Stepmoms Speak

2 12 2008

The L-Word

Guest columnist Izzy Rose is stepmom of two boys, The Tall One and The Young One. The following post is reprinted here with permission from her excellent blog at www.stepmothersmilk.com.

Earlier this summer, The Young One claimed he was suffering from “separation anxiety” (his words).He hadn’t seen his mom for months and he was missing her with intensity. His dismal mood was made evident by slumped shoulders, apathetic table manners and a dramatic display of affection. The kid was oozing with emotion, of the Soap Opera variety. For example, when his dad went out to the garage, The Young One would treat it as a formal departure.

“Bye, Daddy. I love you.” 

“I’m not going anywhere. I’m just going to the garage.”

“I know. I just love you, anyway.”

He started throwing that L-word around like it was losing popularity.

“Bye, Daddy. I love you. Bye.”

Poor kid. Heartbreaking times. His nerves were fried. He’d reached his threshold of ten-year-old bravery. It had been too long. He needed his mom, the original, not the step. Mama Bird was still living in California and we’d moved on to Texas. Video-chat was not cutting it. He was tired of talking to her forehead.  

The husband recognized that his little man was no tough guy, and indulged him. “Love you, too.” With that, he’d close the door to the bathroom and leave The Young One standing in the hall, waving a tragic goodbye.

I know. You want to take him under your bird wing and let him cry it out, don’t you? Well, this essay is actually not about separation anxiety. It’s about the L-word.

 Let’s talk about love.

I noticed during The Young One’s mini-crisis that his freedom with the L-word left me feeling very uncomfortable with my own reluctance to release the sappy sentiment. Why was I withholding?

A recent story in New York magazine asks, do parents really love their adopted children differently than their own offspring? A similar question can be posed to stepparents. Can stepparents really love their stepkids like they were their own flesh and blood? I’ve got to be honest. I think the answer is yes and no.

This love business. It’s a tricky thing.

I believe that with stepchildren, falling in love isn’t always instant. Just because you adore their father doesn’t mean you immediately fancy his kids. Or them, you. Why would this relationship be automatic? Women screen men for years before they find one to truly cherish. Our love is selective, isn’t it?

As much as I like the blissful act of letting go, of finally giving in to love with reckless abandon, I don’t say the L-word until I really mean it. Not only is this my rule for the man; it’s my rule for his kids, too.

I believe that with stepchildren, falling in love isn’t always instant.

I’ve always felt like society expects women to feel tenderness for anything with a heartbeat. Just because I have lady-parts, I’m supposed to love all of humanity? How did this ridiculous rumor get started?

I admit it. This confession makes me wonder if I’m missing a maternal gene. Perhaps my DNA is botched. Whatever the case, I hope my honesty here gives me a little absolution.

When The Husband and I got together, there were many who assumed that I’d fallen for all three of them. They expected that since I’d become an overnight mother of sorts, my natural, maternal instincts kicked in. Again, sorry to disappoint, but I did not feel this way. I wasn’t going to donate a kidney should either one of them get sick. Not right away.

Now, let me be clear, I thought the boys were lovely and I was very fond of them. But neither party was gushing l’amour. We were not living out a fairy tale. It was awkward. And, I thought our hesitation made the situation very real and strangely, comforting.

It wasn’t until over three years into our relationship that the words escaped my lips. One evening, I sat on the edge of The Young One’s bed, feeling sad for him and his nostalgia for the way things were, and it just hit me. I love this kiddo. I said, “Hey weirdo, I love you.”

And instantly, I knew I meant it.





Stepmoms Speak

12 11 2008

Christina Hines is the author of Navigational Skills for Stepfamilies. The following is an excerpt from her book. Used with permission.

Lack of Awareness

When we navigate without awareness, we still remember the “Wicked” Stepmother in our Cinderella stories. We live inside the lingo, the language of “Broken Homes” and “Step” and everyone suffers on all levels. “Broken” takes on a tone as If there is something fundamentally wrong that will always be fundamentally wrong. Step has a tone as if someone is stepping on someone else’s toes or property, as if by stepping “in and on” you are doing something morally illegal.

Inside of this broken stepping on toes limited thinking…. 

We teach our children that love has conditions. “You are free to love everyone! Except the woman who now lives with your father.”

We provide our children with “Disney Land” weekends to ease the guilt we feel inside of us for not being there in the day-to-day.

We get divorced and cling fiercely to making sure our children experience “family traditions” only we don’t stop to understand what we are really doing to them.

Let’s see how this works. We tell our children “Get dressed, brush your teeth, eat breakfast, put your jacket on – you are going to Dad’s for three hours to have his tradition. Next, while you are in mid-play, you will need to put your jacket back on, come back home, we’ll drive to grandma’s and have our tradition (notice, at Dad’s you had HIS tradition but when you are with me, you are having “Our” tradition.) Take your jacket off and then mid-play, you will need to put your jacket back on. Next; we will get back in the car, drive to our house. Take off your jacket it’s time for bed! Now wasn’t that fun?

