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Letter to BM (that I actually sent)

myspoonistoobig's picture

BM asked how we've been getting SS to skype with her, so I told her, and she seemed pretty upset. She didn't try and rip me a new one the way she would've if DH had told her, but she was very short after that.

So, I decided to send her an e-mail explaining why we'd chosen to do with skype time what we've done, and now I've posted it here for your viewing pleasure.

***********************************************
Dear BM,

Please allow me to clarify my position about the skype routine in the house. We have no desire to offend you, and we certainly aren't trying to make you look like the bad guy. Stepfamily research has become something of a hobby for me. Being SS's stepmom is kind of a big job, even before he arrives here, and it is not something I take lightly. So I wanted to share with you the things that made us choose the skype routine that we did.

http://www.helpguide.org/mental/children_divorce.htm

"Helping children cope with divorce: Provide stability and structure

While it’s good for kids to learn to be flexible, adjusting to many new things at once can be very difficult. Help your kids adjust to change by providing as much stability and structure as possible in their daily lives.

Remember that establishing structure and continuity doesn’t mean that you need rigid schedules or that mom and dad’s routines need to be exactly the same. But creating some regular routines at each household and consistently communicating to your children what to expect will provide your kids with a sense of calm and stability.
The comfort of routines

The benefit of schedules and organization for younger children is widely recognized, but many people don’t realize that older children appreciate routine, as well. Kids feel safer and more secure when they know what to expect next. Knowing that, even when they switch homes, dinnertime is followed by a bath and then homework, for example, can set a child’s mind at ease.

Maintaining routine also means continuing to observe rules, rewards, and discipline with your children. Resist the temptation to spoil kids during a divorce by not enforcing limits or allowing them to break rules. "

http://www.nncc.org/parent/visitdo.html

"Make visitation a normal part of life

Find activities that give you and your children an opportunity to build your relationship. Allow time together without planned activities just to "hang out."
Provide a balance between fun and responsibility for your children.
Encourage visitation that includes grandparents and extended family.
Make sure your children have their own places in your home even if it is just part of a room so they feel it is also their home.
Help your children meet other kids in your neighborhood so they have friends at both homes.
Try to keep a routine schedule to help prepare your children for visitation.
Have a checklist of items such as clothing and toys that your children need to take on visitations. If the children are old enough, they can help pack.
If it's appropriate, allow your children to bring friends along occasionally.
Spend individual time with each of your children."

http://kidshealth.org/parent/positive/talk/help_child_divorce.html#
"The Importance of Consistency

Consistency and routine can go a long way toward providing comfort and familiarity that can help your family during this major life change. When possible, minimize unpredictable schedules, transitions, or abrupt separations.

Especially during a divorce, kids will benefit from one-on-one time with each parent. No matter how inconvenient, try to accommodate your ex-partner as you figure out visitation schedules."

http://kidshealth.org/parent/positive/talk/help_child_divorce.html#a_Adj...

"Your child may refuse to share time with you and your spouse equally and may try to take sides. If this occurs, as hard as it is, try not to take it personally. Maintain the visitation schedule and emphasize the importance of the involvement of both parents.

It's important to maintain as much normalcy as possible after a divorce by keeping regular routines, including mealtimes, house rules about behavior, and discipline. Relaxing limits, especially during a time of change, tends to make kids insecure and reduces your chances of regaining appropriate parental authority later."

http://www.svnetwork.net/visitation-decisions.asp
"Respect Parent-Child Relationships

Parents can help their children by respecting and supporting each child's relationship with the other parent. Unless agreed upon by both parents, parents should not plan activities for children that conflict with the other parent's scheduled time with the children. The time a parent is scheduled to spend with the children belongs to that parent and the children. The other parent should not interfere with this time. Parents can also help their children by adjusting the schedule to permit their children to participate in reasonable extracurricular activities.
Encourage Telephone and Other Contact

Parents can help their children by calling and writing to them and by reasonably encouraging and assisting them to call and write to the other parent. Children do best when they are able to maintain contact with both parents. While visitation is one way to maintain that contact, other ways include telephone calls, letters, e-mail, and other forms of communication. Telephone calls between parent and child should be permitted at reasonable hours and at the expense of the calling parent. Unless restricted by court order, parents have a right to send cards, letters, packages, e-mail, audiotapes, and videocassettes to their children. Children have the same right to send items to their parents. Parents should not interfere with these rights."

http://www.familylawrights.net/blog/when-your-kid-doesnt-want-to-go-to-d...
"Working Out Visitation Issues

One of the most common reasons why a kid doesn’t want to go to their other parents house for visitation is they’re leaving all of their stuff behind. Books, games, toys or their ipad may stay at home, and now all they have to do is hang out with mom or dad (which can be boring for a kid!). Couple that with the fact that the child will probably not be having fun and playing with their friends and you’ve got a recipe for one unhappy camper and a child that does not want to participate in visitation.

As the parent who is experiencing the problem of their child not wanting to come over, it’s time to get creative. Think of fun games and activities that your child enjoys and engage them in them. It doesn’t need to cost money, but it needs to be more than sitting around the house talking and watching movies. Riding bikes or having squirt gun wars is fun and is a great way to be playful with your child while keeping them active when they are with you for visitation periods.

If you are the parent with whom your child wants to stay, sometimes you have to just make them go to the other parents house for visitation. Hundreds of studies have shown that a child that grows up without a significant presence of both parents in their lives is detrimental to their growth and overall well-being. Forcing them to go shows them that you respect the other parent and that they should too. Try to be proactive with the other parent, as difficult as that may be post-breakup, and let them know what’s going on and what the child is in to. Realize that this is important, not for you, but for your child, and that is your number one priority."

