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daniellethewickedSM's picture

I'm 28, have DS3, SD12, SS11, and baby on the way. My husband is 40. To make an incredibly long story somewhat shorter...

DH has majority custody. SKs visit their mom on 1st 3rd and 5th (if there is a 5th) weekends. She is a nightmare. Like all of them. Lots of abusive and neglectful behavior in her home due to her violent and verbally abusive husband, and troubled oldest daughter (of whom biomom regained custody after not seeing her at all for 10 years). As you can probably see, the biomom is not much more stable or appropriate than her husband or daughter. Her passive aggressive psychological games are constant with my SKs. These reasons are why we have majority custody.

The kids are obviously troubled. They're so angry. Of course they are. I have been with my DH since the kids were 4 and 5. We have had problems with them ranging from lying, sneaking, and stealing, to my SS willfully urinating and defecating on himself from ages 7-9, and my SD at age 6 was wiping feces on walls and furniture in her room. They are 12 and almost 11 now, and aren't doing things like that anymore. SD seems to be improving, but her relationship w BM isn't good at all. It is very strained.

In particular, my SS's disrespectful behavior has reached a whole new level. He is a smart ass, ignores me when i speak, attempts to walk away while I'm talking, and even goes as far as to roll his eyes at me and laugh when I speak to him. Today I took him to a restaurant for brunch since my DH works a 12 hour shift on Sundays. SS ordered an adult sized breakfast quesadilla. Ok fine. That's no big deal. He proceeds to eat the entire thing before I even had a chance to butter my pancake. That is not an exaggeration. I commented on it so he slumped in his chair. Then proceeded to eat my home fries off my plate and then started shoveling sour cream into his mouth. Pure sour cream. He had to sit there for the next 30-40 minutes because we all had hardly begun to eat by the time he finished. That was when he started eating food off of our plates. So rude and disrespectful. He is completely aware that this behavior is unacceptable to me. It was an intentional slap in the face. Out of left fucking field. Mind you, my SS is 11 years old.

Before anyone says it: My husband is the problem. I know this. He is honestly a total buffoon when it comes to parenting. He is a lazy parent who intermittently commits himself to being better. It is infuriating. While relevant to this problem, it also opens up a whole other story that I won't get into here.

Combine his shit parenting with their mother's "fun mom, fend for yourself, do whatever you want, just leave me alone" "parenting" style.... I have been doing the heavy lifting with these kids for the last 7 years - with extremely unhealthy cycles of "OMG I CANT DO THIS - FUCK EVERYONE" and "I have to sack up. I have to do this. I'm the only one they have." I am literally fighting off insanity.

I'm angry. I feel alone. I don't want to get a divorce for a lot of reasons. I love my husband. I also pity him. I feel I have invested a lot in this relationship and our life. My son adores him. He is not abusive - but he is certainly a lazy dumbass sometimes and a crap role model most of the time. He's a good time guy who selfishly indulges and justifies until he makes a mess and feels guilty, actually DOES clean it up, and then starts slipping again.

Also, I'm pregnant, and not working. But the money wouldn't be an issue if I wanted to leave. I have family that would have no trouble supporting me while I figured things out.

I want to stay because this is my family and I want it intact.

The SKs mom and her life are a mess. Sometimes I want her to just take them. Sometimes I say that to DH....But there is so much guilt associated with that because I know how much their quality of life would diminish if these kids went to live there. It would be like abandoning them. They don't want to go there. Trust me, we have asked them, and so has BM. I feel responsible for them. In a fucked up way I want to save them. That's my own Freudian shit...

I don't know if I'm looking for advice here. I need to vent. These kids are so angry and MY quality of life is diminished. My son's... and now this new baby will be subjected to it. My last pregnancy was very stressful bc of the torrid and awful custody battle that was happening throughout my pregnancy and postpartum... My son screamed all the time and wouldnt sleep for a year. My stress literally transferred to him. I was a zombie. I developed PTSD... wtf, right?

