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Step-parenting

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Dear Non Step Parents

202 replies

prettyfly1 · 11/11/2010 21:28

As you will see from the title this is a mini forum for those of us helping in the raising of other womens children.

Most of us who are honest will know that sometimes raising our own children is extraordinarily difficult at the best of times, and if we are honest, we may always love them but we dont always like them. If we are honest as mothers, we also know we are not perfect parents and can make some collossal clangers in raising our kids.

It is with this in mind that I ask you BEFORE you post on this thread to consider how hard doing this job with a child not biologically ours, who has been/ is going through the disruption and agony of a split in his/her family could be. We are often hated merely for not being a childs mother or father, and have to face daily issues surrounding our roles, responsibilites and rights. Like every other parent (which we are just not by birth) we have good and bad times with our step children. Sometimes we can be unreasonable, sometimes they are, but like all biological parents, we also need somewhere to vent our spleens sometimes, be unreasonable and horrid and just get it out.

This may be difficult for you to hear, particularly if you imagine your child to be the one being spoken about, however the fact that there is somewhere safe for us to get advice, support, and sometimes just a "I know what you are going through", far from showing how evil we are, shows how human we are and allows us to be better step parents and role models to the children we are involved with.

Very few step mothers set out to make mistakes or find it hard, much like very few mothers set out to screw up or make mistakes. We all do it and we all try not to, so please, if you feel the need to express your opinions to women going through this, try and do it constructively, thoughtfully and with compassion.

Yours sincerely STEP PARENTS

OP posts:
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TooBlessed · 12/11/2010 13:17

what a lovely thread and great post PRETTY
I am not a step parent nor have i been a step child but this topic always seem to get negative responses on MN so bravo,,very well and nicely put...

My friend is a step mother to an 8yr beautiful boy and she treats him with so much respect and love and he loves her back,the world is made to believe that all step parents are bad,then add books that talk of bad step mothers,they only make things worse,nice post i repeat..

thebelletolls · 12/11/2010 13:29

Too much exclusivity is placed on blood ties over others kinds. After all, great loves are often for those with whom we have no (biological) relationship to at all - husbands, wives, partners, stepchildren and friends.

as Philip Larkin wrote .. '..what will survive of us is love.'

JiggeryPoverty · 12/11/2010 13:30

Fab post prettyfly. Smile

And (sorry if this has been said already) it's very often the case that those of us who are step parents also have children who have a step parent, so we do see both sides of it.

Pootletrinket · 12/11/2010 13:35

Great post, I think it must be a tough job, particularly to young children. I gained my Step-Mum aged 25 (had some pretty rotten wannabe's standing in before that!) and love her to bits. The only time we've really had a problem was after the birth of my DD - I told WSM (it's a joke, but I call her Wicked Step Monster) that she would be DD's Grandma (my Mum died) - but for a while, she treated her other 'real' grandchildren with higher priority (she was going to stay with them for longer after Christmas while my Dad travelled up to see me and DD). I had to have a word with my Dad and explain that I had bestowed a 'gift' upon her, DD and I view Grandma as Grandma and there is no distinction between her and other, biologically related, grandparents, but that this had to be a 2-way street.

All better now and DD still doesn't know she's not 'biological' - when do you tell a 3 year old that your own Mummy died when you were little?!?!

Alaro · 12/11/2010 13:42

As a stepmum to 3, all I want to say is "Hear, hear" pretty

thebelletolls · 12/11/2010 13:59

Pootletrinket - happy that you have a good relationship with you Step-mum but would suggest that a gift has to be willingly received as well as bestowed. It is not a given.

bratnav · 12/11/2010 14:01

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BigHairyLeggedTurkey · 12/11/2010 14:02

Lovely post, thanks!

I tell my two stepsons that "blood is thicker than water, but love is thicker than blood!" It doesn't matter that we're not related, I chose to be part of their lives and I wouldn't be without them now. It always shocks me a little when I see my influence coming out in them, mannerisms, or phrases or the way they bahave.

They consider themselves to have three parents, and sometimes they feel they are lucky, and sometimes, when there's three of us to pick up on when they've tried to pull a fast one "mum lets me go to bed at X time" - to us, and "dad lets me go to bed at X time" to mum, forgetting we talk to each other, they feel very unlucky indeed har har.

I think the hardest thing is the fact that you don't automatically love these children and you have to work hard at it sometimes. Then you feel so guilty for not automatically loving them, or somtimes not liking them much. I had some good advice on here, which was to "fake it till you feel it" which has got me through some very very tough times.

Go Team Stepparent!!!!

lateatwork · 12/11/2010 14:07

56 posts and still nothing negative? impressive. Smile

hats off to step mums!

TheOleDragon · 12/11/2010 14:29

I am a step-parent and now a step-grannie. My step son came to live with his father and me when he was sixteen. My son was 4, almost 5. I have to say that having a teenager before my time, as my stepson is only 12 years younger than me, opened my eyes for the shape of things to come. My son is now 18 and my stepson is now a father at the age of 30.