Children literally spend half of the day in the car. A quarter of the day taking their jackets off and putting their jackets back on.  A quarter of the day just digging into a wonderful play experience only to have it cut short once again.

Family traditions start to take on a tone of hurry up, let’s go, wasn’t that fun and we do this for your sake. Children’s little heads spin. They can’t remember whom they are playing with and everything feels to the child like there isn’t enough time. We literally teach our children how to not focus fully. We teach our children how not to experience something fully and then we label and medicate them when they can’t seem to focus.

More of what’s Inside of this broken stepping on toes limited thinking…

We send them over to the other parent’s house exclaiming “Oh I will miss you so much while you are gone,” and then the child spends half the time at the other parent’s house worrying about how lonely and upset the other parent is with visions of the “missing” parent crying missing them so much and unable to enjoy their time fully because they are too busy worrying about the other parent’s experience. We teach our children to always feel like something is missing.

We get out of one relationship to get right back into the “same” relationship with someone else or we go for someone completely different and spend all our time comparing, complaining and “pining” for what we no longer have when we didn’t enjoy what we had when we had it. Never fully enjoying our present moments.

We watch a child grow and develop and we have reverence for the process yet we have no tolerance and lack reverence, time or patience for the emotional evolutionary process of growth and development that needs to happen inside of marriages or inside of divorces or our remarriages.

We treat our children like partners and our partners like children.

We ignore our pain, bury it, pretend it doesn’t exist and we hide behind children using them as an excuse on why we can’t move on or worse, we use them like bait on a fishing rod to attract a potential parent for them verses trying to attract a partner for us who will eventually be a good stepparent.

We set our new relationships up to be stressful and chaotic because we didn’t take the time to process our emotions and then we get mad at our new partner for expecting us to be fully present to them.

We expect our new partners to love and accept our children and us unconditionally while we don’t accept and love them unconditionally.

We set the stepparent up by sabotaging their relationship with our children by bending the rules when the stepparent isn’t home or by blatantly coming out and saying, “I don’t mind but your stepmother is on my back.”

We set our children up to feel abandoned and to resent the person who does what we do for our children – by allowing our children to sleep in bed with us at night and then “kicking” them out when an adult comes into the picture.

We blame the “other” parent when our children lie, manipulate or act out on our time with the children. We say the children are doing that because of who the other parent is and oh what a great parent we are.

 We blame the stepparent for pointing out our children’s behaviors and focus on the stepparent instead of focusing on parenting our children 

Women walk around comparing themselves to each other while competing for who’s better, prettier, has a better body, looks younger, makes more money, has a better house. As if a child cares about any of those things. (Who is that really about?)

Men are so confused, not knowing who to listen to, the biological mother or the stepmother. Knowing perfectly well that he’s completely screwed either way, lying to each woman causing more problems for themselves crying, “Women are crazy people!”

We haven’t learned to “play nice” inside of our adult relationships while we tell our children to “play nice” with others. Or, we no longer care about teaching our children how to play nice, we would rather they think of only themselves. We haven’t learned to share the joys of child rearing while we tell our child to share or, we tell our children that they don’t have to share. We haven’t learned to respect each other while we tell children to respect others or, we don’t care if our children respect others and enjoy our children’s ability to be fully self expressed to the point of pure rudeness. We play a lot of ego oriented superficial games and waste our time and life energy on things that do not matter and have absolutely nothing to do with our children.

With all or half of this going on inside of the lives of stepfamilies, it’s easy to see why there is so much stress involved. Most of it has nothing to do with being a parent or having a child. Children are not the problem at all. Most of it has to do with our inability to navigate the issues that belong to us.

http://www.lulu.com/content/2743477





Stepmoms Speak

29 10 2008

Diane Fromme is a writer and 13-year veteran stepmom to Brittany (22) and Ian (20), who were six and four when their mother died. Her upcoming book, Stepparenting the Grieving Child, offers an insider’s guide to navigating the unique joys and challenges of living with a child whose parent has died. For more information and to sign up for her newsletter, go to www.dianefromme.com. You can also check out her blog. Here is the opening excerpt from her book. Printed with permission.

How Did I Get Here?
By Diane Fromme 

“We must be willing to let go of the life we planned so as to have the life that is waiting for us.” – E.M. FORSTER

Fall, 1993

The blue of seven-year-old Brittany’s eyes matched that of the cloudless sky over the softball field. I had offered to watch Brittany and her younger brother Ian at the playground adjoining the field while Brian, my fiancé and their father, played a tournament game.

