. Heck, I felt the same way having my own second child. I was afraid I would never love anything as much as my first. You have a different situation. This IS your first. You are raising another woman's child, and a toddler at that. It is hard.

Sometimes it helps to fake it until you make it. I always had issues in my mind about my SDs, but I never let it show. I could probably write some of the things you listed. However, I never treated them any different than I treated my own. It was VERY hard to do because no matter what anyone tells you, it is impossible to love another person's child as you will your own.

You don't owe any explanation to anyone. You came here with a cry for help. The issue you came here for is regarding your feelings, not about the BM or whatever was going on during the time your SD was conceived. Keep it in perspective. Take from this whatever is helpful to you and leave the rest behind.

Totalybogus's picture

You're a stepmother. You know how it is. If you died, no one would love your baby like you.

I'm sure the OPs hormones are raging. She'll be fine. She just needs to keep talking to someone and work through it.

FrackturedBradyBunch's picture

WOW!

Mustang your responses are amazing, you have not painted yourself in a very good light at all.

You have been with this baby since BEFORE she was born and frankly responses to these 4 things is disturbing, disturbing to me as a woman, as a mother, as a human being. I've said it numerous times on this forum, I am a step mother, I have been for the past 10 years, my SDs were toddlers and older when they came to me and there is still no mother/daughter bond on either of our parts BUT.....

3. I am easily irritated with SD. Her crying fits or getting into things makes me stress out.i have to take deep breaths to keep from screaming right back at her, sounds silly but comforting.
**You want to scream back at 11 month old and need to take deep breaths?? This is screaming bizarre at me....and personally I am worried how long you will take the deep breaths before you snap...

4. I basically do the bare necessities now. Change, bathe, feed, and watch her play and ensure her safety now. I never hold her now. Course she is mobile and normally doesn't want to be held anyways, but I seriously feel DISCONNECTED from her.
**I do understand and appreciate this because I have "disengaged" from my now teenage SDs. But I don't understand how you can do this with a 11 month old that you have basically raised since a baby. Doesn't your womanly mother instincts find her cute and cuddly??

5. To sum it up; I'm more affectionate to my cat. Something I just noticed.
**Again, I understand this....I love my pets but not my SDs. Nothing wrong with this but is wrong for the baby you are raising as your own.

6. I get very defensive about my SD to DH. If I think he is being a pushover, or spoiling her I let him know and if it starts a fight a get really mean and hateful. Worried he will treat SD Diffferent than the new baby. Spoil her more.
**This is just creepy and disturbing on many levels when coupled with point number 3. You are easily irrated, want to scream back at a baby and get mean and hateful. JUST BLOODY DISTURBING!

7. Yes, the fact that she is not my bio child has always been in my mind, but it's been a lot harder to push away now. She is a constant reminder of my husbands past( even though there's not much of one than a one night stand) and now that I am bringing another child into the situation it is so much harder to not think that way.
**You have ALWAYS looked at her different, you have always resented her, you should NEVER have married a man with a child, you should never have entered this baby's life frankly.

Now, none of this is your fault Mustang but you are too young, you are too immature and you are too emotionally charged to deal with this whole situation. It's just how it is and how you are. I was NEVER a kid person, I never wanted to work with kids, I didn't like going to school concerts for my own children or find other peoples kids amusing. And that's just how I am. But I always knew this and didn't think anything would instantly change knowing I was not a kid person. For many MANY years after being a single parent I NEVER dated any man with Children. When I met my current husband and realised he had 3 children I was A LOT older and he seemed to have a large support network so I never really thought I would ever become the fulltime carer....a crystal ball would have been wonderful but alas, none were available and here I am. But this is not about me....It is about you and before marrying or even becoming pregnant you already KNEW how much this baby was going to be in your life.
Admitting how you feel is NOT the beginning of overcoming and suddenly falling in love with this baby. You are NEVER going to love her if you hate her now, and YES you DO HATE her. No amount of counselling is going to fix any of this, it is not a magic solution to switching on feelings.

Rags's picture

Love is not a feeling. Love is action. Take the actions of loving your Skid and the feelings will grow. Love for any child is different than the love of any other child. The feelings of love are unique to the relationship. Your feelings of love for SD will be different than your feelings of love for your BD when she is born.

I too had to grow feelings of love for my Skid when my bride and I began dating when SS was 15mos old and I had to take the actions of love to grow the feelings of love after we married the week before SS turned 2yo. I have taken the actions of love towards my bride and towards our son (My SS now 22) for 20 years of our lives as a family. He is not my genetic progeny but he is in all ways other than genetic my son. You can have the same with your SD. You have been her REAL mom since she was a very young baby. In her mind you will always be her REAL mom while her BM will be something far less.

