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Step-Sibling Rivalry

mama_althea's picture

I’ve mentioned this briefly in previous blog/rants, but today it is a topic unto itself.

We’re having a hard time with step-sibling rivalry and I’m not sure how much of it is a real problem and how much is just my protective mom instincts trying to protect my own son.

My own bio-family unit has known the skids for years before SO and I began to live together, so I have seen SD-just-turned-7 in action with her own brother (SS15) for a long time. She loves to get him in trouble, even if it means lying, exaggerating, or goading him into doing something so that she can tell on him. From the age she was old enough to throw a fit, BM and SO have tended to give in to her to quiet her. They will also believe anything she tells them her brother did. Other family friends, my kids, and I have all seen her make stuff up. SO is kind of aware of it now, but rather than addressing the lies he just kind of brushes her off when she tells on him.

Now she is doing almost the same thing with my DS10. She doesn’t invent stuff out of the blue like with her own brother, but she takes the slightest comment or action from my son and runs to SO to tell on him. SO and I don’t discipline each other’s kids, and even if we did I don’t think he puts enough stock in what she says to discipline my son, but he does effectively agree with what she is saying by replying along the lines of, “He was mean to you? Well then just stay away from him”. As in, “Poor you, I know he was mean. You should just keep your innocent little self away from that bad person.”

Now I know DS is not entirely innocent. He and my DD15 can fight like animals. He will snap things like “shut up” at SD. Things that I think are normal kid stuff given that they live together a couple days per week. Things that if my own kids were arguing I would either ignore or essentially tell them to cut it out. But SD blows these things into epic proportions and runs to SO.

Examples of minor affronts: DS and SD7 were talking about Harry Potter. SD7 didn’t know there were books as well as the movies, DS said she was too young to read them, SD runs to SO that he is saying mean things to her. DS doesn’t want her to use something of his (usually computer or electronics that he is currently using), he is mean. DS was crying about something, SD was standing directly in front of him staring at him with her gape-mouthed stare, he said quit staring at me, she ran to tell SO he was being mean. Plus many, many more. It happens more often is DS is doing something with SS15 instead of her.

Recent example of less minor affront: We just painted/semi-remodeled my bio-kids bedrooms. SD is watching while DS and I put some of his stuff away. She gets on his bed and starts rolling around in the brand-new clean covers, saying how comfy it is. I can tell DS is cringing because she is beyond her normal grubby self, and is downright dirty, right down to her black feet from running around outside barefoot. Neither of said anything at the time and she hopped down on her own, but when she went to get back on the bed, he put his arm out to stop her. This caused her to stumble backwards and step on the metal heat register with her bare foot. I don’t think it hurt, but it did make a loud sound. She yelled at my son about pushing her, and while I don’t normally react to her, I calmly told her he didn’t mean for her to fall, he would tell her he was sorry, but that she didn’t need to be all over his new bed. My son did say he was sorry. She zoomed off down the hallway to run to SO. In just a couple angry steps I was right behind her, but she didn’t know it. She started fake crying that my son pushed her hard. SO just looked at me while he was processing what was going on and when she didn’t get an answer right way started crying that my son hates her. I calmly said, “DS does not hate you. Also, he did not mean to push you- it was an accident.” Not knowing I was behind her, she whipped around and got a deer-in-the-headlights look. She sputtered for a second and then went and hid behind a chair to pout for awhile.

I gave all these tedious examples so that I could get some feedback if I’m just being too defensive of my own son. In my mind I’m not, since I know she does this with her brother and I can see her instantly fake cry. But I also know it’s impossible for me to be objective here.

I’m also hoping for feedback as to how other families handle the step-sibling spats. I’ll add here that my son spends the very most one-on-one time with SD out of anyone in the household, including SO, and I’m reasonably certain more time than BM. Not because of anything neglectful on SO or BM’s part, but because DS will play with her, do activities with her, just sit and watch TV with her, while adults tend to be busy with chores/jobs/etc and only spend limited time with one-on-one play. All this time together increases the opportunities for conflict and puts them in a more sibling type relationship. I used to discipline my son automatically when she tattled to SO, but now I don’t trust that he’s done something wrong. If I see him do something wrong, I still will discipline him for it. I have more than once just found something for us to do away from the house to get him away from her.

One of the themes I seem to harp about a lot is that the relationship with SO has to be given its own priority, in addition to the priority of children’s health, welfare, and safety. In his guilty dad mode, SO used to confuse indulging SD’s whims/wants with making her welfare a priority. He finally realized the difference and truly did grasp the importance of our relationship. Now that he is starting to give our relationship the tending that it needs, I feel like I have to push our children’s needs back to the forefront. Sometimes I don’t think being subject to SD is fair to my kids, and if SD doesn’t like being around my family (conflict with my son plus comments that our house, pets, and numerous other things are “weird” or she hates them), then that’s not good for her either.

I just hate that all roads always seem to come back to ending this relationship when if it weren’t for SD and BM we would be pretty darn happy. I don’t mean I would end it only because of these little spats between DS and SD, but it’s just one more thing to add to all the other problems.

