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Starting New Blended Family - What would you set/start with if you could do it over again?

SouthernMom's picture

I am the "soon to be" step-mom of 2 and bio-mom of 4. Both my fiance and I have our kids on Tuesday and Thursday evenings and every other weekend. We have shared custody of our kids.

Unfortunatley, we decided that instead of buying a new house we could try to all fit into his existing home which is a 3BR. His son's room in which he has had since birth has since been taken over by my 4 kids and now the son is moving into his sister's room (which is another issue). As you can tell, they are already making the "us" and them" when it comes to the two sets of kids. My kids are fine with his two, but his are not too happy about their new "invaders".

If you had to do it all over again, what rules or guidelines would you set up to try to make for a successful blended family? Any help would be much appreciated!

cat72196's picture

Hello! I wish you the best of luck with your situation. Smile Since my SO and I haven't yet tried to blend our families in one household, I can't answer your "What would you do differently?" question, and I hope you don't think I'm overstepping here, but I would DEFINITELY suggest trying to get a bigger house (or at least one w/more bedrooms.) I'm assuming there were reasons for not going that route to begin with, whether financially or whatever. But I definitely see a huge resentmemt issue building, not only with his kids seeing you and yours as invading their home, but also with you, as you struggle to gain authority and respect from these kids who have been living there for x-number of years, as you are just now trying to make it feel like your own and feel at home. I think the term "fresh start" applies here! Good luck again! Smile

SouthernMom's picture

Thanks so much for your comment.
You are right, it was a financial decision to not move. The house is paid for and not having a house payment is a HUGE deal right now with the uncertainty of jobs where we live. We would love to get a bigger house, but probably not for a while.

lm862003's picture

Ah, THE MERGER!

There are a number of things you will have to cope with in respect to your new Blended Family.
* Family roles
* Names and Titles
*Dwellings
* Loyalties
* Family Rituals
* Parenting Styles
* Family Memberships
* Family Rules
* Friends
* Boundaries
* Goals
* Spiritual Beliefs

Things you can do:
* Agree about "who is in charge of what"
* Encourage eachother
* Identify your priorities
* EXPECT conflict (its just going to happen)
* Develop conflict resolution skills!
* Hold "merger" meetings. Communicate and update!
* Celebrate wins, large and small!
* Above all, keep your sense of humor

sixteensmom's picture

I'd love to say i'd run away! But that would make me a loser and a coward, so heres my feedback :

I wouldn't try so hard to be make sure dh and his kids had the kind of relationship i thought they should. I wouldn't care what they thought of me or what bm had to say. I would have listened to dh parents and family who fell in love with me immediately because i made their son/brother smile. I wouldn't try to be the perfect step mom. Or to make them like me. Or to keep everything fair. skids were raised completely differently from my kids. i would have been so much better off not trying to blend for 8 years. the past 6 months have been the best because i've completely removed any expectations of skids. i dont expect thank yous or calls to check in or Christmas gifts or birthday cards. I don't expect to be acknowledged if I'm in the room or when they walk in my house. I don't care if they call dh to check in or invite us to their house for dinner or just to see what they've done with the p lace. i dont care if they share grades or class schedules or plans for various weekends. I don't text them anymore to include them in gatherings and I dont go out of my way to make their life grand.

DH appreciates that it's hard for me, and acknowledges that I was the one to do it all the past 8 years. I don't need a rah rah from skids, my dh gives me what i need.

Stick's picture

Southernmom - the only advice I would give anyone going into this situation is PARENT HIS CHILDREN AS YOU WOULD YOUR OWN and ALLOW HIM TO DO THE SAME.

If he doesn't let you parent as you see fit, and you don't allow him to parent your children, you guys are in for a rough ride.

Granted - DH and I do not agree on every aspect of parenting. And you will be bound to have arguments. But if both of you are putting up walls between parenting each other's kids, in my opinion, it makes the blending that much harder.

To me, that's why so many women are so angry. They want to parent, and cannot. They want to be a positive role model, and cannot. Don't allow things to happen in your home that you do not agree with - from the get-go. Because once you suck it up, it sets a precedent.

Kes's picture

I would say don't have overly high expectations. There is going to be conflict and tensions, that is as certain as death and taxes.
Don't expect to love your stepchildren, and don't expect your partner to love your children.
Keep some regular time for you and your partner, whatever the outside pressures. Don't allow your SKIDs/children to divide and rule you and your partner.
Sorry this advice all sounds couched in the negative. It's not easy, but don't allow that to put you off if you have a strong relationship.

