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Parenting

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Blended family concerns – am I being unreasonable ?

97 replies

ThisBlueOrca · 25/04/2026 11:23

My husband and I have been in talks to blend our families this August, and I’m feeling increasingly anxious about whether it’s the right decision.

I have a 7-year-old daughter. My husband has two children from a previous relationship—a 15-year-old son (16 soon) and a 13-year-old daughter whom he has shared custody with his ex. We all get long and have known each other a long while. His daughter is doing well: she’s academic, enjoys school, and has hobbies and friends. My concerns are mainly about his son.

His son:
• Stays in his room all the time and sleeps until past midday on weekends
• Regularly misses school due to “anxiety” or claims of bullying, but there doesn’t seem to be any clear follow-up or evidence
• Doesn’t complete homework and is currently failing his GCSEs
• Has no real structure, routine, or responsibilities

  • not encouraged to do anything like exercise and my husband doesn’t actively do anything with him.

What I struggle with most is the parenting approach. Both parents (especially his mum) seem to:
• Allow him to skip school without consequences
• Give him money whenever he asks
• Buy him expensive items and “treat” him even after poor behaviour
• Avoid setting or enforcing boundaries
•cries to his mum whenever he doesn’t get his way and she caves in

A recent example: he was allowed out late at night whilst with his mum on an e-scooter, ended up being robbed and hurt, and the next day was bought new clothes after asking.

There also seem to be ongoing concerns around the people he mixes with and the risks he puts himself in. This worries me from a safety perspective, especially with a younger child involved.

Looking ahead, I’m very concerned about what happens when he turns 16 and then 18. There doesn’t seem to be any clear expectation around education, work, or contribution as he is being enabled to do nothing. My husband has said that at 18 he would be free to come and go as he pleases, which raises concerns for me about boundaries in the home—especially with younger children present, and given the lack of boundaries now, I do wonder if anything will change.

At the same time:
• I currently have a stable home and my daughter and I are happy here
• Moving in would mean giving that up and moving into a home where I don’t have the same security (legal security will be there obviously re mortgage etc)
• My husband and I would like to try for a baby, and I feel pressure due to time

I feel torn between wanting to move forward with my relationship and future plans, and protecting the stability, environment, and safety of my daughter.
Just do to add! The things I have listed above have all come from my husbands mouth, rarely has he ever shared anything “positive “ about his son so I deduced that there is nothing positive for him to share which further adds to the anxiety.
My main concerns are:
• Lack of structure and boundaries
• Safety and the type of situations his son is getting into
• The long-term impact on my daughter
• The risk of giving up my secure home for an uncertain situation

Am I being unreasonable to hesitate moving in until there are clearer boundaries and expectations in place? I am leaning towards being in a living apart together situation . How have others handled similar blended family situations, especially with very different parenting styles?
I’m happy to support wherever I can but if his parents are enabling him, there really is no room for me to have an opinion and honestly, I’d prefer to stay out of being active in helping raise him as he has two functional parents.

To add, I am not financial reliant on my husband and have a fully functional , happy life. I just don’t want to get a divorce and leave my loving husband but at the same time, I need to be responsible for my daughters upbringing since she doesn’t have her dad in the picture fully ( I’m a previous domestic abuse survivor and escaped whilst my daughter was a baby) so I’m more alert to ensuring she isn’t surrounded by danger or bad influences.

OP posts:
Roads · 25/04/2026 11:24

You'd be completely crackers to move into his house and blend your families.

Dalmationday · 25/04/2026 11:24

Gosh sounds like he’s not being parented well at all. I don’t have any advice just sympathy

WhatHappenedToYourFurnitureCuz · 25/04/2026 11:24

Your instincts are right. Don't do it. Blended families are, on the whole, not blended at all and really shit for the children involved.

Interested in this thread?

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WhatHappenedToYourFurnitureCuz · 25/04/2026 11:26

Also, do NOT have a baby with this man. Why would you, when you've seen what kind of parent he is?

yeesh · 25/04/2026 11:27

Why did you marry someone that you’ve not lived with? It’s rather odd to not have discussed all this before you married.

ClarasSisters · 25/04/2026 11:27

Can't actually believe you married him in this situation tbh. Don't have a baby with him.

hahabahbag · 25/04/2026 11:32

Are you actually married??? Why oh why did you if so. You can see all the red flags, you aren’t compatible. Blending can work, but you must be on the same page

ThisBlueOrca · 25/04/2026 11:32

I’m not able to reply to people who comment so I’m doing it here, think there may be a glitch!
I chose to marry him first as we were happy to live apart whilst being together, this was my choice but as time went by, we have spoken in depth about people closer to each other hence the conversation about living together. Also, his son was not always like this, these issues cropped up over the past year and I genuinely thought it was being handled. My husband is a good man to me and my daughter and he is loving.

