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Step-parenting

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Should my partner of 7mnths know whether he’s ready to take on my kids?

120 replies

unknownn · 17/02/2026 13:05

I’ve been nervous to post this because I don’t want this to come across badly, because I know my boyfriend is such a gorgeous lovely person and everything he feels comes from a place of care. But I just wanted some advice on my situation.

I have been with my boyfriend for 7 months. I have two young children, 20 months & a 3 year old. Initially I was very against the idea of him meeting the kids until at least a year, but we decided around 6 months that it was the best thing for us to introduce him but only as a friend, & only once or twice a month for a few hours. The kids are too young to understand that there is a romantic connection & so I felt comfortable with this. Just to clarify, my boyfriend is 35, has done very well for himself in life, in a very secure position & loves his life. He has never really been around children before & part of him wanting to meet them was to help him envision what life with 2 toddlers looks like. After meeting them a handful of times he did openly express that parents are incredible for the craziness we face everyday, & he can also see how rewarding & lovely it is. He’s always wanted a family & he knows that’s what he wants in his future, whether they’re his blood children or not. He says he wouldn’t waste my time if he didn’t genuinely want this to work, but he does openly say that he needs a little while to adjust to life with children, as it’s 0-100 for him.

Anyway, my boyfriend’s love language is acts of service, & I feel so unbelievably cared for through his actions. He’s also very great at complimenting me, I’ve never felt so confident with someone in my life. But I’ve noticed recently that I’m putting a wall up slightly as he’s not very expressive with his feelings. I feel like compliments are observations, not emotional vulnerability, and it’s making me feel odd.

I communicated this to him, & we figured out that he really struggles to separate me from the kids. He’s a massive over thinker & he’s scared of being openly expressive with me, until he’s 100% that he’s going to basically step up into that parent figure role.
I’ve expressed that his feelings for me will be separate to the children, & that it’s going to take a lot longer to build a relationship with them compared to me. But because he won’t express himself properly, it’s pushing me away, & it comes across like he has a lot of hesitation about the whole situation.

I know everything he’s doing is because he has the kids best interests at heart, he was a child of divorce & he wants to be 100% that were going to work so that never has to happen to my kids. But unfortunately we can’t predict the future & his overthinking is too much.

I personally believe that yes, he does need time to adjust to a family way of life, but it doesn’t take a year to know wether you can handle the responsibility of two young children, and wether your life is going to fit with that. Deep down he should know whether he genuinely wants this in his life or not.

Do you think I’m being too pushy expecting him to know whether he’s ready to take on 2 children or not at only 7 months, & having only met them a handful of times? Or am I correct in my thinking? As how long do I wait for him to decide whether he’s wants this in his life or not? I’m trying to put myself in his shoes - having never been around children before & trying to comprehend what life looks like, but I do think he either wants the hard work of having two children in his life or he doesn’t.

What do you think? And how can I approach this with him?

OP posts:
SummerFeverVenice · 17/02/2026 17:23

Do you think I’m being too pushy expecting him to know whether he’s ready to take on 2 children or not at only 7 months, & having only met them a handful of times?

Yes you are. He has only met the children a few times. How can he know if he would be a good step father or whether your two parenting styles would clash? It hasn’t been 7 months since he was introduced to the kids, it has only been 1 month. In addition, it’s not just what he thinks or feels, you need to assess how your young children feel being around him. If they aren’t comfortable, it’s not going to work no matter how much you and he want it to.

Frenchfrychic · 17/02/2026 17:25

Whoa you need to calm down op. 7 months and you’re asking this dude if he will take on your kids. That’s just so so inadvisble. In two or three years maybe, but no you don’t ask boyfriends of several months to take on your kids. Why on earth would you think that’s ok.

of you’re struggling as a single parent then you need to find a way to deal with this, not behave so desperate.

take the convo off the table, tell him you don’t know what you were thinking, right now it’s about you both,and getting to know each other.

Dazedandconfus · 17/02/2026 17:26

I think he sounds like he's a nice man and you should try and just enjoy dating him for now.

The fact he's still around, knowing that you have young children, and having met them, is nice - but he can't even really know himself yet what he wants in the future.

Be happy he's potentially keen for a future, but don't put pressure on.
Enjoy your relationship, enjoy your lovely kids, and see where it goes.
Personally I think if he was saying he was definitely up for taking on the kids at this early stage, it would seem a bit insincere. I think going about it slowly is the best way.
Good luck for the future, but relax and don't listen to people telling you he should know already. Just tell them that you think it's too soon and you're happy seeing where it goes.

HeadyLamarr · 17/02/2026 17:40

At 7 months this is a very new relationship. He shouldn't have met your tiny children yet, which you know because your original intent was to leav it a year.

His comment about the "craziness" is telling you it's not for him. He's barely met them, and you're knee-deep in the early years of nappies and toddler tantrums. These are hard enough when it's your own kids!

Back off. You're a big red flag and you need to shift the focus away from your new boyfriend and back on your young children.

PiSqd · 17/02/2026 17:46

You started dating when your child was 1 year old? Sorry, I don’t get that at all. I had a friend who did similar and I honestly think it’s bizarre that in a lovely new baby bubble you’d seek outside validation. Just my opinion.

regarding him “taking on” the kids, I don’t think 7 months is long enough at all to be even considering it. It should be about you and him - not whether he wants to be a stepdad. Yes, you come as a package, but that should only extend to instances where you need to put your kids first, eg. He doesn’t have the right to be annoyed if you can’t make a date because you need to care for your kids.

