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Step-parenting

Need advice - step children causing me so much upset.

108 replies

oldgoatlep · 17/12/2019 05:20

I will try to be brief. I have been with my partner for 10 happy years the only issue between us is his children (now over 18) they have always 'tolerated' me, never rude but indifferent and one word responses. He met me soon after he split up with their mum so I guess they see me as an obstacle (she has remained single). Over the years I have always welcomed them and tried to be friendly we used to have them every other weekend and at Christmas, took them on holidays etc. I always expected that when they became over 18 they would stop coming round as to me it was always obvious they did not want me around. It is the same with my 2 children who have tried very hard over the years to establish a relationship with them unsuccessfully. They are both now over 18 and as expected they no longer visit, they see their dad at the pub or out for dinner occasionally and it is obvious I am not welcome, they are not horrible to me just cold and they go quiet so over the last couple of years I have stopped going with him as I find it very upsetting. My partner has tried to talk to them but they state there is no issue. We usually have them over on boxing day and this is where the problem is this year. My partner and I have noticed this year that his daughter is becoming very distant she does not answer his texts or calls and I have not seen her since last year. To make matters worse last year we finally got my partners house back (they and their mum were living in it but he paid her a large sum of money that she was not entitled to legally, to move out so we could sell the house as he has been paying the mortgage on it for 10 years, he is sole owner they were not married) she was in agreement to leave as quite happy with the large payment (morally my partner felt he had to give her a sizeable sum of which I agreed) He hoped to sell the house but houses are not selling here currently and we could no longer afford to pay the mortgage/bills on that house and our own rent and bills so we moved in temporarily to get some work done on the property to hopefully sell it next year when the market picks up. I lost my father last week, he died very suddenly and I am devastated so is my partner we cared for him for the last few years. His daughter has chosen this week (before the funeral) to call him and rant at him saying he has not been there for her and she is furious about the house. He has met her and talked and tried to explain why we have had to move in (none of us are happy about it, its weird for me!) and told her she is out of order re some of things she has said he has always been there for her very much so - they are both the only children in his side of the family and very spoilt. She is now refusing to come on boxing day (I usually have my dad bless him and my children too) and demanding he see her elsewhere, to keep the peace he has agreed to take her to the pub on boxing day to do the presents. He has been extremely upset over this along with the loss of my dad and I am struggling to cope with the loss and what I feel is the selfishness of his daughter her timing was awful she is aware my dad has passed away and she has caused so much upset in the week before the funeral. I am supportive of my partner and understand why he has chosen to agree to upset our usual boxing day routine but at the same time I am so angry. This means she will never come to this house whilst we are here and I will not see her at all. I have said I am so hurt by her actions re her timing I will not want to see her until she apologises I should have been grieving instead I have had to deal with a very tearful partner and an angry spoilt child. I do 'get it' I am not unsympathetic to how she feels but I hoped being nearly 20 now she would try to view things from our side. She lives up North now anyway. It has been left that he will see his children boxing day morning on his own and join us for our usual buffet and games later in the day, I know this is going to cause upset on the day as I feel for him and I am very hurt myself. I only buried my father last week I do not need this stress and neither does he. I cannot see a way forward.

OP posts:
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hsegfiugseskufh · 19/12/2019 12:07

She hasht done this deliberately to hurt you

we don't know this.

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jenniferazp · 19/12/2019 12:16

When people reply like thighthigh it makes me wonder if that would be acceptable behaviour from their parents to wife or husband . Why are people allowed to hate step parents but not sons or daughter in-laws ,

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ThighThighOfthigh · 19/12/2019 12:17

I wouldn't hate them, i would want a separate relationship with my parent.

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hsegfiugseskufh · 19/12/2019 12:22

thigh how do you know that? why do you have a pre conceived idea that you would find that necessary? you have basically already decided you wouldn't want that person involved. Its bizarre.

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aSofaNearYou · 19/12/2019 12:41

ThighThigh people would probably ideally want a separate relationship with their son or daughter but to throw away any cards with their DIL or SIL's name on it because they were "muscling in" would be considered quite dramatic behaviour from an adult. Most people sign off cards from everyone in their household.

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Sotiredofthislife · 19/12/2019 12:50

Furthermore - the dm in all if this would have known the house was going to be returned so why on earth didn't she prepare the kids for this? She has some responsibility in all this too but as usual on MN that's totally overlooked as she's the golden uterus whose role is to be propped up by her ex partner til the end of her days!

Rubbish. Utter rubbish. You are extrapolating information that simply isn’t there. The OP can’t possibly know what the mother may or may not have done so how you, a stranger on the Internet who has read a few hundred words about a situation could possibly know is beyond me.