There were tough times but on a whole more good times. About a year ago, when my stepson had just become a father, was in a successful job and with a lovely lady who is going to marry soon. He said to me "I have to thank you, I would not be where I am today if it was not for you".

I looked at him and smiled. I felt a rush of love and felt so proud of him. I think he would be where he is today, with or without me.... but those words have touched my heart for life.

latrucha · 12/11/2010 14:35

I can never repay the debt I owe my stepmother for unfailingly patient, kind and loyal care of my father. We are incredibly lucky that he found her.

ThatllDoPig · 12/11/2010 14:38

Great thread, well done OP. Your step children are lucky to have you.

oledragon that made me cry. And I'm not a stepmum. blumming hormones!

Good for you all I say. It is a noble and wonderful thing to truly welcome and love a child as your own.
Enjoy the love reflected back at you.

whoknowswhatthefutureholds · 12/11/2010 14:49

pootle - my granny was my step granny. my dads mum was killed was he was little, I was told at a very young age (so young I can't remember) this meant I never was shocked by it.

It was only when I became a step parent myself did I realise that my granny treated me slightly differently than her blood gcs. more because her relationship with her son is so different from that with my dad.

StiffyByng · 12/11/2010 14:51

Thank you so much for this.

I'm a stepmother to two children full time - my husband had residency already and then their mother died a year ago. I have a pretty good relationship with them considering everything, particularly the younger one, but quite often feel that people think I'm doing the wrong thing. I worry about the situation pretty much all the time!

The older child is very traumatised by stuff that went on in her younger years and has also got serious medical problems. Her father and I BOTH find her very difficult to cope with at times, but try so hard to work it through. He gets a lot more understanding and sympathy than I do, for something that affects both our lives seriously, and also a lot more of the love from her that makes it worthwhile!

Much strength and love to all stepmothers on here.

SkaterGrrrrl · 12/11/2010 14:59

I adore my stepmum and in many ways prefer her company to my mums. Well done to all the lovely stepmums out there!

KaraStarbuckThrace · 12/11/2010 15:13

What a wonderful topic :)

Sadly some people have had bad experiences with stepparents, and unfortunately it means they jump to some pretty wild conclusions without all of the facts and assume you dislike or want to get rid of your stepchildren.

I am both a stepmum and a stepdaughter, I get one well with my stepmum and well with my stepson - who is a fabulous big brother to my son Smile

CornishKK · 12/11/2010 15:20

Hear hear. My life was enriched with a wonderful, loving and inspirational stepfather. Being a parent is hard, being a stepparent must be much, much harder.

moonbells · 12/11/2010 15:21

Much kudos to anyone with the courage to bring up non-biological kids. I have enough trouble with my biological toddler! (Heck, that sounds like washing powder - well you know what I mean!)

My story is a bit negative. I had a step granny. Grandad married her when he was 84 and she a widow of 72!

He actively didn't care about what his grown kids thought - just wanted company (fair enough!), but didn't set things up properly so when he died there was no Will and so all the family property - from my late Grandma as well as himself - went to the stepfamily. This caused some resentment.

It's make a Will month folks - whether you are steps or natural or adopted parents, and especially if non-married ones, please think about making one if you haven't done it!

thedudesmummy · 12/11/2010 15:21

I am a stepmother to two teenage girls whose mother is far away in another country. I have to say I have always felt it to be a privilege to be their stepmother, and they make me very proud. I wondered if it might become a bit more difficult when I had my own baby last year, but they are wonderful with him and have been, true to form, great.

thedudesmummy · 12/11/2010 15:23

PS we manage to have a good relationship with the mum (probably because she is thousands of miles away!) to the extent (on the will making topic) that we have sepcified in our will that she should care for the baby if naything happened to us.

PosieComeHereMyPreciousParker · 12/11/2010 15:30

Well there are step parents that don't complain about their spouses children spending time with them. Most of us wouldn't be step parents if we couldn't cut it.

lucielooo · 12/11/2010 15:38

TheOleDragon - that's so lovely to hear.
I'm stepmum to two teenage boys, the oldest of which is only 14 years younger than me, and pregnant with my first baby.

I can only hope I have that sort of relationship with my stepsons - and it's lovely to hear it can be worth the work no matter how hard it seems sometimes. I often wonder how my step-sons will view me when they are older (too close to home now) and whether they will understand that I do my best with no experience whatsoever.

whoknowswhatthefutureholds · 12/11/2010 16:29

true posie - I want to see my DSS more not less. But he is a teenager and his friends (quite rightly) are being to take precident. Sure he will return to the fold in 5 years or so!

prettyfly1 · 12/11/2010 16:31

Yeahhh - I love this thread - its so brilliant to see some real positivity on here for once. Yeah team step!!

OP posts:
ballstoit · 12/11/2010 16:31

pretty, thanks for this post. After a particularly trying week with DSS2's broken arm making him incapable of doing anything he doesnt want to do Grin, you've made my day.