In a long-distance situation like ours, communication is visitation of a different kind. My effort is to make it regular, predictable, private and relatively distraction-free. I don't see it as optional because of how important it is. There are many fun things SS won't want to do 'right this second' because he's 5. Even at soccer camp there were moments when he went and pouted about something while his teammates had a grand old time without him, which is normal for his age. (They all did it at least once) At the same time, it is not unreasonable to expect him to focus on something for 10 minutes. His attention span at his age should be about 15 minutes.

We do not punish him with time with you. Time with you, like eating all of his dinner or behaving exceptionally well are behaviors that come with rewards; like TV time, ice cream, or special activities requested that are outside the house. And so far, this approach has worked masterfully. He's only asked to skype once, but with the exception of this evening, he's been enthusiastic about skyping with you on Mon, Wed, Friday in his little bunk-bed fort. We never ask if he wants to or threaten him, we just say it's time, and he usually barrels up the bed at full speed.

Skype time is guaranteed 3 times a week, as per the parenting plan. My only goal is to make is normal and pain free, for you and DH, but mostly for SS. He loves you both very much, and he deserves that time with you both.

I know it's different, and I am not asking you to make skype in your home what we have made it in ours, I just wanted to try and put you at ease and explain our position a little better.

I hope this helps!

Much love,
myspoon

Comments

BelleTolls's picture

Spoon, I admire you, but any bm is gonna see this and think "tl;dr" (which I don't need to tell YOU but that means too long; didn't read")

My own vast research trying to see the world through BM's eyes has taught me that a mother doesn't want to be lectured (or "helped") by a stepmom, even if our intentions are well-meaning.

Right or not, you can clarify and clarify until you are blue in the face. Again, I admire your intentions.

myspoonistoobig's picture

I have a feeling she'll argue the point and be a passive aggressive bitch about it.

BUT! She can't say I didn't try, or that we didn't communicate our expectations to her.

I was trying so hard not to lecture too. Bummer. Sad

Also... the other option was to either ignore her (which I only save for REALLY stupid shit) or have DH tell her all these things. She responds far less well to him than she does to me.

It's actually pretty incredible, the difference. One of the reasons I want to gently shove them at gunpoint into co-parenting counseling, at least to try.

BelleTolls's picture

My dear, you have provided enough information for one to write a master's dissertation. It is a lecture incarnate.

She may respond better to you than to your DH. But if I received this in my inbox, I would be incredulous. At one time I believed I was the better communicator and then I started sounding like the "parent" who had all the knowledge. It made bm very insecure -- which helped no one.

Maybe she will read this information and actually learn something. I hope so. Smile

myspoonistoobig's picture

You're probably right. Me being a journalist means I put a bibliography on almost everything I'm nervous about writing. Sad

Hopefully she'll catch that last bit, where I say, 'hey, not saying YOU need to do this, just saying this is why we do since you seemed to think we were torturing SS' before the incredulity takes hold. Sad

BelleTolls's picture

It's OK. You are trying and your heart is in the right place.

Play off the reaction (or lack thereof) that you receive from this.

It's just been my experience that mothers don't like to be told. I've learned to adjust by adjusting.

Hugs. Smile

P.S. you journalists and your wordiness :p. Smile

lil_lady's picture

Thank you for posting this if you see my most recent post we are currently having some serious problems with BM realizing how important routine is... again thank you!

myspoonistoobig's picture

Sure! Though the poster above you I think believes that this may very well blow up in my face.

Honestly? The more I think about it the more I think she's probably right.

This is WHY co-parenting counseling, or just couples counseling for parents who can't STAND each other and need to calm the fuck down, needs to happen more.

For some reason, some people bring out the worst in each other, and when those people BREED with one another? God help us ALL!

lil_lady's picture

I have emailed BM an email such as this at one point in regards to a nick name SD choose to call me that BM did not agree with. That being said I think it depends on your current communication with BM. I know that BM and I communicate regarding skids needs so she takes emails differently than that of someone who does not communicate with their BM.... most definitely let us know what happens!

snowdrop's picture

was it at all passive aggressive to share all of that information about how she should be doing things, to say that you've been doing it in a way that is more effective than her way, and then to say that she does not have to do it the effective way if she doesn't want to? THEN to sign it "much love." Really? All good intentions?

I don't buy it that your intentions were all pure, you wanted to stick it to her a little--- and what better a way to stick it to her than to show her that you're doing something better than her and the articles to prove it....

myspoonistoobig's picture

How she does things in her house is not my problem. But if I didn't say something, she'd deliberately make herself unavailable if SS5 didn't specifically ask to talk to her. She may very well do that anyway, because only she knows what he wants, and what he wants is ALWAYS what he needs.

Which is stupid, because then they'd never talk. He's here too long in the summer for that to be acceptable.

snowdrop's picture

was it at all passive aggressive to share all of that information about how she should be doing things, to say that you've been doing it in a way that is more effective than her way, and then to say that she does not have to do it the effective way if she doesn't want to? THEN to sign it "much love." Really? All good intentions?

I don't buy it that your intentions were all pure, you wanted to stick it to her a little--- and what better a way to stick it to her than to show her that you're doing something better than her and the articles to prove it....

myspoonistoobig's picture

That would require her to talk to DH. It's more likely that she'd ask me herself.

myspoonistoobig's picture

No, SS was having a wierd night last night. He didn't want to talk at all at first, then he decided he did, then he decided he didn't again.

When he wanted to the second time she asked if he decided he did or if we talked him into it.

twoviewpoints's picture

Oh my.

"He's only asked to skype once, but with the exception of this evening, he's been enthusiastic about skyping with you on Mon, Wed, Friday in his little bunk-bed fort. We never ask if he wants to or threaten him, we just say it's time, and he usually barrels up the bed at full speed."

Just this would have been enough if anything.