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HELP! New Stepmom of 11 Year Old (Who Never Wanted Kids to Begin With)

misspengwen's picture

Hello out there! I have recently become a full time step-mom to an 11-year old girl. Her birth mother hasn't seen her since she was 6 months old, so I'm free from any baby momma drama, thank goodness!

Looking for any kind of advice you may have on helping her to function as a human being... she won't brush her teeth, her room is a PIG STY 24/7, supposedly "forgets" chores that she does EVERY DAY, back talks, sasses, LIES repeatedly, and the list goes on. Coming into this having never really had the desire to be a mother in the first place, I am really struggling. I work 8AM - 6PM daily, so having her isn't the only full time job that I have. Her dad is great with her but our relationship is becoming strained because we have different views on discipline and punishment, and she's driving a wedge between us.

Any help you can send my way will be most appreciated! Smile

danielsj2's picture

I don't think you are going to make much progress until you and DH can compromise on discipline and boundaries. If you are going to step in that role as well, you and him have to be on the same page or else you will just have a good cop bad cop scenario which will add to the unpleasant tension that sometimes is step parenting. I think once you guys can come up with a layout on what each of you are comfortable with on discipline and punishment you can set forth a system of consequence/reward with SD.

DH and I had to have this conversation as well. We have a very intricate setup for SS6. It has kept it under control--but you have to be on the same page and have a united front.

Until that comes to fruition tho.. wine. Lots of wine. I make sure I have a bottle per stepkid for good measure. JK. But I seriously would talk to DH about what you and him should do.

ESMOD's picture

^^This^^

This guy may love his daughter, but he is doing a pee poor job of raising her if she truly has all these issues.

It's unfair to you to put you in the position of playing mommy when he won't step up and be a real father to her.

On the other hand, he may see your ideas as having less weight because you don't have kids, but my DH always took my opinions into the mix and I was given the ability to help shape his girls' development.

Let's put it this way, she may not be your kid, but how she turns out as a person WILL impact you. He needs to pay attention when someone is pointing out how out of control his child is.

misspengwen's picture

Wow! Thank you for all of the comments so far. I probably should back up a little bit and shed a bit more light on the situation, and to defend my hubby! He has NOT parented her full time for the last 10.5 years. We used to just have her on the weekends while his sister actually had custody of her. BM is a crack whore and no count, so that's why she has no rights or custody and my husband hadn't been in a place to have her full time up until the last few years. We decided to wait until we were married to file for full custody. So in all reality, we're BOTH brand new to the full time parenting thing. He has SO much more patience than I do Smile He is very strict with staying on her about keeping her room clean, chores, teeth brushing, etc. but it's like she does it once and forgets how to human the next day... like she's never even been told to do those things. We both correct her when she lies and snap back when she's sassy... so it's not like she's running the place by any means! We are constantly on her (like a broken record!) but it just doesn't sink in. I know some things are just typical of kids, but I do feel like she's old enough to know better. She has a very basic cell phone which has actually come in quite handy when she needs discipline... taking that away is pure hell for any kid I'd imagine!

The life she lived before lacked structure, chores, discipline and respect... and instead was filled with lies, manipulation and dishonesty. So I know she's just doing what she's lived. However, we've had her now since August, and I guess I'm just feeling like the way we run things in our home should be quite obvious by now and there should be some improvement by now.

misspengwen's picture

Long story, but it's the past where it belongs! (His mom did have custody but she died at 42)

misspengwen's picture

Wow! Thank you for all of the comments so far. I probably should back up a little bit and shed a bit more light on the situation, and to defend my hubby! He has NOT parented her full time for the last 10.5 years. We used to just have her on the weekends while his sister actually had custody of her. BM is a crack whore and no count, so that's why she has no rights or custody and my husband hadn't been in a place to have her full time up until the last few years. We decided to wait until we were married to file for full custody. So in all reality, we're BOTH brand new to the full time parenting thing. He has SO much more patience than I do Smile He is very strict with staying on her about keeping her room clean, chores, teeth brushing, etc. but it's like she does it once and forgets how to human the next day... like she's never even been told to do those things. We both correct her when she lies and snap back when she's sassy... so it's not like she's running the place by any means! We are constantly on her (like a broken record!) but it just doesn't sink in. I know some things are just typical of kids, but I do feel like she's old enough to know better. She has a very basic cell phone which has actually come in quite handy when she needs discipline... taking that away is pure hell for any kid I'd imagine!

The life she lived before lacked structure, chores, discipline and respect... and instead was filled with lies, manipulation and dishonesty. So I know she's just doing what she's lived. However, we've had her now since August, and I guess I'm just feeling like the way we run things in our home should be quite obvious by now and there should be some improvement by now.

