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Unable to form bond with stepson

37 replies

SMB21 · 12/12/2016 11:47

My stepson is 10.5 and i have known him for about 2 years, its not that I don't want to bond with him i do and i want to help him as he has lots of difficulties. I have brought up two boys who are early teens now, the last 5 years very much on my own aside from alternate weekends to their dads, so its not like i have brought children up or dealt with boys or ever not bonded with a child whether a friends child or all of my own of child's friends, who i get on with great.

I find my stepson difficult in many ways, his diet is poor he eats bread, crisps, dry crackers, biscuits and cake mostly, hes overweight, under exercised, spends majority of his life on xbox, phone or nintendo DS, cannot ride a bike or doing anything sporty, cannot use a knife and fork as never had to ? cannot tie shoelaces, eats with his mouth open and noisily, has no tone in his voice other than one tone and fairly loud, he only uses my name if prompted and infact only usually says hello or goodnight to me when prompted, this weekend he spoke one one word to me from teatime friday to saturday morning

I have tried to help him by sitting down with him and explaining about the importance of all these things when hes older, ive bought him a 2nd hand bike but he has no want to do anything and gives up so easily, ive explained i am happy to help him with eating and trying new foods, ive taught him how to use a knife and fork, but ive explained he has to want to do it otherwise it wont work. Also told my partner he has to speak to the family too as they have to help i cannot do it alone .... my partner doesnt seem bothered about doing anything and tends to only do something when prompted by me ? i feel like i am flogging a dead horse and its beginning to impact on the realtionship as I am started to dread him coming round as nothing i do or say changes anything its like i seem to get through for a moment and then he gives up and goes back to his normal self and it beginning the grate on me that my partner doesnt seem to do anything either and i dont want to feel stressed in my own home every or go out every weekend to get away from what seemingly isnt going to change

Ive spoke to many support groups who all advise an appt with a child psychologist would be a good idea to rule out nothing underlying, but again nothing been done, I am not the type who rests on my laurels i have problems i deal with them and constantly strive to improve or make things better, so you can see this stresses me out as for over 2 years from when i first met my partners son i recognised subtle differences he suffers terribly with anxiety too, so much so even at out house he will shout downstairs from the top of the landing his dad to check he is still there ? despit me and his dad saying a million times we would never go anywhere without telling him, he wont go to the toilet by himself when we are out either, infact he does very little by himself i had to ask his dad to stop dressing him on holiday last summer as hes 10 and perfectly capable which he is in a fashion he struggles more because hes sloth like in his movements not because he cant

can anyone give any advice i find it painful to watch a child who isn't being taught and developed well for the big wide world, he also doesnt play out ever with other kids and spends most of time with his mum or either of his grans or on a computer console or phone outside of school.

on a more positive he is very bright child for his age but outside of this he reminds of a 5/6 year old, he has only basic please and thankyou manners all other manners and etiquette you teach children are non existent.

His biological mum suffers with a mental illness and for the last two years have lived with her mum, mum and son slept in the same bed for this time despite having a spare room as no one can be bothered to sort it out for him ?

any advice feedback would be welcomed thanks

OP posts:
Paperkins · 12/12/2016 13:14

I would say it could be worth getting him checked out for ASD. The social stuff, the food issues, tone of voice, difficulty dressing, etc. would all tick boxes in the book I've been reading. The advanced maths group would also tick a box!

It may not be, but I would say there are enough things there that a doctor would take you seriously to refer you. Think it's worth finding out. Would school talk to you? They may know more as at that age and they will often pick these things up and have groups where they work on particular areas such as social communication. I know not all schools mention these things to the parents (due to bad communication I think more than any particular reason) so it may not be obvious that he is getting special educational need intervention.

At least, have a look online at support groups that will have info on ASD/Aspergers. You may find it's much easier to bond with him if he is presenting with traits that you can better understand and support him with.

There are prob far better experts on here - I only know from my own experience.

Chippednailvarnishing · 12/12/2016 13:15

So ignoring any SEN, his Dad doesn't even spend the whole time with him when he is at yours?

Running a business is not a barometer to how good a parent he is. He's allowed his son to live in a house where he doesnt even have his own bed and isn't even around to spend time with him. Your right your DH isn't useless, he's worse than that. Poor boy.

