You are here

Sunday night Roast ending in disaster...

belle_27's picture

So, my partner was feeling a bit down and wanting to see his kids a bit more, We have them 40% of the time and agreed we should start up a weekly family dinner sort of thing to have a tradition in our house. We agreed as it is winter in Australia that a Sunday night roast would be a really lovely idea. The kids just live up the road so every second weekend we don’t have them BM agreed they could come over for dinner on Sunday nights.

They all went off to football and i went to the market alone, picked up all the meat veggies, and dessert. Mind you I’ve NEVER cooked a roast before and took me well over 3 hours to cook but it was amazing and i was very proud of my efforts!

SD 8 is an attention seeker, she is 9 in a few months and still gets her dad to cut her food up for her! anyway i made this amazing dinner which the boys raved about and love and SD ate nothing but meat and left all her veggies. DH didn’t ask her to eat veggies or even try. After hours of cooking and now me in the kitchen by myself cleaning up everything for his family dinner he wanted so badly! SD walks in with her dad and goes "OHHH DAD IM STILL HUNGRY!" DH walks to the fridge and gives her a yogurt. i almost exploded! When i was a kid when you didn’t eat all your dinner you went hungry, but he rewarded her bad behaviour! so i CRACKED it and we had a huge fight and he thinks im being to harsh on his kids and I’m pulling away and not caring and its making him feel bad.

i have been more relaxed and i say hello to the kids, im not rude but im not putting in my usual big effort with them and DH has noticed. I am just not trying to put in a big effort and be rejected.. i just don’t see the point, if they aren’t in the right age to bond then im backing off as i dont get even more resentful of them and hurt.

am i crazy? does DH have a right to be annoyed at me as in hasn’t spoken to me and left the house this morning and didn’t say a word? i know he wants me to relax more and not get upset over little things but its just unfair it always seems IM the one who has to change or make an effort... isnt this a 2 way street!!

Comments

hismineandours's picture

I think you need to allow your dh to make the 3 hour dinner and then when the kid is still hungry after not eating we will see if it bothers him.

LONGTIME SM's picture

AGREED! Biggrin

Totalybogus's picture

People are raised differently and in turn raise their children just a tad different than they were raised. Generally, a parent will take away the lessons and traditions they thought were good and apply them to their own children. They also will reject some of what their parents did while raising them. There is usually a disagreement about how to raise children even when the nuclear family is intact.

What you need to do is sit down with your husband and compromise on house rules. You guys need to learn how to blend your ideas on what is, and isn't proper for YOUR household. He needs to understand that you are 1/2 of the relationship and there are certain things that you expect from his children while they are in your home. You need to understand that he is not alwasy going to agree with you on the raising of his children. The only way you can co-exist is to compromise. What may be "small stuff" to him may be a deal breaker for you. You need to let him know that life will be more harmonious if he can at least agree to work with you on the things that his kids do that really grate on your nerves.

belle_27's picture

thanks for the advice, we have making a nice dinner which HE is cooking and we are opening a bottle of wine to decide this. As he is a disneyland Dad and wants it always to be fun but we need to also remember the fact i am a adult figure in the house also so values and rules which i feel need to be followed need to be taught to the kids as well.

and yes 100% true on the "small stuff" that grinds me like there is NO tomorrow but those little things are whats important to me so he needs to understand that because its not important to me he cant over looks them.

thanks for the advice, hope tonight goes well.. i want to be able to agree and have an opinion in the house and have my expectations included as well.

Travelguy's picture

I agree with this 100%. I am new, but a lot of what I am reading is not always unique to step parents / step kids. I was horribly picky, still am in a way. I came from married parents who still are today. I ate PBJ every day for lunch from K through 12th grade - I shit you not! I was that bad. I mostly ate pasta with butter for dinner - never liked tomato sauce. I realy don't like a lot of vegetables.

So what do I like? I have learned in my adult life I enjoy a lot of strange foods my family never ate that I discovered on my own. Not sure why this is the case, but it is. I work internationally now and the stuff I eat, my parents swear aliens came and traded me with their son or something.

Point is, kids can be picky and this is a normal occurrence. You may think your skills at parenting would have prevented it before you knew them, or could change them now, but kids need to learn what they like in their own time. My mom's method was the "try it" method. I had to try anything. I agree with this. My dad had to swallow his pride and let this be the house rule. I know that he was a picky kid too when he was young, but he wanted me to eat more or face consequences. Mom protected me from that. Not sure if one or the other is better, but the point is parents sacrifice and parents make concessions. Just do your best to find the balance. It is not about the kids in this case IMO but rather about your relationship with you SO.

Take this from someone who couldn't eat stake (yes, COULD NOT eat stake - I would choke on it), but now with a glass of fine red wine, served medium rare (parents always liked it medium to well done), and a side of fresh, steamed broccoli, it is one of my favorite meals. Better that kids be picky than eat the house, sit around doing nothing but text, and just get obese, but I digress...

Shaman29's picture

You're not crazy. My DH's kid used to gag and pretend to throw-up whenever she ate my cooking. I am an excellent cook, so it wasn't that it was bad food. It was that she's a badly behaved child. So I stopped cooking for her. I only cooked when she was with Uberskank, the minute she came home DH was in charge of meals or at least her meals.

Now she lives with Uberskank again. I usually insist on DH cooking and I very rarely cook when she's around. Why go through her crap? She's 15 now and I am polite but otherwise don't give her the time of day. Especially with my culinary skills.

Now....was the yogurt worth a fight? Absolutely not. You're going to have to learn to turn a blind eye on those moments. Disengage and remember it's not your kid. My DH used to fill the house with crap for his kid to eat, then would make remarks to me (without her around) that he was worried she was putting on weight. I would look at him, go to the pantry and pull out the cookies, mac n cheese, top ramen, high fat crackers, spray cheese and ask "what do you think?"

This summer will be interesting as DH and I have completed changed our eating habits and shop at a health food store. I'm going to see if he's going to buy her healthier food or run to the old store and buy her the crap she prefers to eat. Either way, it's none of my concern.

We can only do so much with these skids. I think the best way to deal with it is to disengage. We can put the fruit and veggies out there, but there isn't anything we can do when Dad gives them cookies and ice cream.

belle_27's picture

When i think back now picking a fight over yogurt was a very childish thing to do! it was more the fact i am trying to hard to be apart of his family and do the right thing and i felt it was just a slap in the face, for him not even encouraging her to eat her dinner and rewarding her after.

i need to really learn to disengage and doing it in a correct way, and just really not let it get to me about those little tiny things! normally i just remove myself from the room and go hide out which only seems to make my DH more annoyed, i am removing myself and not trying.