Like you are experiencing I went through a phase that I can only describe as a visceral revulsion to my SS's presence. When by bride and I were dating there was a period when SS's presence truly revolted me on what I can only describe as being on a mammalian level. The closest example I can reference is that it was kind of like an Animal Planet special on lions that depicts the newly arrived dominant male killing the cubs of his predecessor in order to get the females to ovulate and to create his own progeny. Of course I was not violent toward my SS but I was aggressively working through not rejecting him. I did not like the feelings I was having. That I was having them made me feel truly disgusted with myself. So ..... I swallowed my revulsion and I engaged with the kid. We chased ducks around the gold course together, I chased him through play scopes, carried him on my shoulders while holding one of his ankles in one hand and his mom's hand in my other. His mom and I walked with him between us swinging him as we all three walked together, we went hiking with him on my shoulders, on back country camping trips with my Skid in his booster seat between his mom and I in my 4X4 truck and sleeping between us in my small tent, etc, etc, etc…...

It did not take long for me to work through my own personal issues with accepting him. Even today more than 20 years later I get choked up thinking of the feelings of rejection I had toward a beautiful little towheaded toddler with big brown eyes and a smile for me that would light up a room and then the confusion on his face when I would grumble at him and not engage. I am truly thankful that I was able to consciously work through that phase to be his dad.

My SS considers me his REAL dad and though he has a relationship with his Sperm Idiot and his three younger also out of wedlock Sperm Idiot spawned half sibs he knows that his REAL family is he, his mom, and I. You can create the same feelings for yourself, your SD, your DH, and your new baby by taking the actions of growing that love as a family. You can lead it.

So, do the things for your Skid that will grow the feelings and behaviors that you want as you have listed them.

1. To be able to look at my SD as my own.

She is your own. She is your SD. YOUR SD. So be her mom. Tuck her in at night, read her a story, brush her hair. Talk to her about the new baby and how she will be the big sis and how important she will be for her new baby sister/brother. Talk with her about how much you and her daddy will need her help with the new baby, etc….

2. To not see any forms of jealousy when I see my DH interact with her.

Why would you feel jealous about a toddler spending time with her daddy? This one is mostly on you and you will have to address these feelings within yourself and again by doing the actions and behaviors of love. Spend time with your DH and your SD when they are interacting with each other. By participating in their time together you should be able to develop your own positive feelings about their interaction. By participating you are doing the actions of love and that may help you overcome your feelings of jealousy.

3. To be able to be strong in my role as her mom, like I was in the beginning.

So do it!! You know how to do it. You have done it. Do what you used to do and your confidence and positive feelings will return. ACT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Don’t feel. Don’t think about it. ACT!!! Just do it!!!!!

4. To not see a threat from SD to the new baby.

SD is not threat. Your Bio Daughter will be the first child that you and your DH have together and the first sibling to your SD. They will be so close in age that if you engage from the perspective that they will be sisters then they will be sisters. Again ACT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

5. To not feel feelings of resentment towards SD.

See #4. Do not tolerate those feelings within yourself, engage with SD as big sis to your own daughter. You are their mother. What could you possibly have to feel resentment towards a 17mo old SD about? The answer ….. ab-so-frickin-lutely NOTHING!!!! So act like the responsible loving, caring mother and that is exactly what you will be and the feelings you will have. ACT!!!!

6. To be able to be affectionate with her without feeling awkward(this is a long shot cuz I have never been this way)

Be affectionate with her. You have cared about her in the past so knock off the irrational lack of affection and be affectionate. Just do it and quit rationalizing bullshit excuses for not doing it … NOW!!! Do you think you will have difficulty being affectionate with your new baby? If you don’t address this now with SD then yes, you very likely will be uncomfortable being affectionate with your own bio-daughter. SD will be a great help to you in dealing with this odd bit of your own behaviors. BE AFFECTIONATE … with SD and with your DH. This will reassure all three of you within your family dynamic. SD will know you care, DH will see you being the woman he married, and you will become more comfortable with affection.

Take the actions of love toward your SD and build the feelings of love. Do the same with your DH. He will feel it and respond in kind. This is what you must do to build a loving family to bring your own baby into.

IMHO of course.

Congratulations on the new baby.

Rags's picture

It tears me up too just thinking about it more than 20 years after the fact. I cannot immagine how much different my life would be if I had not worked through those feelings very early in our blended family life.

Rags's picture

Mm,

No doubt you are right that the OP will not love her SD as she will love her own baby. That is the case even within initial families with multiple full sibs. However, she can still love her SD if she chooses to.

Parents love each child differently. My mom and dad freely admit this even now that I am 50 and my surviving young brother is 44. Our youngest brother would be 42 this month had he survived. Mom and dad love us all equally but differently. We are different people with different things about us to love.

I think that is true in any family dynamic.