MrsJayy · 12/12/2016 13:17

Thing is if his parents are not concerned then a step mums hands are tied

SMB21 · 12/12/2016 13:42

that is what hes allowed to do at home too, as him mum doesnt socialise either thats whats he used to ? his mum suffers with mental health issues so even more reason to focus on the lad i just cant understand why dad doesn't push to do more ? and when i broach the subject it turns into a row ?? and i feel deflated as its one step forward 10 steps back !! :-(

OP posts:
SMB21 · 12/12/2016 13:50

Hi paperkins, I have spoke to 4 qualified groups who have all agreed he seems to have underlying issues ? he has been registered with child development group since he was about 3 in local town and signed off by social services that believe his mentally ill mum is capable of looking after him ? despite she can longer drive because of meds so his nan drives him and picks him up for school ?

the last thing we looked into was or rather i looked into was anxiety disorder as he ticked 12 out of the 15 boxes and i said to his dad how much more proof do you want that he needs to speak to a professional ? for me its difficult to work out if it is medical or upbringing or even a combination of both and how if possible things can change ?

on the back of that his dad pushed for an appt with child development centre which was 6 weeks ago after waiting 6 weeks for the appt and the person he met had only just taken on his case and didnt have all the paperwork to hand so nothing really happened that was beginning of Nov since then nothing !!!

OP posts:
SMB21 · 12/12/2016 13:57

I am with you chippednailvarnishing majority of the time and i cannot answer why he doesn't do more its not that I don't go on and one so much so i've given up saying it now as i'm wasting my energy

I can only think its because his son isnt into doing anything, so not much you can do with him ? no excuse i know

OP posts:
Chippednailvarnishing · 12/12/2016 14:40

I couldn't be married to someone who shows so little concern for their own child. It speaks volumes about them.

SMB21 · 12/12/2016 15:00

hi i am not married to him i have never been married myself but i question his strength myself too i used to be very quick to judge and dismiss people who weren't quite on my page but the older i have got I've got i think i have learnt to become more tolerant of people and realised not everyone is a strong as I am. this is the first guy in my life i have ever trusted incl the father of my boys and when we are on our own or at home with my two boys who he gets on great with everything is fine its great it couldn't be any better and then Friday comes around where my tolerance for the situation with his son is virtually non existent and my stress level kick in and i got that worked up about it all i end with a headache !!!

OP posts:
SMB21 · 12/12/2016 15:06

my thoughts and comments he;s made are he sees him one night a week and wants to let him do whatever he's happiest doing ? which is xbox ? and not force feeding him food he doesnt want to eat ? its not because he doesn't care he does care but i don't think he gets the whole cruel to be kind thing and the benefits he will reap from healthy eating and furthermore i think he gets frightened that his son will not want to come round anymore if he stops him doing what he enjoys or makes him do something he doesn't really want to do

he used to stay at his grans on a friday before we moved which we moved so he could have his own room as he never used to stay with us and no he says he might go here one week and grans the other to which i said so weve moved to this lovely big house so you can come and stay with twice a month !!!!

in the back of my mind i'm thinking i should have stayed where i was ha ha

OP posts:
Chippednailvarnishing · 12/12/2016 22:30

"Ha ha" Hmm
Poor kid

corythatwas · 12/12/2016 22:57

"has no tone in his voice other than one tone and fairly loud"

surely this suggest Special Needs rather than just lack of training?

The excuse that the boy isn't into doing anything so his dad (or you) can't do anything with him seems a pretty weak one to me. He plays on his x-box: surely his dad (or you) could take an interest in that?

The only thing you've actually told us you do to help him directly is to sit him down and tell him he ought to be different in all sorts of ways. And why I absolutely agree that he should, that is presumably not his fault. Wouldn't it be better to build a relationship first and gain his trust, by engaging in something he is interested in and can understand? Obviously, this is his dad's responsibility rather than yours, but it seems odd not to start there.

Oblomov16 · 13/12/2016 09:11

He sounds a lot like many Asperger's boys I know. that is a distinct possibility. You need to get the GP to refer him to a paediatrician.

but generally I just don't know how you can make your partner do anything that he doesn't want to do. He does sound beyond useless. He has a responsibility!! As a DAd!!

and similarly, how make the ds do anything he clearly doesn't want to do, seems nigh on impossible.

I feel you are fighting a losing battle, this is really sad to read. I don't know what to suggest.

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