He shouldn’t even had met them.

Blended families are hard work. He’s right to be taking it cautiously. I would have been gone like a shot.

FreeFromWhat · 17/02/2026 17:54

Deep down he should know whether he genuinely wants this in his life or not

After 7 months he couldn't possibly know.

FreeFromWhat · 17/02/2026 17:57

but it doesn’t take a year to know wether you can handle the responsibility of two young children, and wether your life is going to fit with that

I meant to quote this part. Of course it can take way longer than a year.
The responsibility is massive. You must know that.

Gonnagetgoingreturnsagain · 17/02/2026 18:02

HeadyLamarr · 17/02/2026 17:40

At 7 months this is a very new relationship. He shouldn't have met your tiny children yet, which you know because your original intent was to leav it a year.

His comment about the "craziness" is telling you it's not for him. He's barely met them, and you're knee-deep in the early years of nappies and toddler tantrums. These are hard enough when it's your own kids!

Back off. You're a big red flag and you need to shift the focus away from your new boyfriend and back on your young children.

Agree with you about the craziness probably not being for him. If he’s in love/lust with you then of course he’ll overlook it but if he moves in and has to cope with being a step parent he will realise it is a different kettle of fish.

MeatyMagda · 17/02/2026 18:03

IAmKerplunk · 17/02/2026 14:13

Even if today your bf turned to you and said yes he is ready to take them on and have a step father role, he could change his mind next week purely because your relationship is so young.

Well, exactly. It wouldn’t give you any more security if he were to say right now ‘yes, I want to commit to you and your children forever’. It would just be words. He could still end the relationship at any point for any reason.

Gonnagetgoingreturnsagain · 17/02/2026 18:03

My stepdad met my mum when he was in his 20s and she in her 30s. He said in the past he was maybe too young to take on 2 young children.

Blushingm · 17/02/2026 18:12

Yes - 7 months is nothing and 2 step kids is a huge commitment

Tablesandchairs23 · 17/02/2026 18:23

You've been together just a few months. He's right to be cautious. Why should he know do soon if he wants to be part of the family.

BerryTwister · 17/02/2026 18:27

Way too soon OP.

I've been with my partner for 10 years, and when we met, my kids were 7 and 10, and his were older teens. We met each other's kids after about 6 months. Although my partner comes on holiday with me and my kids, and sees them when he visits 3 times a week, he still hasn't moved in or taken on a paternal role.

At 7 months into the relationship, we didn't even know if we were committed to each other, never mind each other's families!

I would actually be suspicious of someone who was ready to "take on" the young children of someone he barely knows. I think it would be at best naive and at worst sinister.

DestinedToBeOutlived · 17/02/2026 18:29

7 months? I'm just coming up to 7 years with my dp and we haven't moved in together. My kids are older and he does quite a bit for them at this point, but this has been gradual over the course of years, and we may possibly move in together next year, but my kids come first and I'm fully aware what a commitment dc are and they need stability. I wouldn't have even contemplated a meeting at 7 months let alone expect dp to take a parenting role with my dc.

Remember you never really know someone properly until about 2 years in ime.

Rayqueen2026 · 17/02/2026 18:47

7months wow, I made the determined effort to stay single and work at being a good stable mum and a good life for 5 years, then unexpectedly met someone and went out for another 3 before he met my kids all choices we made together. We've now been married 15 years and have a much bigger family and an lovely blended one from 2-16...however just because he hasn't been around kids doesn't mean it won't work, my dh hadn't other than nieces and turned out to be a super good dad to all and I adore him

BudgetBuster · 17/02/2026 20:31

@unknownn
I say this all as a step-parent.... please calm down. You are a walking red flag. 2 tiny children need stability. They need a stable mother focused on them... not some random man showing up in their life "taking them on".

Absolutely continue your relationship but leave your kids out of it for another year. They are too young to have to deal with this. And your partner CANNOT know after only 7 months if he can commit to 2 children he doesnt know.

It's worrying that you said you wouldn't introduce before a year bug changed that (significantly) and now after he's only basically seen them a few hours, you're trying to say he should know if he's committed or not? Like... read your post back to yourself. It's absolutely crazy.

Hopefully your relationship continues and when your kids have more stability then they can be reintroduced and start to build a relationship. But if you want a real relationship, you need to take your time.... you nor this man can even know if you'd want to commit to eachother at this stage, not really. Nevermind kids in the mix and kids so young at that.

I'm not saying this to be nasty. I'm saying it so that hopefully you take something on board and put less pressure on the entire relationship. Just enjoy eachother for now.

HowBizxarre · 17/02/2026 20:35

It's all just a receipe for a disaster 🙈

Your all full of love hormones atm, your not seeing or thinking clearly.

If he's such an amazing fantastic person and he's done so well for himself, why hasnt he had a family already at his age?

The chances of this going terribly wrong are very high and the chances of him being not so nice are also very high. Be careful

redjeans28 · 17/02/2026 20:56

If I was your boyfriend, I'd run a mile. Why can't you just date for a few years? Absolutely no need for him to be so involved.

Minnie798 · 17/02/2026 21:32

Yes you are being too pushy. You have very young children and have only known him for 7 months.
It sounds like he doesn't have any of his own children either, so there is no way he can know the realities of 'taking on' two very young children that aren't his.
I agree with others , there are red flags in your expectations.

wishfulthinking25 · 17/02/2026 21:42

Please, just prioritise your kids.

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