Meet the Other Phone. Only the apps you allow.

Meet the Other Phone.
Only the apps you allow.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Step-parenting

Connect with other Mumsnetters here for step-parenting advice and support.

Stepson needs support

32 replies

Ivy2006 · 01/03/2022 07:44

Hi,

I need some friendly advice without any judgment! I want to offer my stepson who is 4 some support. But being his step mum I feel I don't have much control over the matter. Every time I bring it up to my husband he tells me I'm in the wrong and shouldn't get involved.

His parents were never together and I've been with his dad since day 1. His mum is also married and has been with her partner from day 1 also. We all have a very good relationship.

Firstly, I do feel he's been very coddled from birth. Both his mum and dad refused to let him sleep alone until he was 2/3 years old. This in turn meant he couldn't self soothe and was very reliant on them.

He was spoon fed purées until a ridiculous age and even now gets spoon fed most the time.

My step son is really struggling with his emotions. I feel for him so much because I know he needs help but his parents aren't listening.

If my husband goes to the toilet, gets in the shower, or even walks across the room (still in sight). My stepson will sit and shake uncontrollably. NOTHING will soothe him until my husband is back. As soon as he's back my stepson acts as if nothing has happened. We try to avoid my husband leaving but sometimes he needs to go to work or somewhere important. There is no soothing my stepson at all and he will shake his fists and head as if he is so furious.

He has become very aggressive. We got kicked out of softplay because he picked up and threw a small baby and said 'hulk smash'. He also punched and kicked several children which led to multiple complaints.

If anyone goes near his dad, either myself or our little girl, he will become so aggressive. I've had him phlegm in my face, punch me, smack me round the head, go put trainers on and come back to kick me. This is so mentally and physically draining. I'm never able to relax and I'm constantly worried for my little girl. When I was bathing her once, he tried to shove her head under and said he wanted to drown her. He pinches her when his dad isn't looking but of course denies denies denies and my husband thinks I'm exaggerating.

His mum had a similar issue. She put him to bed at bedtime and he started punching and kicking the walls. He then put football boots on and cornered her and kicked her until she was bleeding and had a black eye. It sounds silly considering he's 4 but it's so hard knowing what to do in that situation.

I'm so stuck on what to do. His dad/my husband thinks he just gets scared and is just 'emotional'. He thinks I need to make more of an effort with him to understand where he's coming from. But I've been doing that for 4 years and it's only getting worse. We have him every weekend and I never get to relax. I can't relax without panicking what he's going to do. I worry he's going to hurt me and my daughter. I worry about mine and my husbands relationship as we can't have any time together as he can't stand us being near. My husband feeds his behaviour and allows him to act this way and doesn't see any issues! I feel if he perhaps started to discipline him and tell him off when he did these things we'd make improvements. But that could be naïve of me.

Please help!

OP posts:
SpaceshiptoMars · 01/03/2022 07:52

Yes, he needs support. Professional support. This is not normal!

What is his speech like? Does he play with toys by himself? Duplo etc? Is he playing with age appropriate toys?

wildseas · 01/03/2022 07:53

Is he at nursery/pre-school? If so I would try to persuade your partner to ask them to look into whether he has any special needs.

Where you are seeing him being "coddled" I am seeing mum and dad supporting him with things where he isn't ready at the same stage as other children. The behaviour sounds the same too - he isn't ready for independance in eg a soft play setting.

ilovemyboys3 · 01/03/2022 08:04

Blimey, no wonder your stressed out. Simply I wouldn't sit back and allow this to happen. I wouldn't let him in my home where he is physically abuse towards my daughter, no way! A Serial killers instinct begins at a young age, he needs help. Go to the GP. If your husband says no, then tell him he can see his son elsewhere at weekends - that will show you mean business. He will be starting school this year; they won't tolerate this behaviour if he is physically violent to teachers and children. You need to show you are trying to help him overcome whatever is going on. Best of luck. X

SpaceshiptoMars · 01/03/2022 08:05

You can speak to your doctor about your concerns for your daughter and yourself. It sounds like you cannot leave your daughter alone with him even for a few seconds.