 It was the first time I’d ever looked purposefully into her eyes. I think I was afraid of what I might find there, just one year after the children had lost their mother to cancer. But in Brittany’s eyes I saw an unexpected calm. Only the slight, purplish-grey smudges underneath yielded a clue of strain; dark crescents in the soft, ivory skin.  When the sunlight would flicker across her eyes, I also saw questions. Unspoken questions and no answers.  Ian’s eyes were a little darker than Brittany’s: seawater blue. He was so active that I couldn’t get a deeper look. Ian was five and if he showed any sign of mourning it was masked by his nearly constant motion.  The kids dug around in the wood chips near the swings, climbed on the geo structure, and played a fantasy game concocted from the depths of their imaginations. Sometimes I let my gaze wander over to the action on the softball field, but most of the time I studied the children. I was taken with the creamy perfection one finds in the faces of the young. Their constant jabbering amused me.  I wondered what they’d been through, losing their mother. I couldn’t connect from my own experience – I had just spoken to my mother that morning – and so felt a distance from any understanding of their pain.  When Ian asked me to take him to the bathroom, he didn’t look at me but he did grab for my hand. I wasn’t used to being around children in recent years. The little hand felt strange at first, but overall warm and good.”We could get used to each other,” I thought. “This could work out just fine.”    

~

I clearly recall that when I was considering marrying Brian, everything lined up in my logical view of the world. I liked children: as a teenager I had been a youth leader and a day-camp counselor, and in my mid-twenties I mentored an at-risk, ten-year-old girl.  Now, close to thirty, I had met a man who was kind, intelligent, and sensitive, and I was actually eager to help him and his children move forward in the aftermath of his wife’s and their mother’s death.

What I didn’t know anything about was the distinct nature of stepfamily formation, its singular undulations and patterns, coupled with the effects of grief and the possible ways grief can manifest over the years. So without much further study than snapshot observations of the children, I launched optimistically forward into “I do,” which became a union of husband and wife and two children, not to mention two dogs and three cats. I also didn’t realize that Brittany and Ian’s mom, though deceased, was an essential part of our new family.  

In many ways, my blissful optimism was healthy: When you’re moving into the role of stepparent, it’s beneficial to become educated and gain assistance early on, during a time when you’re feeling positive and hopeful. And when you’re adding the challenge of stepparenting after a parent has died, some level of grief education is also vital. Of course it’s not too late to shore up your knowledge. Thank goodness, because I didn’t seek help right away.  

After many years of “let’s try this” stepparenting, followed by many years of research about what the experts recommend, my formula for successful stepparenting after a parent dies looks closest to this:  

Willing Attitude + Stepfamily and Grief Education + Support Resources = Sane Stepparenting   Grab hold of the opportunity to explore all parts of this equation, while at the same time reflect on how you arrived in a family where a child’s parent has died.





Stepmoms Speak

28 10 2008

Karon Goodman lives in Alabama with her husband of eleven years and is the mom of one son (22) and stepmom of two (22 and 18). She is the author of several books, including three for stepmoms. Her latest release is “Stepping Stones for Stepmoms: Everyday Strength for a Blended Family Mom,” which helps guide the new and even seasoned stepmom through the stages of steplife: Beginning, Struggling, Coping and Growing. Find her at: http://stepjourney.blogspot.com

Decide to adopt a long-range view while living in the moment.

By Karon Goodman

Sounds contradictory, doesn’t it? Actually, it’s a practice that allows you to live in peace and joy because you’re a relaxed and powerful stepmom. This is when you’re keeping your faith but it’s tough, you’re pressing through your latest crisis the best you can, and your stepson walks up and gives you an unexpected hug. Will that hug solve the crisis you’re battling? No, but taking the time to live in that hug for a moment will make you more able to solve the crisis you’re battling.

Sure, it’s hard to laugh with a stepchild over breakfast when you have the screaming telephone message her mom left ringing in your ears. But a stepmom’s strongest suit may be her ability to focus on two things at once-to enjoy right now even if you’ve got to sit beside your stepkids’ mom at a ballgame in an hour and keep your faith in the future you see years from now when their mom is far less intrusive in your life.

This decision gives you the ability to appreciate the blessings of an isolated moment when your world feels upside down-because your confidence is strong in your staying power for the long-term. You can decide that you’re unwilling to give up easily, even when it hurts, because you trust something good is coming, and you’ll rest in the joys along the way. All of the decisions we’ve discussed so far come together here, in this one, because everything else you practice and claim for yourself will empower you to adopt a long-range view while living in the moment.

The more positive and confident you feel about your steplife in the long term, the better short-term management you’ll have. Looking at your world with a view way down the road gives you lots of room to maneuver, lots of time to experiment, lots of grace to adapt to whatever happens.