I am an educated person who understands my situation. I'm not justifying it. I know what the problems are. I can't see how to fix it, or manage it. But I don't want to leave. I definitely need some relief. I need a healthy pregnancy. I need some sanity. I don't know what I need.

I needed to vent. Comments/insight welcome.

daniellethewickedSM's picture

Thanks thats incredibly helpful. And appropriate considering my post.

Rags's picture

notasm3,

I just read this right after I posted my suggestion. Lol.... great minds........

daniellethewickedSM's picture

Lol. Somehow the food seems to be the focus of that whole post. of course I did. DH was working... just me, my son and the SKs.

Also, when we got home, I had a talk with him about his choices and I told him bluntly that when he behaves that way I don't want to do things for him. I told him it was a slap in the face that I took him out and he chose to be as rude as possible. I told him it was inconsiderate to behave that way and affect everyone's meal.

I am not a passive or permissive parent. Neither am I aggressive or incredibly punitive. I try as much as possible to parent from a perspective of reality. I don't do things on principal. I try to logically think through what is happening, why it is happening, what I would like to see change, and how i can begin to effect that change. I'm learning as I go... I'm a young parent yet. But the trouble is that I'm the only parent - out of 4 present - that has a fucking parenting philosophy. My husband is infuriatingly helpless. For reasons I believe to understand, yet, those reasons don't make me feel better. I have been these kids' main caregiver for the last 7 years, and I haven't kept from jumping off a bridge by being a doormat. I pick my battles, for sure. But I don't "let things slide." My husband even chimes in sometimes in a very "Yeah, what she said!" sort of way. *eye roll*

Unfortunately most of my influence is cancelled out by their other parents' actions/lack of action. My husband swears we are a team and he wants to be a great parent, yadda yadda yadda. I tell him "hot air." because he does clean up his act for awhile and pay attention to them. but only with considerable effort. and then it tapers off every time.

Haha. Have I stumped StepTalk?

Disneyfan's picture

"Before anyone says it: My husband is the problem. I know this. He is honestly a total buffoon when it comes to parenting. He is a lazy parent who intermittently commits himself to being better. It is infuriating. While relevant to this problem, it also opens up a whole other story that I won't get into here"

SO you did you have children with a man you feel is a POS parent?

Why did you allow the kid to eat off of everyone's plate???

daniellethewickedSM's picture

See above comment.

I did not allow the kid to eat off of everyone's plate.

I don't know why I had children with a man i feel is a POS parent. But that's a very unproductive and rude question. Should I UnHave them now that we have established this error in judgment?

What's your point disney?

Disneyfan's picture

"What's your point disney?"

My point is that your husband is a useless, sorry excuse for a father. Instead of manning up and parenting the two kids he helped bring into this world, he found a young woman 12 years his junior to dump his responsibilities on.

Instead of seeing this guy for the loser that is and getting far away from him, you have two kids with him. Now there will be 4 kids stuck with this loser as a father.

The man has shown you year after year after year that he isn't daddy material. You can't fix him or his kids.

The most you can do is figure what is best for you and your kids. Raising your kids in a home with a man who has no desire to parent and shows no interest in teaching his kids to respect you, may not be such a good idea.

ChiefGrownup's picture

Does the boy have an intestinal worm? How on earth else was he able to put away so much food so quickly without immediately vomiting?

Well, lots of compassion for you, not much if any advice.

Get the food to go, lock it in the trunk, throw boy and his burrito in the backyard until everyone else is through with theirs?

Maybe get some respite care for yourself? You may require specialty babysitters for this precious pair. But you can find them and it will be sooooooo worth it. A couple times a week? Just to keep your sanity?

daniellethewickedSM's picture

This boy is eating to fill an emotional void. He has issues with food. At his mother's he has been purported to eat nearly whole loaves of bread when no one is looking - or to hide crackers from the pantry under his bed so no one else can have any. Here he has eaten leftover pasta with his hands from the pot when he was supposed to be packing it into a container and putting it away. (ALL OF THE LEFTOVER PASTA... NOT JUST A FEW BITES)

He is not OK.