KindlyKanga · 01/03/2022 08:10

Take your daughter and leave. She is your priority here.

AskingforaBaskin · 01/03/2022 09:02

I would do a midnight run with your daughter and get far far away.

In 20 years your going to be interviewed on one of those dateline shows about the origin stories of a serial killer.

Ozanj · 01/03/2022 09:13

What is the relationship like between his Mum and Stepdad? The stuff he’s doing isn’t an ‘origin of a serial killer’ but imitation. So it’s possible he’s seeing his stepdad abuse his mum, or they aren’t controlling anything he watches / plays. The lack of control is probably at fault - I can’t imagine any parent letting their 4 yo go around unsupervised in a softplay, let alone stand there like a lemming as he ‘hulk smashes’ a baby in the toddler area.

Either way I think it’s time social services is called.

aSofaNearYou · 01/03/2022 09:16

Wow. Is your DD your DHs? It reads as though she's a baby, but I'm strongly hoping she isn't because the honest answer is that you should get far, far away from this child and not subject your DD to such abuse, but if they share a father you will then be exposing her to contact time with her blind father without you there to supervise.

It's hard to know what to advise, his behaviour is deeply disturbing!

femfemlicious · 01/03/2022 09:20

Tell your husband you wont be alone with him. Your husband needs to handle him by himself. If he is going to the bathroom he takes his son with him

QuirkyTurtle · 01/03/2022 09:24

What happens when he gets aggressive? If he kicks or smacks you, do you tell him off? Or his dad?

I am in a similar situation in the sense that my stepson's parents also were never together, and also both parents have new partners that were there from day 1. My stepson has also been very coddled. When I leave the room (not his dad though ironically) he would often howl until I returned. If I had a cuddle with my SO or even my dog, he would come and smack us.

We nipped this in the bud VERY early on. When he cried because I'd left the room, my SO would say "she's coming back, please stop shouting now". We'd often do it on purpose just to 'train' it out of him. My SO never had any patience for aggression so if he tried to smack or kick, he would immediately be told off and put in the naughty corner.

It took a while, and while he is still very attention-seeky, he has learned not to shout or be aggressive (most of the time). But the key thing here was that my SO and I were on the same page about discipline. If you're not, then the battle is lost before you've begun fighting. The fact that your SO doesn't see the problem here goes beyond parental guilt. He's putting you and your daughter in danger.

AnneLovesGilbert · 01/03/2022 09:25

Your husband is putting his feelings about the safety of your baby together. You know that’s not okay. I wouldn’t stay in a house where my child was at risk, and she is. It’s not your job to accommodate any of this, no matter how long you’ve been together or how much shit you’re getting from his dad.

You know if your DD gets badly injured you’ll be under the same spotlight your husband is because you knew the threat was already there.

He obviously needs help, he’s little more than a toddler himself and it’s tragic he’s not getting it. But you’re getting fuck all agreement from his parents and literally only you can advocate for your daughter. It’s irresponsible and dangerous to stay living together. I couldn’t look at him the same again if the price of his denial is my baby being pinched or nearly drowned. This stuff is incredibly serious.

If part of your reason for this thread is looking for permission to just walk away then you’ve got it. Protect. Your. Child. It’s your most important job.

LittleOwl153 · 01/03/2022 09:26

I would actually seek help from social services - whether your husband agrees or not. That stuff sounds serious and you need to protect your little girl as well as this seriously messed up kid.

Can you set up a video camera where it could be seen how he reacts to your daughter? Could you do the same with him he reacts when your husband moves away?

Every time I bring it up to my husband he tells me I'm in the wrong and shouldn't get involved.

Ultimately though if your husband won't deal with it you will need to leave to protect your daughter. Do not let her grow up in fear of her (step?) Brother. And if your daughter is his make sure that his contact with her does not include the boy unless it is properly supervised in order to keep her safe.

TheTeenageYears · 01/03/2022 09:26

I think you need to look at safeguarding your DD first and foremost. This is not going to get better without significant help and if both parents are in denial the best thing you can do is remove yourself and DD from the situation before something terrible happens. The longer you wait the harder it will be for everyone. It's a very difficult situation for your DH to be in because both DC are his. For you it should be clearer, far from easy but you are pushing water uphill if DSD's parents won't do anything.

