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I was "Evil" about Birthday parties

108 replies

Knifer · 17/05/2022 16:50

I was a stepmother over a decade ago. For 8 years, from age 20 to age 28 to a 10-18 yr old boy, an 8-16 year old girl and a 4-12 year old girl.

Those children lived mostly with me and their dad, sometimes they'd flit to their mums for a few months, but mostly with us. He wasn't a very good dad and she wasn't a very good mum. I knew that about her but it wasn't so blatant with him until I was well and truly trapped.

Because of my own experience with a stepparent hating the children of the marriage when I was little, I tried my best for these kids even though I was little more than a kid myself and certainly closer to a sister in age than their mum. Despite this I cooked and cleaned and washed and shopped, clothed and provided makeup and cool shoes and music lessons and instruments and all the things they'd never have been able to do or have if I hadn't worked my arse off to provide them. I spent hours waiting outside counselling sessions for two of them, I drove them to their mums, I even paid their mum to have them when she had spent all her money on other stuff and couldn't feed them. I bought all the birthday and Christmas presents, and I made every birthday cake, exactly how they wanted. Did all the typical stuff like chores for pocket money, taught them to cook and bake, coached two of them through their GCSEs. I genuinely do feel I went far above and far beyond what was expected of me for these children.

BUT. I never did birthday parties. Two reasons. One- I couldn't afford them what with having 3 fully grown kids to support with zero maintenance from the other parent. Two- I felt that their PARENTS should do that, they were their kids, not mine, and I did everything I could do to make sure they were clean, fed, clothed and housed and that their mental health was taken care of. But their parents never pulled their fingers out of their lazy arses and did it. I would let them have friends over for tea or for a sleepover and when the older two were teens I paid for them and a couple of friends to go to the cinema and McDonald's.

Despite everything I did, they were vile to me. I tried not to take it to heart, they had a hard and very traumatic upbringing with their parents- more so than I realised since I was pretty much a kid being lovebombed by their dad and duped into sticking around. But yes, they were vile to me in so many ways, and when me and their dad split up, they said they never wanted to speak to me again for "using" their unemployed, deadbeat father, and none of them have contacted me for more than six years, which has been quite blissful! But today, I got a "Facebook user" message in my inbox, "hi skanky bitch! We saw your son's party pictures on Instagram. Funny how you can do parties for him, but never did for your stepchildren but I guess we weren't worth the money. You have to be a special kind of evil to never give a party to a child."

I imagine this is from the middle one. Who would be 28 now. I'm not usually bothered by nastiness from that direction but this really does upset me. I went without for 8 years and sacrificed so much to make them feel they had the same as anyone else because their parents wouldn't, and they repaid me with misery upon misery which necessitated 3 years of psychotherapy to overcome. And now, because I only had what my job paid me in the early part of the century instead of a magic money tree, some grown woman has messaged me just to be horrible to me. For never arranging and paying for an actual party for her or her siblings when she had two parents who claimed benefits I didn't know existed in order to look after their children. 😡😡

I don't think there's any point to this except to get it off my chest

OP posts:
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Prerapher · 17/05/2022 20:09

@mathanxiety....very well put indeed.

Bigboysmademedoit · 17/05/2022 20:15

This woman wants your attention - why else would she be stalking your social
media after so long. She’s 28 now - she must know her behaviour was wrong but she’s justifying it with an ‘evil stepmother’ narrative. If you respond with ANY explanation she’ll twist it to suit this narrative and may increase contact to force a reaction. Don’t respond. Just block. You have a child who loves you and who you obviously love - this angers her. Move on and tighten your online presence.

bert3400 · 17/05/2022 22:57

@Tamzo85 I can not believe you are blaming the OP ....really ??? What planet are you on 😡

aSofaNearYou · 18/05/2022 09:26

bert3400 · 17/05/2022 22:57

@Tamzo85 I can not believe you are blaming the OP ....really ??? What planet are you on 😡

She's on a different planet on every thread, best ignored!

funinthesun19 · 18/05/2022 11:05

Who the hell do they think they are?!
Pathetic losers - they need to get a grip and stop reaching for reasons to play the angry adult (EX)stepchild. They need to look closer to home at their parents if they’re bitter and angry as adults about birthday parties they never had when they were kids.

You’re well shot of all of them all OP. I hope your DS had a lovely birthday.

Knifer · 18/05/2022 13:20

This reply has been deleted

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I want to respond to this because it seems unfair. I hosted sleepovers, they had friends round for a tea party, of course they had multiple presents- she means like hiring a hall or a soft play or something. I know this from when she screamed at me when she was sixteen that I had never booked a disco for any of them. I know what I did. I also did only tea parties for my own now teen DC until years after me and ex broke up because I couldn't afford it and I didn't treat any of them differently.