But I cannot seem to help him. He has two BREATHING and WALKING and (semi) FUNCTIONING parents who live right in the area. DH lives in this house! Has custody! But these people aren't parenting their kids.

Who thinks it's unfair of me to ask him to send them to live w their mother?

ChiefGrownup's picture

What would DH do if you up and left him and moved a million miles away? Would he give the kids back to BM? Would he step up? Would he institutionalize them?

Start asking yourself why is it you have to do all this when if you got his by a bus this afternoon he'd have to figure out something anyway?

You've made it clear you are very committed to him and to your marriage. I totally respect that. So assuming he is just as committed, what is stopping you from drawing a very firm line with him about the parenting support you need or you resign as Mary Poppins?

This comes a little easier to women as they get a bit older but you are going to have to learn to find your voice NOW before you lose your cotton pickin' mind altogether. Tell him in clear calm language. Then do it. He's a big boy. He will figure something out. You are not his mommy. You do not have to clean up his mess.

I know you care about these kids but trying to save them yourself -- how's that workin' for you?

ChiefGrownup's picture

"Unfortunately most of my influence is cancelled out by their other parents' actions/lack of action. My husband swears we are a team and he wants to be a great parent, yadda yadda yadda. I tell him "hot air." because he does clean up his act for awhile and pay attention to them. but only with considerable effort. and then it tapers off every time. "

Well, the way you fix that is tell him he hops to it or he can arrange for after school care for the both of them until he gets home and then HE is on the clock, not you.

Flat out tell him you're not going to live like this anymore, they are not your responsibility, he is not backing you up, you're on the verge of resigning if he doesn't pick up his game pronto.

CANYOUHELP's picture

You need to not take this kid out to a restaurant again for a while and explain clearly why not. You might look into family counseling as an alternative, if your husband will go--he just might if you say it is that or you are done.

I have a grown SD who actually reached across a long table with a fork in a restaurant to take food off my husband's plate, at least one time when I was present (I know it was done to show me-- see I can do whatever I want and daddee will not say anything to me). He said nothing, as usual, so I reached into her plate and forked her food, that got her attention-for once. I finally stepped up to defend myself, shocking her..... That was the last meal we will share together. As a friend of mine says, "Stick a fork in me and I am done."

Cannot imagine her table manners as a small child....ughhh.

I knew it was time to disengage, I was turning into somebody I did not recognize.

If I had to be around this kind of entitlement mess a lot, as much as I love my husband, I would have to get a divorce. It only works because I stay away.

daniellethewickedSM's picture

Ok so consensus is that I need to disengage. I get that.

Can I ask some logistical questions? This isn't meant to be uncooperative or fatalist. But here's what comes to mind:

I am a SAHM

Husband has lots of days off bc he works a rotational schedule of three 12 hour shifts one week, four 12 hour shifts the next, repeat.
However, we live in a rural area, and the kids ride the bus home. SS gets home at 3:30, SD gets home 5:00. Husband gets home from work almost 8PM. He works 7a-7p.

Not sure how to disengage when I'm literally the only one here and these kids have ALWAYS been dependent on me for... well.... everything. It seems cruel. It seems like it would make them worse than they are.

Can I refuse to care for them when I'm the only adult present until almost bedtime on days he's working? Wouldn't that be psychologically totally fucked up for them? I'm the only one who is consistent and then I "bail" too? Am I too harsh on myself? I feel so much guilt. But I DO have my own son, and one more on the way to care for, not to mention myself. I'm not doing well at all right now. At all. Not great for early pregnancy

We cannot afford after school care. Especially not for 2. Even so, I would be the one who had to pick them up if we enrolled them, because DH doesn't get home until so late.