SMforever's picture

How can someone "become a stepmom" without investigating what they are signing up for? The OP doesn't say what the nature of her relationship with father actually is, but I'm suspecting this is a new GF just realising the guy comes as a package, complete with snarky stinky kid.

Never had the desire to be a mother? Then don't choose a guy with a kid. You are not going to change the two of them one little bit.

misspengwen's picture

I'm not sure what OP stands for. However, it sounds as if you are calling me his new GF? If you'd have read my post above, you would see that I am his WIFE of almost 3 years, and we've been together for 5. I knew what I was signing up for and did PLENTY of investigating. He is and will always be worth the package deal. I'm not trying to change either of them.

Your judgy comments and "suspicions" that I'm just a "new girlfriend" are certainly NOT what I came to this site for. :jawdrop: Carry on to the next post please!

Stepped in what momma's picture

OP stands for ORIGINAL POSTER. You might check out FAQ section and get familiar with the acronyms.

misspengwen's picture

I already did. Thanks for the suggestion though!

OP is not listed.

What do the abbreviations mean?
Here are just a few (for now):

sm = stepmother
sd = stepdad
bm = biological mother
bf = usually biological father but every now and then some use for boyfriend
sd = step daughter
ss = step son
bs = biological son
bd = biological daughter
dw = darling wife
dh = darling husband
dd = darling daughter
ds = darling son
poa = power of attorney
cs = child support
mil = mother-in-law
fil = father-in-law
pas = Parental Alienation Syndrome

misspengwen's picture

I already did. Thanks for the suggestion though!

OP is not listed.

What do the abbreviations mean?
Here are just a few (for now):

sm = stepmother
sd = stepdad
bm = biological mother
bf = usually biological father but every now and then some use for boyfriend
sd = step daughter
ss = step son
bs = biological son
bd = biological daughter
dw = darling wife
dh = darling husband
dd = darling daughter
ds = darling son
poa = power of attorney
cs = child support
mil = mother-in-law
fil = father-in-law
pas = Parental Alienation Syndrome

Exjuliemccoy's picture

OP, you may not care for some of the comments you're receiving, but the members commenting so far collectively have in the ball park of one hundred years of stepping experience. Some like myself have been around long enough to have skids that are now adults, and we've watched the drama and dysfunction carry on through the generations.

You need to get real and accept certain truths before you can effectively deal with the situation you've chosen for yourself. No sugarcoating, no saying the past is the past because the past is about to bite you and your DH in the butt.

You chose a man with a lot of dysfunction and baggage. A man who abdicated his parenting responsibilities not once, but twice, and now has the feral booby prize daughter to show for it. I'm betting he has absolutely zero parenting skills, while you, despite having no kids, are able to recognize his daughter's deficits. I have been in a similar situation, and know every pitfall lying in front of you.

Your ONLY hope of making this work is if your H is committed to being a parent. If he isn't willing to put in the VERY difficult, CONSISTENT, exhausting work turning this kid around will require, there is little hope for saving this kid and your relationship will suffer under the strain. Don't let him dump the parenting in your lap, or think you're helping if you do it for him. HE is the parent, and you are merely support. If he isn't interested in parenting, then disengagement or moving on to healthier pastures are the only healthy choices.

This child has issues that far exceed your joint skill set. She is no doubt struggling with grief, resentment, anger, and feelings of abandonment. Your H should be seeking professional support & training to give him the necessary tools to parent effectively, including parenting classes (you both should go to be on the same page) and family counselling to help with this transition. The two of you need to decide what your expectations are for living in your home, draw up a list of house rules, and go over them with his daughter. At best, you have only seven years to prepare this child for independence.

Lastly, you absolutely must avoid getting sucked too far into this messed up situation. Detachment is crucial for your own mental health. You can't fix this for your H, and do not need to become the warden or scapegoat. Research Drama Triangle and think about his it could apply to you, your H, and his daughter.

Acratopotes's picture

Hon - your problem is your husband - you work full day, so does he, but why can he come home and do nothing while you raise his daughter..

immediately stop it, and send SD to DH if she wants something.... hand over the parenting reigns to DH and bust his balls to parent

bitsnpieces15's picture

Well Bioparents struggle with the tweeners being slobs. That is nothing new. Girls tend to be better, but both of my kids don't listen to clean-up. I've got friends that say reminding their adolescent about deodorant etc. give it time, you have the advantage of no outside interference and she will come around. Take time to be the cool big sister or Aunt and try to teach her how to be a young lady! Keep in mind that she hasn't had the mothering influence and at this point is moving into a confusing time for any child.