The step child is entitled to feel however she feels. It is not the mother’s responsibility to somehow change that. The house move may have been a hive of bitterness and anger - or nothing at all may have been said and mum maybe happily settled in her own home. Step child isn’t obliged in either situation to like what has happened, to feel it is fair, or to be happy about going back into her former home with mum to celebrate with dad and step mum.

As for your ‘golden uterus’ shite, no one has suggested that mum having to move from the family home is unreasonable. No one has suggested the father has been particularly unreasonable even if perhaps it could be interpreted as dad jumping in as soon as the daughter turns 18 might have been a bit quick. It is not an uncommon situation. That still doesn’t mean the step child has to be comfortable with her former home now being her dad’s home.

I dislike the persistent narrative on this forum that children - adult children included - must like and accept step parents at all costs or else be branded spoilt brats and their mother’s golden uterus be dragged through the quagmire of separated parenting. If the child in question is polite - which the OP says she is - then there is nothing more to be done. She can’t be forced to like the OP, or accept her, or play happy families when it doesn’t sit right with her. She had no say in the situation and was forced to accept it. She is under no obligation to like it.

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hsegfiugseskufh · 19/12/2019 13:07

sotired

nobody has said the step child should be happy, or must like and accept OP. It has been suggested that she should stop stropping like a child and start acting like an adult.

As for your ‘golden uterus’ shite, no one has suggested that mum having to move from the family home is unreasonable. No one has suggested the father has been particularly unreasonable even if perhaps it could be interpreted as dad jumping in as soon as the daughter turns 18 might have been a bit quick

erm, yes they have, and yes they have.

I dislike the persistent narrative on this forum that children - adult children included - must like and accept step parents at all costs or else be branded spoilt brats and their mother’s golden uterus be dragged through the quagmire of separated parenting. If the child in question is polite - which the OP says she is - then there is nothing more to be done. She can’t be forced to like the OP, or accept her, or play happy families when it doesn’t sit right with her. She had no say in the situation and was forced to accept it. She is under no obligation to like it

well she has no choice but to accept it, op has been in her life for 10 years. Nobody is saying she is under any obligation to "like it" but should be able to act like an adult, considering she actually is one.

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Ibizafun · 19/12/2019 13:27

SoVeryLost You say nowhere does it say that the op loves her step children. How is she meant to love people who are cold to her despite her being warm and friendly? Why would she?

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Elfnsafe1y · 19/12/2019 13:42

Stop taking on your DPs problems. Getting upset on his behalf doesn't help.
Let the DSD be a spoilt brat - there is nothing you can do to change that. Just concentrate on giving your family as pleasant a time as possible, despite your loss.
DSD probably won't change until she has her own family. Be supportive of DP but stay in the background as far as his DCS are concerned.

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Magda72 · 19/12/2019 14:00

Rubbish. Utter rubbish. You are extrapolating information that simply isn’t there.
@Sotiredofthislife - we're all making certain assumptions including you! So no need to get rude or personal. My comments were general & about the tone on this form which is SUPPOSED to be a step-parenting form (see title) but which regularly turns into a bashing of stepparents by certain posters who seem to think that first wives & first children should be treated with kid gloves, nor should they have any responsibility towards cultivating manners or empathy for any situation or person beyond their own little world!
These posters are all entitled to their opinions & to bash stepparents if they so wish but I'd suggest they get their own forum for that & stop hijacking this one when they have NOTHING constructive to offer bar their own anger & vitriol at their situations!

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notnowmaybelater · 19/12/2019 15:08

Bollykecks this is about the lack of empathy a parent shows towards their child and bereaved partner, not about men providing for women Hmm You don't wash your hands of empathy for your children on their 18th birthday unless you never actually had empathy to begin with. He's asking his daughter to suck up all her negative emotions about the incredibly awkward and rather humiliating way he's treated her and "tearful" and playing the victim, demanding he be supported by someone in more need of emotional support (his partner) than he is, when she (his daughter) calls him out.

This man has caused a really awkward and upsetting situation for his partner and daughter - he made this bed - but he's the tearful one.

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hsegfiugseskufh · 19/12/2019 15:21

notnow sorry but how do we know he is showing no empathy for his child? I agree he isn't acting very well towards OP!

How exactly has he washed his hands of empathy on his daughters 18th birthday? by selling HIS house? After 10 years of paying for it? What would you suggest he do?

Maybe he does feel sorry for her, but in the real world finances have to come before your adult children being a bit sad. For all we know he might of offered her to live there with him!

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notnowmaybelater · 19/12/2019 15:32

Bollykecks We don't have much information I agree, but he's created this very awkward set up and, according to the opening post told his daughter that she's the one who's out of order. The OP describes him as being tearful. He's the cause of it all though! He's created this inevitably difficult and humiliating and tense set up and is tearful and trying to style himself as the victim because his daughter isn't playing along.