In addition to his crappy parenting "skills", he has also been struggling to provide for us for the past few years. I have been working on and off, but the plan was always for me to stay home until our children are in school.

Am I making excuses? How do I force him to be accountable for his own brats when logistically our lives are set up to allow him not to be? I need real answers. I'm not trying to say it's futile. Any real insight into this is appreciated... provided it's serious....and not blatantly rude.

Thanks to many who have provided great feedback. Smile

ChiefGrownup's picture

I don't think you have to disengage. You've made a good case for why you prefer not to. My suggestion is speak up to your husband and let him know how serious this is. Let him know that you are prepared to let him find other child care if he doesn't step up to what you need in parenting support.

I do believe you can work this out together. He's a good guy, right? You have a good marriage? Well, do the hard work of letting him know just how desperate you are.

But if he absolutely cannot help you by sticking to a parenting plan, the next question you have to ask yourself is who are you sacrificing to the status quo? To what end?

I understand you feel as a sahm you need to "step up" yourself. But if you met your dh before he had the first 2 kids iow you were his first marriage, would the two of you still have you be a sahm? Or are 4 kids necessary for you to do that? If the answer to the first question is yes, then don't feel guilty about doing just that.

It seems to me if he does not want to parent his options are to sign those kids up for after school care and then hire a nanny to care for them the rest of the evening. If he feels he can't afford that than he can be the sahd while you go back to work and I would certainly put my own kids in daycare rather than let them around feces-smearing and food-stealing under the watch of a guy who can't stick to a rule.

Finally, when you come here take what you need and leave the rest. Some voices you will not want to listen to nor respond to. I might be one of them myself. Others will sound like they understand and you'll be glad you came. It's much better than being alone in Stepland. Just ignore people who don't resonate with you.

Safeplace's picture

I feel for you and know all too well what it is like to feel as if these kids only have you. my Skid's BM is a complete loser (welfare, DUI's, doesn't work, etc). My DH didn't step up to the plate like he should have with HIS kids either and I have felt what you feel for almost 7 years now. His way of thinking was that no matter what we did, she would counteract what we did on her side (ie, she wouldn't make them study for tests and they would fail anyhow).

In my case, it took a major life event for me to disengage and I finally have. What I want you to realize is that you only "feel" as if these kids only have you. This is not the case. The fact is that they have two crap parents and however they turn out is how they turn out.

Now, getting to your point about how you are alone with them during those hours...I would say you have a few options:

1) Change that plan and get a job (if for nothing else, to pay for afterschool care)
2) Tell your DH to change his schedule (work from home if he can) and make him pick up HIS kids

I feel like you are being used right now. You were not born to raise someone else's kids. Your concentration must be only on the marriage and on your LO's.

You seem like a really good person that is being shat on in a lot of ways.....take back the control of your life and protect your mental health.

daniellethewickedSM's picture

Yikes. Did something I said strike a chord? I have posted once in the past, about slightly different issues.

I thought this forum was specifically for cathartic purposes.... Does anyone truly come here to get instructions from others, and then execute them thereafter? Should I divorce my husband because a comment on a forum says I should?

I didn't realize I would end up defending myself here.

I stay because I don't want to rip my son's normal out from under him in a world where the devastation that is tearing apart a family is commonplace. I don't think it should be... not without a damn good fight. So many women throw their hands up and put themselves first when life gets hard. I put my son first. I did make a commitment to these kids... it's not easy.

The go-to answer in our society is "leave him". I don't think seriously considering the psychological effects my decision could have on ALL of the children in the house means I am being a doormat or a martyr. Those are very strong assumptions for someone who has never seen me parent.

Last time I posted here people were a bit more understanding and appropriate when responding to this obviously sensitive topic. I get step-parenting is hard, bitter-making business.... but jeez. Someone on this forum actually asked me "So why did you have kids with a man you feel is a POS parent?" WTF? How is that helpful AT ALL?