Comments

hismineandours's picture

I have lived with this for years. I have 3 bios of my own and ss. SS lived in our home from ages 2-9. He's 13 now and visits. My bios are 13, 12, and 9. SS13 loves to tattle-I just posted today on here about an incident last time he was here-where he was intentially antagonizing my ds, baiting him, and coincidentally getting on his bed and rolling around and refusing to get off when my ds12 asked. My ds's response was to plop a stuffed snake on his head. Not hit him, or throw it at him, just plopped it on his head. The snake was so floppy that I dont think he could have actually hit him with it-DS was also already holding it and had already ignored several inflammatory comments ss made. Well, that's all it took for ss to fly out of his room, down the stairs, to tattle to dh. My dh, lost his mind, and came up and called my ds12 a troublemaker.

Another time, my ss13 repeatedly insulted my ds and dd-kept calling them rude, and how he would never be like them, and on and on (this was because they went next door and got popsicles which they have been invited to do so and we are ok with). My kids didnt say a word and then went outside. Dh sent ss out a few minutes later and when ss walked by my ds hit him on the head with a foam noodle. SS's response was to grab my son, throw him down on the concrete floor, and grab his face and tell him not to mess with him. Then ss ran downstairs to tell on my ds. My dh stayed on top of that one and reminded ss of how he just was calling them names-and I was right behind him to talk about how he threw my son on the concrete floor and grabbed his face.

When he was younger he used to just completely make up stories. Just complete lies. Now, that he's older he's seemed to grasp that there needs to be at least a grain of truth to his story so he just instigates.

He also does it to my other kids. My dd13 was doing her math homework one day. He started asking questions and she answered them all and they talked about their various classes. She said that when she was a freshman she wuold be taking Algebra II. He proceeded to argue with her for the next 15 minutes about how there was no such class-even my dd8 tried to find a graceful way to end the fight and say maybe they dont have that class at your school,ss, but they do at dd's. I also weighed in, which I usually dont during arguments, and said I took algebra 2 when I was in school. He kept on and on and she finally told him that she wasnt going to argue with him nor discuss it any longer and he started calling her stupid-so she said something about him not passing his state testing. Which he ran and immediately told dh without mentioning that he had been gving her a hard time for 15 minutes prior and had progressed to calling her names.

So those are my examples to let you know I am right there with you. Dh feeds into it sometimes, sometimes not. I always get on to dh when he does. So its mostly not. Its a little harder in some ways with your situation since your sd is so much younger. I think you will need to focus with your dh to not encourage or feed into it and talk to him about wanting to foster a close relationship between them and also wanting to teach her to be independent and solve her own problems without tattling to him all the time. Tattling, IMO, is something that should not be encouraged in any situation (unless someone is bleeding, seriously broken, or there is some sort of emergency situation)-someone being "mean" is not an emergency situation and he needs to encourage her to cope with these issues on ehr own.

mama_althea's picture

Thanks, hm&o...I saw that stuffed snake story earlier and totally related to it. Do you ever find that your DH is defensive when you discuss it with him? Your suggestion of approaching it from the context of fostering a good relationship between them and independent problem solving on her part is good. It takes away the "your daughter does this wrong" feeling that would tend to put my SO into defensive mode.

overit2's picture

I wish I had an answer. Life is so lovely when we dont' have to deal with that. What I've noticed myself is that from SD there is EXTREME jealousy with my boys.

Reason being, they have a nice stable home with a mom (myself) that does care and love them. She also I'm sure knows that bf (her dad) spends a lot of time with us during the week. He does in effect take a more active role and spends more time around them then with her. Kids are perceptive-she's seen how they get along. She must sense the unspoken truth-he probably enjoys them more then her.

I've been thinking of this-seeing him interact with my boys nightly-he's at ease, more at peace, doesn't mind helping w/homework or making a drawing for them or talking. He really seems to enjoy them and also care for them-kind of I guess the way an uncle would-or a loving stepfather. I just can't reciprocrate with her those feelings he has with my boys.

I'm sure they do things to grate on his nerves-they do it to me and i'm their mom lol-but it's not intolerable. COntrast that with his mood gets tense and angry when she's comign to visit-more impatient, more snappy, etc. He doesn't enjoy it-he doesn't show it but I know he can't wait for it to be over.

Truth be told-I think the reason is for his dislike of SD-AND mine-that she does look and act exactly like his ex. She is certainly (bm) not somebody I would EVER associate in anyway with...certainly someone HE never would have run to divorce when he realized his tragic 19yr old got trapped w/the preggos line mistake he made. He dislikes her family-she's what he just considers a BAD PERSON. Not just they didn't get along-she's just a shady, bad, selfish person-and the fact that the daughter looks just like her and ACTS just like her makes it incredibly hard to just "deal" when we have her. Not somebody (bm) I would ever welcome into my home-that makes it really tough.

Her behavior w/my sons-especially my youngest can border on abusive, certainly bullyish and mean-we have to be on top of her the whole time. I think that rivalry will alwasy eb there...because our kids are getting what she (and other skids) ultimately would prefer.

A stable loving home with two sane adult figures, my sons are getting that now-she's not. It's resentment and jealousy-and thereforth not much will change her outlook and rivalry with them. I DO get that-and try to be as fair as possible. But YES momma bear comes out when she messes with my kids.

Most of the time-bf recognizes she IS the problem. He feels massive guilt about how that affects our relationship-and also feels massive guilt because he really doesn't like her very much. Not sure how to change that? We all jsut cope the best we possibly can.