2plus2's picture

Well I suppose it depends some on the age of the kids involved but....my biggest advise has to do with you and your SO, make 100% sure he has your back and you have his. Kids step or not will cause issues, if the two of you do not have each others backs it will ruin things in the end...it may take a few yrs to undo it, but trust me damage will be done. My DH has said things to my skids like just shut up and pretend like you are listening so she will shut up...not relationship forming material for sure no matter how hard I try. Good luck!

lintermans@aol.com's picture

First of all, I wish you all the best with your new family! Please allow me to pass along some things I, as a stepMom who has done a tremendous amount of living and research on this subject for the book I've written, have learned.

Typical multi-home stepfamilies are similar to intact biological families in a number of ways. At the same time, they also differ structurally, developmentally, and dynamically in oversixtyways! People unaware of these differences, and what they mean to typical adults, kids and supporters, risk unconsciously using inappropriate or harmful biological family norms and expectations to guide their stepfamily perceptions, goals, and decisions. This is like trying to play baseball with soccer equipment and basketball rules—guaranteed to create confusion, frustration, conflict, and stress that will inhibit healthy stepfamily merging and bonding, and promote growing dissatisfactions.

Learning, Teaching, and Applying Stepfamily Realities

Learning to live well in a new stepfamily has been likened to the challenges faced by a clan of Swedes pledging loyalty to a tribe of Tibetans, who all settle down together in rural Brazil. There is much for everyone to learn—new laws, customs, roles, and vocabulary. Everyone is learning to cope in a new, alien environment.

There are three distinctly new challenges facing you and your child-raising partners:

1. You will need to learn specifically how your multi-home stepfamily differs in composition, norms, and dynamics from your respective birth-families and first-marriage families.

2. You will need to use these step-realities and make time together to evolve clear and realistic personal, marital, co-parent, and multi-home stepfamily goals and expectations over time.

3. You will need to teach yourmain stepfamily differences, realities, and goals to your kids, important kin and friends, and key professionals. Keep them updated. Expect some people to misunderstand and to criticize your new values, goals, and plans—or you. Realize they probably have their own unsolved problems and/or are stuck in a biological family mode of thinking. Befriend informed others who will empathize with and support you.

Here is a sample of common stepfamily myths and realities that you’ll discover, discuss, accept, and apply:

Myth: “I love you and I must love your kids.”

Reality: “I love you and will patiently work at respecting your kids. They and I may never love each other. If we do, it will feel different than biological parent-child love, and that’s okay.

Myth: “Your or my ex-mate is not part of our family!”

Reality: “As long as your previous marriage biological children live, their other biological parent, and their new mate(s), if any, will emotionally, financially, legally, and genetically influence all of your lives. Ignoring or discounting the needs and feelings of these other adults will stress everyone for years.

Myth: “We’re just like a regular biological family.”

Reality: No, because you have two to three linked stepfamily co-parenting homes, three to six stepfamily adults, six to twelve co-grandparents, forty to ninety relatives, new alien family roles (such as stepfather, stepmother, stepsibling, for example), many major losses to mourn, and many conflicting values and customs to resolve among all your people. You are, however, normal—a normal multi-home stepfamily.

Myth: “Your or my kids will never come between us.”

Reality: Stepfamily adults’ inability to resolve clashes over one or more step-kids, including related money issues, is the most quoted reason for a stepfamily divorce. Underneath this usually lie your own unhealed wounds.

Myth: “Step parenting is pretty much like biological parenting, without the childbirth.”

Reality: While key aims of stepparents are about the same as those of biological parents, the emotional, legal, and social environments of average stepparents differ in numerous ways from typical biological parents. That usually leads to role confusion, frustration, and high stress, until all the stepfamily adults in your stepfamily agree clearly on what each stepparent’s key responsibilities are.

Myth: “Your and/or my biological kids(s) will always live with us.”

Reality: In about thirty percent of U.S. stepfamilies, one or more minor biological kids move sometime to live in the home of their other biological parent. This sends complex emotional and financial shock waves into and between the sending and receiving homes, especially if the move was on short notice or not agreed to by all involved.

Use this information to build realistic expectations for your new stepfamily homes, roles, and relationships. If you do not, collective, distorted expectations can cause great ongoing frustrations and disappointments, and even corrode your marriage. But by learning together what’s normal in average stepfamilies—early on—minimizes much of this.

Ideally, all of your stepfamily co-parenting ex-mates and key kin will join you in this goal. Be aware that some or all of your stepparents and biological parents may agree intellectually that you are a stepfamily together, but may not learn, adapt, and apply important step-realities to your expectations and relationships. If so, they risk expecting, deep down, biological family behaviors and outcomes. This will surely lead to mounting frustration, disappointment, and stress in and between your homes. This is especially true in the first years after the wedding, as alien stepfamily crises, like loyalty conflicts, begin to bloom.