OP posts:
Greensleeves · 18/05/2022 13:24

Honestly, my suspicion is that you are copping for all the banked-up resentment against their useless parents, purely BECAUSE you were the only safe parent figure they ever had, and they still aren't secure enough with their parents to actually put the blame where it belongs.

None of which is even remotely your problem or your responsibility. It's very sad, but you have done your best for them, and now it's time to move on completely. Block them and try not to dwell on it, would be my advice - they have a huge amount of work to do if they are going to salvage themselves from the damage their parents have done to them, but it doesn't involve you any more.

justamushypea · 18/05/2022 13:33

Much as I love some of these responses and they would be so satisfying to send, I would actually ignore the message and block her.
You don't owe her an explanation and you shouldn't have to justify yourself.
You have moved on, you are happier now and your children love you and know what a great Mum you are.
Tighten up all the security on your social media accounts and carry on living your best life.

crj123 · 18/05/2022 13:35

This reply has been deleted

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Are ye drinking?

Beamur · 18/05/2022 13:38

I feel quite sorry for your former SD. She's obviously still harbouring a lot of resentment about her childhood. I would go as far as to hazard she's especially angry with you because you were kind to her while you were with her father. This is a 'Mum fail' argument except you were not her Mum.
Tbh I wouldn't respond in anger as this will just further entrench her bitterness with you and you won't actually feel better for it.
This is still an upset child's voice speaking about rejection.
Personally I would respond briefly, say you're sorry she feels so angry about that and wish her well. Don't try and explain or apologise.
My DSC - who I still see and get on fine with were amazed by hearing what I actually did for them growing up - as they didn't see it and just assumed that either the fairies did the laundry etc, DSD was astonished when I told her I had made their packed lunches for years and they had assumed Dad had done it because he took them to school... Nope, it was me at night and I had already left for work in the morning. Plus me that had bought the lunch things and always made sure there were the things they liked.
My point being, that kids (in my experience) are much better at noticing what they don't have rather than what they do have, or having much curiousity about how the food appears or the clean clothes.

Coachwork · 18/05/2022 13:43

We all know the reply she deserves but engaging will get you nowhere. Block and try to forget, you know the truth.

HOTHotPeppers · 18/05/2022 13:48

I'd probably give in to temptation reply along the lines of 'I'm sorry your parents failed you so badly and I'm sorry that you have such a miserable life. I tried my best to help you'.

But it's probably best to ignore.

Tamzo85 · 18/05/2022 13:57

@Knifer That’s different. From your post it seemed like you didn’t bother to get presents or do anything because “it was the parent’s responsibility” - which seemed very cold, and I was responding to that because I can’t imagine being in the same house as any child, knowing it’s their birthday and they’re not getting anything and not bothering.

Perhaps you could have done more, but you did something which is different than what I thought you were saying. If I were you I’d just leave this in the past and not respond. Nothing good will come of a response other than more back and forth - and how well do you really know this woman now? Maybe she has problems and things will escalate, you don’t want that.

ifIwerenotanandroid · 18/05/2022 14:04

@Tamzo85 you seem to have missed this in the OP:

. I bought all the birthday and Christmas presents, and I made every birthday cake, exactly how they wanted

EurovisionTragic · 18/05/2022 14:14

I'd reply:

Sorry, who are you ?

WhatATimeToBeAlive · 18/05/2022 14:29

EurovisionTragic · 18/05/2022 14:14

I'd reply:

Sorry, who are you ?

Ha ha, this! Or "Fuck Off" and block.

Knifer · 18/05/2022 14:34

@Tamzo85

I assure you, I couldn't have done more. Not only did I not have the money, I had split myself first four (their dad and them) and then six ways (my dc) in order to give everyone what I didn't have and what I didn't see modelled in my stepfamily as a child. By the end of that relationship I was clinically burnt out, traumatised and barely remembered I had needs too. A decade of never getting anything right and being everyone's whipping boy took its toll but I kept going until the bitter end. Like I said, I know what I did and I don't have anything to apologise for or any reflection to do over whether or not I could have done it differently or bigger or better than I did. I was one very young woman raising three children not her own and not even old enough to even be their parent. And unless you've been in a relationship with a sociopath, you don't know what it is to be the frog in the slowly boiling water.

I gave them everything that I had to give and worked all the hours I could to give it to them. They could have had better if their good for nothing parents had paid a penny toward their upbringing but that is not on me.

