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New to this and not really sure why I'm here.

not-really-my-thing's picture

Let's see. I'm in my forties, recently married to a man with a nine-year-old daughter. Notice I don't identify myself as stepmother. In fact I don't particularly refer to her as my stepdaughter. Not yet anyway. Who knows. She's an alright child as children go. We're "friendly strangers" as someone put it on the forum earlier today. That feels accurate and that's okay by me. I don't relish the idea of being a full-time stepparent or parent. I run a successful business, I love my husband, we have a good life.

I suppose what brought me here is my good friend who married and became a stepmother at about the time I did. (She told me about this site though I cannot for the life of me imagine her here. She's the epitome of the happy stepmom.) She dove right in to the deep end and has devoted her life to her husband's children. They adore her. It's rather like a Normal Rockwell painting when we visit. I don't mean to poke fun. My friend is very good at it and sincere. She loves those children as if they were her own. So you can imagine that watching her, watching them, made me wonder. Where is my maternal urge? Am I missing something? Because I don't dislike my husband's daughter but I don't love her either. Frankly, I think it would be odd if I did love her after six months.

So here I am. Wondering what my role is in this situation. Wondering how it will change. Luckily I have a husband who cherishes me and allows me to be myself. He doesn't push me toward his daughter, he doesn't pull me away from her (not that he'd have to). They do their thing and I do mine and sometimes we do something together. He has a cordial relationship with his former wife. (Therein lies the difference between my situation and my friend's: for all intents and purposes, her stepchildren have no mother so there's a perfect empty space for her to fill.) I don't interfere with my husband's communication with his former wife. He's not particularly fond of her and limits their communication to parenting their child. He is a good father. She is a decent mother. There's no need for me to involve myself. I know it would make my husband ridiculously happy if his daughter and I adored each other but I'm not going to force myself on her. I value my own independence too much. And I value my relationship with my husband above all.

I will admit that the only uneasiness in my situation comes from my intuition that my husband's daughter is not trustworthy. There's something not genuine about her, something deceitful. She's a compliant child, easy to be with, easy to manage. But there's a watchfulness about her. She has a way of chirping out just what she thinks we want to hear. It makes me cautious around her. It may sound cruel to judge a child like that, but there it is: I don't trust her. Something tells me that she is not who she seems to be when she's with us. Who knows? She may not be who she seems to be when she's with her mother. That's the sad reality of forcing a child to navigate two homes, two different worlds. They learn to adjust themselves and to manipulate their surroundings. I understand that it may well be a very normal survival impulse but it's enough to keep me on edge. That's what I don't like. Not feeling I can truly be myself in my own home. I assume everything I do is being reported back to the former wife who doesn't seem to have it in for me, but still. I suppose it could just take time. I've not been around children much and it takes some getting used to. I often feel that my personal space is encroached upon simply by her living here half the time. I'm relieved on weeks we don't have her. I breathe easier. And like I said, she's an easy child. I just prefer it when she's not here.

So that's it. Perhaps I'm a stepmonster in the making. Or perhaps I'm just indifferent to children. Maybe I'm missing the chromosome that kicks in the maternal instinct. But here's how I feel: I love my husband, I can live with his child, but I have no desire to be her mother. I don't even want to be her stepmother, particularly. Frankly, I have no idea what that means.

Comments

Brady_Bunch_plus_some's picture

Interesting. Seems like indifference more than anything else. Do you guys get her often? You reference 6 months. Is that how long you've known her? Doesn't seem like very long. She's probably still trying to figure you out. Trying to see what kind of role you are going to fill.

not-really-my-thing's picture

My husband has his daughter every other week, and yes we've been married just six months. Not long I know. I'm sure you're right, she is getting a sense of how and who I am. I am doing the same. I wouldn't say I'm indifferent. I would say I'm not invested. I wish the girl well and do things for her, spend time with her when she's here. She knows she is cared for when she is with her father and me. I just don't feel compelled to forge a bond with her. I'll be pleased if one grows over time. But I will wait for her to come to me and until then I will follow my husband's lead.

not-really-my-thing's picture

Good advice and much appreciated. My husband and I have talked about the changes his daughter will no doubt go through as she gets older. He seems prepared with a stern fatherly perspective and a sense of humor. We'll see if that continues. I think part of the reason I can stay uninvested is because he does such a good job. He's not asking anything of me accept that I build a life for myself here and enjoy that life with him. Brilliant, actually.

Pinki3663's picture

I have had the same feelings regarding the lack of maternal instinct. I have never wanted children and people from work, my friends, my family all keep telling me I will change my mind. Some even say "oh when you have your own it'll be different" or "When you have your own you will love him/her. I just don't see having a child changing anything for me.

I don't love my SO's kids and I am completely honest with him and have been from the start. That has been the best thing for my SO and I, me being upfront about how I feel about children, how I won't be the motherly type. At most I am a distant friend who buys gifts for their birthdays, Christmas..etc. When they are over I interact with them as much as I want. When I feel that I have had enough my SO is always available and I say "Welp going to take my nap" or where ever it is I am going.