Try this quick exercise. Can you can name fifteen or more structural and dynamic differences between the average step and biological families, and describe clearly how each of those differences affects your home and family relationship? Though both are four-legged animals with mouths, noses, hair, and tails, poodles aren’t ponies—despite wishing, praying, mantras, thinking, or hallucinogens.

COMPARING STEPFAMILIES AND BIOLOGICAL FAMILIES

Differences and Implications for Stepfamily Adults

Stepfamilies and biological families do have major similarities. Simultaneously, they differ structurally and dynamically in over sixty ways. If unexpected, these differences individually and collectively can startle, confuse, frustrate, and greatly stress all new stepfamily members—and their supporters.

Biological families and stepfamilies have each been around for thousands of years. They are both normal. Because in our era and culture there are many more biological families, people often judge stepfamilies as abnormal. Neither family type is inherently better; they are, however, vastly different.

Terms

Among the many confusions around stepfamilies, one stems from the terms that we all use to describe them. For clarity, let’s review the “new” terms we are using. Stepparent means any adult who provides part-time or full-time guidance, nurturing, and protection to the minor or grown biological child(ren) of their current adult romantic partner.

The stepparent may be married to his or her biological parent partner, or cohabiting with—and emotionally committed to—him or her. A stepparent is usually, but not always, the opposite gender from his or her current partner.

A stepfamily is any family where at least one regular member of a parenting home is a stepparent. Typical extended stepfamilies, i.e., kids, stepfamily adults, and all relatives, can live in many related homes and may include 100 or more members. A blended stepfamily is one where both stepfamily adults have one or more biological kids.

A stepfamily adult is any biological parent or stepparent living in a stepfamily home. A stepchild is any biological child who lives with—or visits—a biological parent’s committed adult mate. Step-kids can be grown or minor, and legally adopted by their stepparent or not.

An interesting paradox is that, depending on the yardstick you use, typical stepfamilies can be accurately seen as just like biological families, andsimultaneously verydifferent. How can this be?

Stepfamily and Biological Family Similarities

Typical stepfamilies and biological families are alike, in that:

•Both family types are composed of adults and kids living together part or all of the time.
•The adults are (usually) in charge of their homes, and do their best to guide, nurture, protect, teach, and prepare their dependent kids to eventually leave and live well enough on their own.
•All members of each kind of family have daily needs and developmental life tasks to fulfill, as well as a range of daily activities, such as work or school, worship, socializing and play, meals, shopping, chores, and so on.
•Both kinds of normal families evolve through a predictable, natural sequence of developmental stages—although stepfamilies have some different stages. For example: a minor step-kid(s)’ key task is to test to learn clearly, “Am I safe in this family, or will it break up too?” Members will need to resolve personal and family-role name confusions such as, “What should we call each other?”
•Both family types periodically have conflicts between their members, and with other people and the environment. They use tangible resources such as money, phones, cars, appliances, etc., and personal resources like love, humor, time, intelligence, patience, etc., to seek resolution to their conflicts.
•Step-people and people in biological families each have individual and shared hopes, fears, goals, achievements, dreams, failures, joys, health concerns, celebrations, depressions, identities, bodies, losses, etc.
•Both family types naturally develop sets of personal group values, group roles (who does what) and rules (when, how, and why), a history, an identity, and some loyalty or bonding.
•They both evolve with human and natural environments and interact with each as contributors and consumers.
So, when a stepfamily adult (or other) says, “Hey, we are just a regular family!” they are absolutely right. At the same time, there are over sixty differences between biological families and stepfamilies.

Stepfamily and Biological Family Differences

Average stepfamilies could not be more different than biological families! Typical multi-home stepfamilies have very different structures and developmental tasks than biological families. By these measures, they vary more from average biological families than do typical foster, single-parent, or adoptive families. In reviewing the following information, notice both the individual differences and the collective impact of all of them.

Adopt a learner’s mind. Award yourself patience, permission to mess up and learn, and strokes for the smallest triumphs. Keep your emotional knees flexed, hold hands, and enjoy the adventure and challenge together. It is worth it. Average multi-home stepfamilies are simultaneously both the same, and enormously different than, typical intact (two-parent) biological families.

What’s Normal in a Typical Stepfamily?

Once again, a stepfamily is one where one or more adults are doing part-time or full-time parenting for their romantic partner’s biological child(ren). Thus, parental cohabitation with a new adult partner after divorce or a mate’s death forms a psychological stepfamily. Post-divorce stepfamilies have legal documents that further define them: property settlement decrees, and child custody, support, visitation, and sometimes stepfamily co-parenting agreements.