OP posts:
Knifer · 18/05/2022 15:17

I still haven't replied. I've just left it. I don't want to invite a response and I don't want to engage really but equally I feel very unfairly maligned and I want to tell her and her siblings that they'd probably have been living in squalor and eventually ended up in care if it wasn't for me, but as it stands, they had almost ten years of a decent upbringing and while they may not feel they owe me thanks, I'm not owed nastiness either.

There's virtually no chance of them not realising that I gave them everything they had that was good, because when I went, all the funds and the thought and attention to detail came with me. Though the older two were into their teens by then, they will also have noted that the lack of fancy birthday parties was not remedied by either of their parents and that their allowance which found its way into their pockets presumably by magic, ceased to do so when I left my horrible ex. That their on tap taxi service dried up because their shiftless parents didn't drive. That they had nobody to ask for that new top, or those trainers, or this eyeliner, that fragrance etc, because their parents would rather smoke and drink their money in the pub than kit their kids out. Maybe THAT is what they're really mad at. That they know I did it all and that I left and devoted my money and time solely to myself and my children before eventually meeting my husband. Maybe it's not about birthday parties at all as much as it's about the fact that my children are getting what they thought was their due and they're mad that their own parents didn't step up and fill the void.

I'd feel very sorry for them if they hadn't been abusive little bastards themselves. I asked a genuine friend to check on their social media in case any of the three former stepchildren had posted any of the photos of my son's party. They haven't, but she said their pages tell quite the story. Lots of disrespectful language toward women from one of them, talks about tussles with the police and the one I suspect of contacting me has been complaining in a public forum about a restraining order a neighbour has against them. So they haven't improved.

OP posts:
DangerNoodles · 18/05/2022 16:31

Block and don't engage OP.

They are up for a fight, in thier mind you are the bad guy and nothing you can say will change that. Also, if they have form for harassing people then things could really escalate.

Best thing to do is to ignore the messege, block them and tighten up your social media.

It sounds like you did your best for them even though they aren't your children. Thier anger should be directed at thier parents.

Beamur · 18/05/2022 16:56

I think you're better off not replying fwiw.
I suspect you hit the nail on the head with this reflection.

maybe it's not about birthday parties at all as much as it's about the fact that my children are getting what they thought was their due and they're mad that their own parents didn't step up and fill the void

Comedycook · 18/05/2022 17:00

In the grand scheme of "evil" I'd say not hosting a birthday party is pretty low down on the list...

Anyway...my take on it and I love a a bit of amateur psychology. They know their parents are shit and are deeply hurt. They do not want to acknowledge that their actual parents didn't care because it's too painful so they are blaming you and you're the scapegoat.

Console yourself that you actually did a really good job and probably benefitted them more than they will ever want to admit to.

Comedycook · 18/05/2022 17:06

And you know what I wouldn't ignore that.

I'd rise above it and send a message saying

"Hi, I hope you're well. I'm very sorry you feel like that. In the years that I was a part of your life, I'd tried my hardest in difficult circumstances to be a positive and caring person in your life. I had a delicate balancing act as I was conscious of not stepping on your biological mums toes. I cared very much for you and am hurt that you have disregarded all I did and only concentrated on what I didn't do. I wish you all the best for the future"

justamushypea · 18/05/2022 17:09

Beamur · 18/05/2022 16:56

I think you're better off not replying fwiw.
I suspect you hit the nail on the head with this reflection.

maybe it's not about birthday parties at all as much as it's about the fact that my children are getting what they thought was their due and they're mad that their own parents didn't step up and fill the void

This is what I was going to say.
They behaved badly because they had no moral guidance from their parents and you did the best you could at the time (a lot of which is more than I would have done for my own stepkids and I love the pair of them)
Now they just resent you for leaving without even realising that their Dad was the reason you left, or maybe it is easier to resent you than face up to what he really is.
You and your children are well out of such a dysfunctional fuck up of a family and it's great that you are giving them such a lovely childhood now.

Sswhinesthebest · 18/05/2022 18:36

Let’s give them the benefit of the doubt. They might be feeling very hurt that the only good thing in their life left them, aka you.

This is no excuse for the nastiness, but they were obviously mixed up before they met you and then your influence stopped, and they had to suffer on their own again.

Not saying you shouldn’t have left, but perhaps you could understand why they’ve acted/are acting the way they are. Feel sorry for them still.

HomeSick2 · 18/05/2022 20:20

I think id have to reply saying how much I thank God every day since that they were no longer my step children.