OP posts:
DuchessOfStuffit · 25/04/2026 11:33

No absolutely bonkers situation. Why did you need to get married!? Before living together? Dont move init will be terrible for your existing child.

CurlewKate · 25/04/2026 11:35

Make sure your contraception is rock solid.

redfishcat · 25/04/2026 20:16

I also vote not to blend as I think you are heading for the teenage boy to fail to launch. You will be living with him forever.
Wait until your husbands kids have moved out and look like they will stay moved out.
And I think another baby with such big age gaps is also looking like slightly mad.

Purplecatshopaholic · 25/04/2026 20:22

I’d stay married but living apart (given you are already married - I wouldn’t have married him in your circumstances). Do not move in with him, the blended thing rarely works well, and in this case really does not sound like it’s in your best interests, and defo not for your DD. And FFS do not have a child with him - your parenting styles are very different, the son sounds an ongoing challenge, and frankly it’s a recipe for disaster all round. Like I say, I wouldn’t never have married him in the first place, but if you are committed to staying married at least live apart together, so all the kids don’t get totally fucked up.

PygmyOwl · 25/04/2026 20:25

YANBU and your concerns sound really valid.

Decacaffeinatednow · 25/04/2026 20:27

Do not move this man and his son into your daughter’s home.

ThisBlueOrca · 25/04/2026 20:29

Purplecatshopaholic · 25/04/2026 20:22

I’d stay married but living apart (given you are already married - I wouldn’t have married him in your circumstances). Do not move in with him, the blended thing rarely works well, and in this case really does not sound like it’s in your best interests, and defo not for your DD. And FFS do not have a child with him - your parenting styles are very different, the son sounds an ongoing challenge, and frankly it’s a recipe for disaster all round. Like I say, I wouldn’t never have married him in the first place, but if you are committed to staying married at least live apart together, so all the kids don’t get totally fucked up.

Edited

the circumstances were great when we decided to get married and we were happy living apart, it’s just recently we have discussed moving in. I don’t regret marrying him at all as we are generally happy with each other, it’s just when we think of blending it becomes a bit difficult.

OP posts:
WallaceinAnderland · 25/04/2026 20:37

You cannot move in with his son.

kscarpetta · 25/04/2026 20:42

None of the children will benefit from you moving them in together.

Deneke · Yesterday 11:46

No, don't move in together. His son would be a dreadful influence on your daughter.

Thegoldenoriole · Yesterday 11:53

Why did you decide to get married in the first place?

But no, I would not move this teenager into your home and near your children. He could well improve, but I would need clear evidence of that. Otherwise he is likely to be a terrible influence, at the very least.

MakingPlans2025 · Yesterday 11:56

Thread 8,479 proving the point that blended families are a fucking disaster in almost every instance ever

TheLurpackYears · Yesterday 11:57

Please bear in mind that you lost the security of owning your own home at the point you married him. If he started the divorce process now, the marital pot would include your home (I’m assuming you are in the UK).
Stay put and don’t get involved with his children. And lock into taking your contraception!

anourishingsoup · Yesterday 11:59

You already have significant legitimate concerns. Please prioritise your daughter and do not blend anything. Read the step parent board it's full of threads like this.

LoudPlumDog · Yesterday 12:00

You don’t live with your husband? How weird. Who even does that? I definitely would not in a million years add a baby to the mix.

Snoken · Yesterday 12:00

I cannot for the life of me understand why you thought it was a great idea to marry this man when you both have children and don’t even live together. You are now financially linked to him and you don’t even know if you are compatible enough to share a life inclusive of your kids. Insane!

Also this: I feel torn between wanting to move forward with my relationship and future plans, and protecting the stability, environment, and safety of my daughter. How can any parent be torn between living with a man or risking their child’s happiness and security? You should obviously choose you DDs happiness and security over your own need for a relationship. Every single time.

ainsleysanob · Yesterday 12:01

MakingPlans2025 · Yesterday 11:56

Thread 8,479 proving the point that blended families are a fucking disaster in almost every instance ever

Yep, readying oneself for thread 8,480 about how husband doesn't pull his weight with the new baby they so desperately had to throw into the mix.