Lots of posts I see here seem to stem from the assumption that there is a "how things should be" that we should all ascribe to. Life is complicated. It's not cut and dry black and white or any other brand of two opposites.

I think I'm starting to think this forum is generally a bad idea.

furkidsforme's picture

If you were to leave or to die, your DH WOULD find a way to see that his kids are cared for. He would either change his schedule, change jobs, or find a way to afford care. He most likely would also find a new lady who seemed likely to be suckered into being the nanny he can f*ck. So, it might be time to evaluate what your value in the family really is.

If DH doesn't want to find a way to be more of a parent to his kids and take the stress off of you- well then, you know you are the nanny.

CANYOUHELP's picture

Just a recommendation because I have no solution to offer, I would honestly look for a position outside of the home after this baby is born. and get away from this crazy expectation that you raise all these kids the majority of the time alone. You need it for your own sanity and maybe you could get a discount for your 2 own children. This setting is exhausting and you have no/little time away from these ill behaved children. I believe you would feel much better about this situation if you had some time to yourself and you were not being forced to play primary parent to kids who do not want you.

My heart goes out to you, pregnancy was not easy for me either and with your hormones raging you really question why you do what you do and how you really feel. I have no real answer, wish I did to support you. But, I do think family counseling might be helpful, and needed. Also, like I said, you need some independence from these kids, all of them, including your own, that is why I think you should consider working outside of the home,to gain some me time-even if spent working. If your husband appreciated all your effort to parent HIS kids, would he not make them behave?

Trust me, nobody else would put up with these ill bred kids BS. Your husband needs to be held accountable for his kids behavior, he needs to be dealing with it. If you go to work away from the house, you may force him to do so...You are only a bandaid covering a seriously infected family; but the disease itself is spreading. You are not the cure.

oneoffour's picture

Heavenlike is correct. An intact family can still be emotionally destructive to itself.

First things first. I am older than your husband and you are the same age as my younger daughter. So here is some advice on how to deal with craptastic teenage boys. The minute he starts behaving like a jerk look at him in the eye and say "Do NOT close your eyes to sleep tonight." Turn away. Smirk behind your back. But carry on. When he eats like a pig in the restaurant you say in the car on the way home "Richard, you know you behaved like a jerk in the restuarant. So you are not coming to breakfast for the next 4 times we go out to dinner. You can stay home with your father." The bravado will start ... he doesn't care. You are stupid. You are dumb. You are ugly. At this stage you say "So? And you opinion counts for nothing."

For the love of all that is holy stop trying to analyze this boy. You are not a trained professional neither have you raised boys. They are gross, inconsiderate and loud and dirty. 2 sons and 2 stepsons... I know what I am talking about. I was horrified the way my sons would behave until their father or I pulled them into line. They did things my girls never thought of.

And if you seriously think the right reason to stay is so your own children can have a 'normal' life then be prepared to be on protection duty for the next 5 yrs 24/7. These kids esp that boy will do all they can to get your attention (which is more the problem... Any attention is better than none, right?). You will be stressed out, probably have another baby or two. There will not be any money for college for any of them unless your family helps out. You can't fix stupid. But you can fix yourself.

Personally I am not a quitter. But when I see women and men trapped in selfish relationships sometimes the only way to be a good parent is to move on. My ex left me. I would have been there through the long haul. My now-husband has never elected me as substitute mother to his boys. They have a mother. I am his wife first and foremost even when we had 4 teenagers at home. I suspect your husband sees you as a substitute mother before being his wife. Is this OK with you? And if not, what can be done to change it? Only you have the answers.

Hyacinth's picture

If you left, or something happened to you, what specifically do you think he might do in the immediate aftermath? He'd have to come up with something very quickly, right? He'd have to have someone come in to his home to take care of them, or send them away somewhere to be taken care of, in order to return to work (until he found another relationship partner to fill your role, as others have suggested, but that might never happen plus it takes some time, at least). Think aunts, uncles, on either side. Grandparents? Godparents?