Older remarrying couples whose kids are all grown still form a stepfamily. They do bypass many, but not all, of the stress of stepfamilies with dependent kids, e.g., child visitation, support, and custody conflicts. They still encounter some of the most serious common causes of stress, particularly stepfamily ignorance, unhealed childhood trauma, incomplete grief, and divisive loyalty conflicts around grandkids, wills and bequests, holidays, and key traditions.

An intact nuclear (parents and kids) biological family normally lives in one home. Typical nuclear stepfamilies live in two or three stepfamily co-parenting homes woven tightly together by child visitations, legal agreements and responsibilities, genes, history, finances, and deep emotions. The only stepfamily that lives in one home is one where all biological kids or non-custodial biological parents are dead. Even then, there are usually emotional and other ties with living former in-laws and with step-kin living in other homes.

Because stepfamilies are adults and children living and growing together, sharing concerns with work and school, pets, health, bills, chores, religion, friends, etc., they do share some average biological family traits. Yet, certain “common sense” biological family operating rules and values cannot only be ineffective, but even harmful.

Some key differences:

Unlike biological families, normal/typical stepfamilies…

•Live in two or three homes linked for a decade or more by genes, child visitation, support, and custody agreements; divorce decrees and obligations, history and mementos, and strong emotions.
•Always include one or more living or dead ex-spouses and their relatives, who are usually emotionally part of the family.
•Are always founded on two sets of major losses: divorce or death, and remarriage and cohabiting. All three generations on both sides need to grieve these abstract and physical losses well.
•Have up to thirty family roles (e.g., stepdaughter), compared to the fifteen roles in typical biological families. There are no schools or accepted social conventions for these extra fifteen roles, so they typically cause confusion and frustration in and between linked homes until a stepfamily-wide consensus evolves on them.
•Include many more people. Typical multi-home, three-generation stepfamilies have over sixtymembers.
•May have complex confusion over priorities, values, names, rules, holidays, inclusions, traditions, money, and loyalties.
•Have common social isolation, misunderstandings, and biases to deal with.
•Stepfamily adults usually have to master numerous major developmental tasks, many of which have no equivalent in biological families—with little preparation or social support.
Because stepfamilies are so different from biological families, all remarrying adults and emotionally important kin, including their prior parenting partners, should study stepfamily basics, regardless of prior biological family experience. Note that growing up as a stepchild is probably not adequate preparation for being an effective stepfamily adult.

Over time, all parenting households evolve hundreds of rules about child discipline, finances, holidays, names, privacy, money, pets, home chores, grooming, health, worship, etc. Some of these rules are unspoken while others are vocalized and clear. Because stepfamilies are so different, some “normal” biological family rules about co-living—and especially about parenting—can cause conflict rather than order. Other “normal” biological family rules about who’s in charge of the home, hygiene, privacy, interpersonal respect, clear communications, honesty, nutrition, and the like, are still relevant and applicable.

Sometimes step-people are stressed by trying to force “normal” biological family priorities on their new household. For example, pushing step-kids to accept, respect, and like (or love) their new step-relatives quickly because “kids should respect (i.e., obey) their elders” can cause major resentment, guilt, and frustration.

Brady Brunch notwithstanding, new love is usually not enough!

Relatives and friends of remarried people often mistakenly expect the new household and kin to feel and act like a biological family. They also may not approve of either the prior divorce(s) or the remarriage. Therefore, friends and relatives may be startlingly un-empathic and critical, or offer unrealistic or inappropriate (i.e., biological family) suggestions if your new stepfamily runs into unexpected problems.

Yet, well-run by knowledgeable, confidant stepfamily adult teams (not simply couples), this modern version of an ancient family form can provide the warmth, comfort, inspiration, support, security—and often (not always) the love—that adults and kids long for.

Gloria Lintermans is the author of THE SECRETS TO STEPFAMILY SUCCESS: Revolutionary Tools to Create a Blended Family of Support and Respect (Llumina Press). http://amzn.to/stepfamily

overit2's picture

Well, I'm not married so cant' say how it works really. I know that even in our dating realm it's so difficult.

I know this much-i do not plan on every having her live with us. I know it's always possible but nothing I would ever push for honestly. I think it's hard enough to get along and "blend" eow for us, let alone try it full time.

Funny-I just seperated my bio sons rooms to give them their own rooms-they have shared for 11 years...the SD says..you should put them back together so I can have my own room. WTH! I didn't even bother w/a response.