Creating a loving stepfamily out of two other families comes with big
challenges and big potential rewards. It's not quite like other families, because
it's a family forged after loss. There has either been the death of a
parent, a divorce, or a single parent going it alone, or maybe a
combination of these losses. You are starting out trying to build a family out
of people---adults and children--- who may be sad, grieving, adjusting, hurt, bitter,
frightened, angry, or possibly just used to doing things their own way. It
helps to know what is normal for a blended or stepfamily.
Dating as a single parent is like dating with an audience. Correction: make
that a critical audience who may write bad reviews. While I want parents
to keep their children out of and protected from your dating experiences, at
some point a partner you are serious about having a life with needs to meet
your child or children, and you need to meet theirs. If you have children, you
need to think about being a package deal. (As in, love me, love my child.) It's
a make it or break it issue for responsible, loving single parents. Only
mature grown-ups need apply for the role of stepparent. Starting with anything
less than that is heading for trouble. You need a partner who really supports
you being an excellent parent, not resenting it. Not acting loving for a time
to secure a marriage, and then resorting to immaturity. That's why premarital
counseling for couples contemplating blending families is so important.
If your child feels criticized, marginalized, or otherwise uncomfortable
around your intended new partner, you may want to break it off now and save
yourself, your child, and the other person a great deal of pain. You want to
make sure you both fully understand the complicated feelings involved in
stepfamilies.
To be a good stepparent you need to be kind-hearted, sensitive to the
developmental needs of children, secure, loving, and grounded. A good
stepparent cannot be petty, jealous, controlling, negative, selfish, or
judgmental. It takes a mature person to carve out a role as a stepparent, and
play it well. In most situations, the child won't need you to "be"
their parent. If they have two solid biological parents, you are another adult
to love, support, and help them.
The American Stepfamily Association estimates that it takes a full seven
years for a stepfamily to fully hit critical mass and blend in most cases. It
doesn't happen overnight. Each person has to adjust. It helps to start with
realistic expectations. Stepfamilies start with divided loyalties, and loyalty
conflicts are normal. How the adults handle the first few years really makes a
difference.
Here are some guidelines that will help:
Be patient.
Never criticize the child's other biological parent.
Hold weekly family meetings, at least for a few years so everyone gets a
chance to work out rough spots.
Date nights are extremely important for couples blending families, as you
are most often surrounded by a crowd. Don't discuss the kids on date night.
Schedule 1:1 time with your own child/children.
Spend positive activity time with your stepchild/stepchildren.
Create some new family traditions, with input from the children.
Try not to do important family events/celebrations/vacations unless all of
the children are with you.
Be mature at each child's important school and life events, so the
child isn't stressed (it's not about you).
Greet the child's other biological parent graciously at the child's events.
Don't make it more difficult.
Let the natural parent be the disciplinary one when needed.
Recognize developmental stages that are difficult for children and
teens/don't take it personally.
Look for a common interest or activity with a stepchild.
Support your partner spending some time with their child/children without
you.
Find a way to make each child feel important and special to you. Don't
compare them.
Try to find a common faith or religious practice. It will help.
Plan some family day outings and trips that include all the children and help
build cohesiveness.
I never planned to make a subspecialty out of treating step and blended
families. Sometimes life experiences change us. Because I spent some of my own
childhood years in a stepfamily, and have lived through building a stepfamily
of my own, I feel a special sensitivity to the needs children have in
stepfamilies, the importance of assembling the right cast, and using best
strategies to help everyone in the family feel welcome, loved, secure, and an
important part of the new family that is created over time. Nothing positive
happens instantly in stepfamilies, so adjust your expectations accordingly.
Stepfamilies? Big challenges, but even bigger potential rewards if you do it
well. If you are considering becoming a stepparent or blending families, remember
that only mature grown-ups need apply. Starting with anything less is a bad
idea, and a set-up for disaster. Two mature adults can weather the challenges and
make something beautiful happen for all involved.
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