The reason I ask is this: whatever this emergency plan might be, no matter how unpalatable it seems to you now---consider giving yourself permission to make it happen in the short term ("short term" meaning simply not as a permanant arrangement, maybe just for the duration of your pregnancy and caring for your newborn, or however long you need). I know it's extreme and I'm probably going to get burned at the stake for even suggesting it, but I hear the desperation in your voice and I'm not sure you're going to make it several more years (much less through this pregnancy) without losing your ability to cope and leaving him IN THIS SITUATION ANYWAY. You've already suffered antenatal and postpartum mood disorders in your previous pregnancy, and PTSD is not to be trifled with. You've already suffered a horrible custody battle during your last pregnancy. It sure sounds like you may be heading for another one if something doesn't change pretty drastically.

Alot of us come here to bitch or find validation or whatever, but you sound in a very, very dark place to me, and I know you understand that things won't get easier as your pregnancy advances or after the baby's born. Maybe after a long break, I'm talking months or more, it will be clearer to you how to move forward in your marriage and your life, and at least you will have made it safely through your pregnancy and delivery.

What happens if you develop health problems, and are bedrested (I was!)? What would he do then? Or if you have a C section? What if, God forbid, YOU need to be taken care of? I'm really asking these questions of him, not you, because I imagine you've already lamented these things privately. I know I did. What if you showed him this post, to open the conversation?

Many years ago, my brother out of the blue called me up and asked my husband and I to take his 11 year old daughter for an indefinite amount of time. Just like that. He had no resources or support system where he lived (across an ocean from us), was trapped in his job, was a single parent and overwhelmed with depression and anxiety. He could not leave his job to come to us, nor could we go to him. BM was out of the picture. So he sent us his kid.

We were a childless couple in our thirties. We picked her up at the airport, set her up in the spare bedroom, enrolled her in our school district, no attorneys or courts involved, just notarized letters from her dad granting us authority to make medical decisions, etc. I taught my niece to drive a stick and ride a horse (we had a farm, she never left the property in the truck lol), answered her questions about sex and helped her with algebra. Was she upset at first? Of course! She was full of doubt and anxiety about leaving her dad, but she gained alot from us too, and returned to her father about a year later when he had his sh*t together and could be a better parent. In the end, it benefited all of us. She and I are closer to this day because of it, and she's a grown woman now.

I acknowledge that this would not work for everyone. There are custody issues, etc. But you obviously need help, and it is not forthcoming from your DH. If none of the skids' biological extended family is willing to take them in or help you at home, could you turn to your own family and ask someone, or several someones in shifts, to commit to coming into your home every day while you retired to your room, or to take the skids out of the home for several hours every day, to begin to vent some of this tremendous pressure you're under? Is it crazy to suggest packing skids and all with you to your family for several days every week so that you can rest THERE while someone else watches them? I know leaving your marriage is not an option right now.

And please look for postpartum depression support online in your area. You may already have done so, but I mention it anyway in case you haven't and may be able to find free counseling, or direction to other resources. Postpartum Progress is a good place to start.

I know it's hard to ask for help. My heart goes out to you. You sound strong, and decent.

bearcub25's picture

You sound like I did 6 years ago. BM called at 930pm in May of 2010 and said CPS had taken the kids from her....she even lied about the reason. DSO spoke up and told the CPS lady that Sure, we would take the kids. Problem was, I had stated many times that I did not want to raise kids again, mine were adults and out of my house.

For the first year, I worked straight weekends, I work 3 12.5 hour days like your DH. I did it all. After a year, I told DSO I wasn't doing it anymore and he had to figure something out or get his own place so he could get welfare benefits. The kids had aleady been kicked out of 2 day care places bc of their nasty violent behavior. He had to drop to 20 hours/week and start taking care of his own kids.

You have to speak up for yourself first! Difference between you and me is that I was in my late 40's and no way in hell did I want to spend my time raising his kids...I also have a good enough job that I was OK on my own and didn't need him or his income to survive.