AnneLovesGilbert · 01/03/2022 09:28

I’d contact your HV as a first step. You need it on record that your husband is negligent about your child’s safety. If the inevitable happens and you wait for her to get properly hurt by SS you need to make sure DH doesn’t have contact with both kids without you there, you know for a fact that he won’t keep her safe.

KindlyKanga · 01/03/2022 09:43

Who is supervising when he's hulk smashing babies?

Ivy2006 · 01/03/2022 10:09

@SpaceshiptoMars
Thanks for your response! He refuses to play with any toys. Whether age appropriate or not. He never has done! He sits next to his dad constantly and follows him round all day. If his dad isn't there then he sits in a corner. It's such a shame. The only thing we can convince him to do is go on a scooter for a bit

OP posts:
Ivy2006 · 01/03/2022 10:10

@wildseas
Thanks for your response! He goes to a childminder but they only have one other child at the same time. Personally I feel it would benefit him more being in a nursery or pre school setting where he can be around more children and learn to play and share etc. His childminder has mentioned multiple times that he's very aggressive if she has a younger one in on the same day

OP posts:
Ivy2006 · 01/03/2022 10:11

@ilovemyboys3
I agree! I'm at the last of my tether. He isn't just aggressive with people but animals too. I took him to visit my mums dogs once and he just wanted to punch them and grab them. Safe to say I've never taken him back!

OP posts:
Ivy2006 · 01/03/2022 10:12

@AskingforaBaskin
I think you might be right haha!

OP posts:
romdowa · 01/03/2022 10:13

In the nicest possible way , you need to put your child first and keep her away from her violent brother. A friend of mine spent his childhood being attacked by his sibling, being slapped, kicked , stabbed , bitten and his parents never protected him and its has a lasting impact on my friends mental health. I'd be taking my daughter away and reporting what's going on to social services.

Ivy2006 · 01/03/2022 10:15

@Ozanj
The relationship between his mum and stepdad is very healthy. I'm friends with his mum so I know there are no issues. She's trying her best but she understands there is a problem. He's very physically aggressive towards her and I know she's struggling as much as me but isn't willing to seek support! It's very frustrating.
The local softplay is no adults allowed. There's a seating area with screens where we can watch but by the time my husband managed to worm his way through the maze, he had already acted in that way. The 6 month old was supervised by a parent but I'm assuming they weren't expecting my step son to lash out

OP posts:
Ivy2006 · 01/03/2022 10:16

@aSofaNearYou
Yes my DD is my DHs! It's very stressful for me as regardless my daughter will be having contact with her brother. Hence why I prefer to stick around and supervise. Ideally my husband would stop having his son overnight and just take him out for a few hours in the day every weekend so we could avoid having him in the house

OP posts:
Ivy2006 · 01/03/2022 10:18

@QuirkyTurtle
Thank you, your message is helpful!

When I'm present I'm very strict. I put him in the naughty corner, or a time out etc. I'm very stern. However, my husband takes more of a 'gentle parenting approach' which obviously I do not agree with. He sits him down and cuddles him and reassures him. So basically gives him attention for being naughty. It drives me insane!

He is brainwashed by his son. He thinks his behaviour is the same as any other boy!

OP posts:
aSofaNearYou · 01/03/2022 10:18

[quote Ivy2006]@aSofaNearYou
Yes my DD is my DHs! It's very stressful for me as regardless my daughter will be having contact with her brother. Hence why I prefer to stick around and supervise. Ideally my husband would stop having his son overnight and just take him out for a few hours in the day every weekend so we could avoid having him in the house [/quote]
I can imagine! I don't know if there's any way you could orchestrate the situation so you could seperate and he would not be allowed to have the children at the same time, I've never dealt with courts or social services, but this would be my focus.

Ivy2006 · 01/03/2022 10:18

@AnneLovesGilbert
Thank you xx

OP posts:
Swipe left for the next trending thread