I would let the relationship with the step go where it will naturally. Don't feel pressured to force your feelings and obviously you're not about to pressure her. Don't feel guilty about your feelings or lack of. You didn't give birth to her, to you she is just another human. Are you "besties" with everyone you meet? Probably not..and that is okay.

not-really-my-thing's picture

Funny, I rather enjoy children from afar. I have nieces and nephews and I think they're neat little people. Clever and funny and one-of-a-kind. I don't feel that way toward my husband's daughter but then again she's had a much different upbringing than anyone in my family. Much more conventional. She doesn't have much of a spark but perhaps that will be a good thing when she hits the teenage years. I don't mean to give the impression that I don't like children, I do. But I don't feel the need to smother them with my affection. And I certainly don't feel the need to be this girl's mother as she already has one. My husband didn't marry me to be his child's mother. He married me to be his wife. Good that you're able to be so upfront and direct with your husband. Taking naps is good. I find I take more walks and read more books when my husband's daughter is here.

Not_what_I_wanted's picture

Wow, you said everything I feel all the time. I am indifferent towards SD10, I dont trust her, She is manipulative, but she lives with us FT now. I do not have motherly feelings toward this child, and I have a 17yo of my own. To me she is a roommate of sorts, I dont know her well, and I dont particularly like her right now. I feel so much guilt over this, but I cannot force myself to care if I just dont. Unfortunately this is causing a riff between DH and I, as he is not happy with my distancing myself from her.

not-really-my-thing's picture

Interesting that you feel maternal toward your own child but not your stepdaughter. I assumed it was either in a person's make-up or not. Are you distancing yourself from her now after being close? Perhaps I have the advantage in that I've not yet tried to get close to my husband's daughter. If I did and then I pulled away I would imagine it would be quite a shock for everyone and would cause a rift. Good luck.

Not_what_I_wanted's picture

SD and I have never been close, no. We have days/moments when we are more compatible than other times, mostly due to her behavior and attitude. If i see her manipulating or she is overly dramatic and dying for attention, pulling her stunts, having to be the center of the universe, I pull away. This is a huge turn off to me, and I am still trying to get to know her but this just pushes me away.

She has been in my life almost 3 years now, was heavily PAS'd most of that time and only recently has come to live with us FT with minimal phone contact with BM. I try to be polite and indifferent but sometimes I cross the line into disgust by her. I"m far from perfect and having a hard time having her around.

Mystic18's picture

We recently just got custody of my husband's 11 y/o son who has Autism.  I feel nothing maternal for the child.  I find him incredibly stressful to be around for reasons that aren't his fault.  But Autism or not, I am not a huge fan of random kids.  I love my own dearly and that's about it.  I can have my house full of kids for a sleepover or whatever but this whole full time gig with another woman's child? Not my cup of tea.  He already has parents.  I can be kind, provide food and a cozy home and all that but that's kind of where I'm at currently.  I'm not snuggling up on the couch tossing popcorn like some Disney advertisement but I'm not rude, either.  In my opinion, my loyalty is to my husband.  I will support and encourage him, especially as he navigates the muddy waters of Autism.  But I'm not in the trenches with him.  

Frustr8d1's picture

I feel the same. SD9 is more like a roommate. It's very hard to have maternal feelings toward another person's child and especially when it's someone who you just don't trust. SD has stolen several items from me in the past 3 yrs and she lies everytime she opens her mouth. Don't feel guilty. You can't force yourself to love someone, especially if that person rejects you or doesn't view you as their parent.

not-really-my-thing's picture

It's hard for me to know what is normal and what's not since this is my first time living with a child. But my husband's daughter did, in the first few weeks I lived with them, feel free to enter our bedroom and go through my things. I put that to an abrupt halt with my husband's support. I have caught his daughter in a handful of lies, some inconsequential, some large and ongoing. She strikes me as the kind of person who bends the truth in her own mind so she doesn't even realize when she's lying. Again, I feel for her because I think this is a coping mechanism that's grown out of her relationship with both her mother and her father before and after the divorce. But I don't want to be tangled up in her deceit. As I've read here on the forum a few times: "not my child, not my problem." That's how I have felt the entire time I've been in her life. I don't expect it to change.

not-really-my-thing's picture

A "background check." I like that, very clever. Not something my husband's daughter would be bright enough to think of. But you're right, she's scoping me out and that's to be expected. I'm sure she can intuit that I'm uninvested. But I think my comments here have given the wrong impression. My husband, his daughter, and I have dinner together nearly every night she's here, we take on long walks together, we visit museums and play on the playground, we go to movies, and we've traveled quite a bit together in the last six months. I'm not keen on forcing time with just his daughter and me, but I'm happy to join them when they're doing something I want to do, and I've introduced both of them to new things.