My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Relationships

Step children lying... Modern Family difficulties

139 replies

Harrisd · 30/12/2012 13:53

My fiancée and I had a devastating row ruining what would otherwise was a great Xmas. We live together with her daughter (my stepdaughter) full time. She is 7. My daughter lives with her mother (8yrs old) and is with us most weekends and half of all holidays. My relationship with my stepdaughter is great. Very proud that she feels she can call me daddy. its not always easy of course but my fiancee and i have done our best to understand things as we have gone along and work together to ensure a happy loving home. We still have the odd disagreement over rolls and responsibilities etc. and mistakes have been made. neither of us sure sometimes of the best way to act.

Back to my Fiancée, she has worked very hard over the Xmas holidays to ensure that neither of our daughters feels outdone by the other (a common balancing act). In fact she is always conscious that the two feel equally loved. She often feels that this love is not reciprocated by my daughter in the someway I am loved by hers. My daughter was given a mobile phone as a gift. My fiancée was horrified to find a string of text messages on it to her maternal mother that were essentially lies indicating that she was having a terrible time for one reason and the next. It instantly broke my Fiancées heart. It's not the first time we have encountered this and my Fiancée feels gutted by this following all of the efforts made to ensure a special Xmas period. We both work very hard in our careers and work very hard at maintaining our "modern day" family. Heart breaking. I strongly told my daughter off ending by telling her I was extremely disappointed with her and that lies are never acceptable etc. I left her to sleep crying without even saying good night (this now breaks my heart as I think that this was a terrible way for me to react). Not knowing what to do or say about the situation to get under the skin of it all. I let my emotions rule my head. Now I'm completely distraught as I feel my whole family slipping away...

OP posts:
Report
izzyizin · 31/12/2012 05:42

From the nauseating way in which the OP describes his precious- Fiancee, I'd be sorely tempted to insert a Blackberry into one of her orifices where the sun don't shine it won't receive a signal, emma Smile

As for him, nothing can provoke me to violence except cruelty to children

Report
yohohoho · 31/12/2012 07:46

BoneyBackJefferson

The poster that mention his house not being her home was suggestng it as one of the reason she may feel unhappy. Stating some is also not aggressive.

You say that people are letting their own situations cloud you judgement. I think you may be as well.

Report
ScarletWomanoftheVillage · 31/12/2012 08:26

Well, op, has any of this helped? Are you the fiancée? Is this a reverse thread from the mother?

What is going on?

Report
ScarletWomanoftheVillage · 31/12/2012 08:31

"Step children lying" was the start of your thread title.

Step children - but you were talking about your daughter lying. So either you are the fiancée posting as the dad, or you are the mum, posting as the dad.

Please clear up the confusion

Report
dequoisagitil · 31/12/2012 09:57

I think the thread title is possibly because HarrisD started off posting on an old thread and was advised to start his own, and that one was called something about step-children. I guess he just took part of the title for his own without really thinking? I don't think it necessarily means he's not who he says he is.

Report
ScarletWomanoftheVillage · 31/12/2012 10:59

Oh, ok thanks for that dequoisagitil

Report
yohohoho · 31/12/2012 11:17

I think the 'not thinking' is a common theme.

Report
dequoisagitil · 31/12/2012 11:29

Yeah, yoho, I was tempted to say something like that myself.

Report
AmberLeaf · 31/12/2012 11:42

It concerns me that you are dismissing your daughters feelings as lies.

Your fiancee sounds like a manipulative drama queen.

It may well be very difficult for your daughter that your step father calls you Dad.

Snooping on the phone is so so wrong, as is an eight year old having a blackberry!

You seem to be placing more importance on your fiancees so called 'heartbreak' than on the fact your daughter cried herself to sleep.

Just wrong on so many levels.

Report
izzyhasanewchangeling · 31/12/2012 11:51

If I had my time again I would have taken sds phone off her the minute she got to our house - it created a nightmare situation where her mother abusing it.

Contacting sd late into the night and making her very unhappy.

She would be fine one minute - sobbing on the floor the next.

Report
givemeaclue · 31/12/2012 11:59

Why does a seven year old need a BlackBerry?

Why is her mother struggling financially?

Report
givemeaclue · 31/12/2012 12:05

You say your dd loves the way the family has developed but perhaps she doesn't, perhaps she is unhappy as sharing her dad etc but feels she can't say so.

It is all a bit of a mess!

Report
BoneyBackJefferson · 31/12/2012 12:47

yohohoho

that would be extrememly difficult in this case.

Report
snowshapes · 31/12/2012 12:51

Wrote a longer post but my pc ate it, so short version as on phone again. Reflecting on this it struck me that in any difficulties, DH and I tended to see our own child's pov first, and defend that, so to speak. Working out how to co-parent in a complex stepfamily has taken time, patience and understanding and is an ongoing process. One seeks to understand and calm, not escalate, tensions.

So I guess what seems odd here is that OP so quickly took his DP's side against his young DD, when actually the texts seem quite understandable, if hurtful, from a child in that position. Of course, me saying well, I wouldn't send DD back was an emotive reaction, but really, I would be looking for some reassurance that her dad was taking her needs seriously, had this happened, and not just going waaaah, it's all falling apart because a 7 year old is behaving like a 7 year old, and banishing her in tears.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.