Answer this question though: What happens when the skids behavior is picked up on by your babies? Are you worried the skids may turn on your babies and hurt them?

You need to worry about you and your babies, not someone else's kids that obviously don't care about you at all.

trying1996's picture

I feel for you. I have an SS11 as well and he has some major issues. Luckily he is a sweet kid, but I do get a bit annoyed more so with his parents because they have adopted the same parenting methods as your DH and his BM. My DH is a great person, but he has to be the "cool dad," and his mom has to be the "cool mom." My SS doesn't really know how to tie his own shoes. He complains constantly about being hurt. He still asks for help in the shower and brushing his teeth. He never picks up after himself. I tried my best for about 3 years to try to intervene, but then I became the wicked stepmother. I came on here for the same reasons as you, and many people gave me the advice of disengaging. I have been doing that. I do care about my SS, but every time I try to teach him right from wrong DH ends up getting mad at me. I don't want my SS to be ridiculed and made fun of, but if my help is not welcome then what can I do? I do think my DH will regret his parenting style one day, but I have to do what's best for me. If SS isn't cleaning up after himself, I tell DH. If DH wants to clean up after an 11 year old, go right on ahead. If DH wants to brush an 11 year old's teeth, go ahead. If DH wants to help an 11 year old in the shower, go ahead. If DH wants people to look at him as though he's lost his mind when he picks up an 11 year old as though he's a baby, that's all his problem.

I will tell you disengaging has helped me. Things aren't perfect, but they have gotten better since I began disengaging. I have a really big family and when SS is over, I usually visit with them, or go out to dinner with them. It really has helped me to enjoy my weekends. We have SS every weekend. I have brothers and sisters with children and they have all commented on SS odd behavior. I just tell them that I tried to help and I failed, so I'm not going to do that to myself.

You have to do what's right for you. It sounds like you really care about this kid and that you want to help. Honestly, I care deeply for my SS and my DH, but sometimes people need to learn from their own mistakes. I'm not going to lie, it hasn't been easy, but my own sanity has improved. I do NOT feed into the drama. SS still claims to be "hurt" all the time and I just ignore it.

I wish you a lot of luck with your situation.

Rags's picture

I am puzzled by his eating food off of other people's plates. How could he possibly do that without getting a fork stabbed into the back of his hand? That would be what I would do if he pulled that crap with me after he had been firmly told not to do it again.

Lather, rinse, repeat. Eventually he will get tired of trips to the ER to get forks surgically removed from the backs of his rude food stealing hands.

It may be time to investigate an exit strategy in order to protect yourself and your own young children from over exposure to this shallow and polluted gene pool and your DH's abject parenting failures. On one hand DH is fighting for custody of his children then on the other he fails to parent worth a shit? :?

Curiouser and curiouser.

Rags's picture

Upon further reading... the fix is for you and DH to sit down for a talk and for you to give him clarity that as equity life partners you are also equity parents to any children in your home regardless of kid biology.

He needs to understand that he is currently operating as an abject failure regarding the parenting of his elder children, particularly SS, and that you will no longer tolerate their behavior to go un-confronted and as the father of your children give DH a clear understanding of what he WILL do regarding parenting. He has a choice. Step up and get the parenting and disciplining done before you have to or STFU and have your back while you do it.

Then inform him that together you will document the reasonable standards of behavior for kids in your home and together going forward you both will enforce those standards in an age appropriate manner for all kids in your home with particular focus on SS-11 until his behavior conforms to the standards that you and DH set.

Good luck.

foreverred's picture

There has been a lot of good advice being thrown around. I also agree with most of the people here saying that you need to have a real good conversation with your DH about who needs to take care of the children and that you can't be the only one who plays the parent role. It is definitely too much and can lead to some serious issues in the long run.

Talk with you DH, tell him that he needs to step up and take some responsibility about his children!