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aSofaNearYou · 19/12/2019 15:44

He clearly did meet his obligations to the letter but saw them ending cleanly when the youngest turned 18, which isn't how being a parent works

Suggesting that a separated dad should keep paying for his ex and kids to live in his house after they have become adults is like saying a parent should just buy their kid a house at 18 because "parenting doesn't stop just because they're adults". Many parents allow their children to continue living with them either with or without rent, many parents give a contribution towards a mortgage... Very few just give their adult child their own house and take the financial loss themselves.

It's very likely that he would be more than happy for his daughter to come and live with him because that is how parenting works and often adult children can't move out immediately, but it is NOT how parenting works to just give her a house. Let alone the fact that it might just end up being his ex living in it.

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hsegfiugseskufh · 19/12/2019 15:57

but he's created this very awkward set up and, according to the opening post told his daughter that she's the one who's out of order

he likely had no choice, he will have legally had to house his ex and kids until they were 18. I cant imagine he did this because he actively wanted to, can you?

I think kicking off is out of order, she's a grown adult. She should know better. He could have not said that and just thought it and pandered to her, yes.

I don't think he's playing the victim at all, he is allowed to be upset that his daughter is acting like a nasty little brat. I think he should put that to one side, to support op personally though.

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notnowmaybelater · 19/12/2019 16:01

Has he invited her to live with him? That would be tricky given she was initially told to move out so that the house could be sold. Is there space with the OP's children now living there? Would it be tolerable for both daughter and OP? Does the daughter have cause to genuinely believe that the OP was her father's other woman while her parents were together even though she wasn't? As she came into the picture so quickly the daughter may genuinely believe that her father lied about timing. That's an almost impossible emotional hurdle to jump in order to return to your childhood home...

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notnowmaybelater · 19/12/2019 16:04

Bollykecks you can't imagine he wanted to house his own daughter from the age of nine or ten years old until the age of eighteen? What kind of parent would rather not provide a home for their ten year old?

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hsegfiugseskufh · 19/12/2019 16:26

notnow presumably he was living somewhere during that time, he could have housed her there. Or he could have sold that house, and bought another and housed her there. Or he could have payed her mum maintenance as his share of housing her, you know like most NRP's do.

It is not usual to pay for 2 houses until your kids turn 18. It is usual for both parents to pay for their own house, you know?

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notnowmaybelater · 19/12/2019 17:00

Bollykecks we don't have any financial information unsurprisingly, but as the OP refers to his children plural, not just one daughter, it's perfectly likely that paying the mortgage and having his ex remain in the family home doing 12 out of 14 days of childcare and providing and parenting was far cheaper for him than paying maintenance for 2 or 3 or however many children. We also don't have any way of knowing whether he wanted his children living with him - plenty of men don't see it as their job to compromise their careers by working around their children. We have no information to tell us whether this man was an exception and fought to have his children live with him, put in a flexible working request, had bedrooms ready for his children in his home, but was thwarted in the courts or selflessly decided not to be either resident parent nor to have the children 50/50 in their best interests.

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tinyvulture · 19/12/2019 17:08

I think (and I admit I could have this wrong) that at the heart of OP’s distress is her conviction that her (now grown up) step children don’t like her, despite the fact that she feels she always tried her best with them.
I do have some sympathy. I have 4 grown up step-kids. Two I am very close to, one I like and get on fine with, just don’t know them very well, but the fourth I am totally convinced doesn’t much like me (I have various bits of evidence for this, which I won’t go into here), despite the fact that I feel I have always tried very hard to be nice, friendly and supportive to all four (and I definitely wasn’t the OW - nobody could plausibly think that).
I have come to the conclusion that some people just don’t like you - you can’t really say why - they just don’t. And really there is nothing to be gained from taking it personally. It is a bit upsetting though - I would totally agree with that. If you love your partner, it’s a natural corollary I think to want a good relationship with their kids. Just sadly that isn’t always gonna happen, even if you have tried your best. Noone’s fault. Just the way it is.

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IHateBlueLights · 19/12/2019 17:26

What kind of parent would rather not provide a home for their ten year old?

The ex wife, that's who.

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notnowmaybelater · 19/12/2019 17:41

IHateBlueLights that makes no sense.

Some people are very hung up on the daughter's mother when she isn't even relevant - the OP's issue is with her partner and partner's daughter.

tinyvulture is probably right though.

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hsegfiugseskufh · 19/12/2019 17:55

notnow he may have paid maintenance on top. Why do you automatically assume the worst? Because he is a man?

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notnowmaybelater · 19/12/2019 18:03

Bollykecks because he is the kind of man who creates a difficult situation for everyone then when called out plays the wounded party and expects to be comforted by one of the people he's put in the middle of it despite the fact she's the one who's father just died.

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hsegfiugseskufh · 19/12/2019 18:07

Or hes just upset that his daughters a brat and hes just handled it badly?

Please elaborate on how you know that HE created this situatuon.

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