And when you keep your eyes on the future yet to come, you aren’t so scared of the right now. You trust yourself and your spouse to handle things so that the long-range life you see in your heart is still reachable. You trust your abilities and resourcefulness and strength to deal with the issues at hand and-here’s the best part of this decision-even somehow put them all to use for a better long-range view than you had before.

Often that will simply be part of decision number 4, where we learn from everything that happens, but many times the sum will be greater than its parts, and the struggle we conquer today will serve us many times over in the future. And if we’ve already decided to get to that future we see, we use today’s distraction as a stepping stone, a great big slab we can jump up and down on because we’re powerful enough to create peace in our present and promise for our future.

Meet each day with this decision, and whatever happens falls into the perspective you’ve assigned it-the place where you’re committed to having a great life now and later.

Decide to adopt a long-range view while living in the moment. Then live it. That’s power you have if you’ll use it. This decision is another step toward making things better.

Action Plan:

1. Put a picture of a clock on your computer or refrigerator or dashboard, wherever you’ll see it regularly. Let it remind you that you only have twenty-four hours in each day. You don’t have to solve every problem in one day, but trust you’ll find or create at least one reason to rejoice every day, probably more than one.

2. Monitor your progress in dealing with a difficult issue. Note that it may take a long time and tremendous effort, but let that encourage you to give other issues the time and attention they need as well. Pace yourself.

3. Think about a personal goal you hope to accomplish within the next five years. How will you factor that goal into your other steplife hopes and dreams? Spend some time talking with your husband about it, and enjoy that time together even if your hopes and dreams are a long way from coming to pass. Time spent discussing them today makes them more real tomorrow.





Stepmoms Speak

28 10 2008

Dads Are People Too
By Gina Shuster

Gina and her husband married in September 2000. Together they have two sons, 6 and 3. Gina works from her home in New Jersey. Gina’s husband has joint custody of his 12-year-old daughter. The schedule itself can be challenging, but otherwise, Gina gets along well with her stepdaughter’s mom, which means she has less conflict in her life than many stepmoms have. Although Gina has a relatively good situation, she has still found that life in a blended family definitely has challenges: her sons not getting to see their sister every day, nor she them; dealing with planning; adjustments to different parenting styles in each home, to name a few. She is the founder of an online forum for stepmoms: www.stepmomstation.com.

Historically, mothers are viewed as the nurturers and fathers are viewed as the breadwinners. When couples with children divorce, there are many assumptions:

– He left his wife, presumably for a “younger model”
– He doesn’t want to be a full-time father
– She is now left alone, saddened and penniless

…as well as many other stereotypical assumptions.

While this may certainly be the case in some situations, it’s most definitely not in all, and in fact, is true in the minority rather than the majority of families.

Time was when even the court system saw fit to provide custody of the children to the mother, with the father allowed every other weekend visitation and told to pay child support. It wasn’t the norm for children to live with their father, and joint custody was something most of us hadn’t heard of until recent years.

Welcome to the 21st century!

News flash: Fathers want to be parents, and in fact, are parents. Many people forget that in a divorce situation. Many look to the mother to make decisions, even simple ones such as getting a child’s haircut or what clothes the child should wear.

As the owner and an active member of Stepmom Station, I’ve seen many situations, running the gamut of custodial schedules and support orders. More often than not, I’ve seen fathers who want to be involved, who want to love their children, who want input, but are often met with resistance from the ex-wife and even from family members and outsiders.

When parents divorce, they divorce their partner; they do not divorce their children! No one knows the full extent of any situation except for the two parties involved, so the automatic assumption that it was his idea to divorce or that he cheated is unfair. In fact, in my own blended family situation, it was my husband’s ex-wife who wanted the divorce. (And no, she wasn’t cheating.) It’s also completely irrelevant to his parental status.

Fathers aren’t bad guys. Maybe some weren’t the best partner, but that can be said for some ex-wives as well. I see too many fathers kowtowing to their ex and her whims for fear of losing their children. Why? The children are his too. She doesn’t get to decide if he can be their father. He is their father. One does not lose their parental title by virtue of divorce. A dad should still be there to provide love, discipline, financial and emotional support and everything else that he was providing up to that point.

It’s high time that society recognizes the equality of fathers as parents in more areas than just the wallet. That would be best started by these fathers recognizing as much. Hey guys, you may not be Mommy, but no one else is Daddy.

Have advice to share? Email Jacque.





Stepmoms Speak

27 10 2008

 Maureen McHugh lives in Austin, Texas with her husband. She’s a novelist and freelancer. Her stepson, Adam, is 22 and finishing an engineering degree. They IM a lot, especially, but not exclusively, when he needs money. (Seriously, he is proof that sometimes it all works out. And he gave her permission to publish this essay.) Visit Maureen’s website.

The Evil Stepmom

By Maureen F. McHugh

My nine-year-old stepson, Adam, and I were coming home from kung fu. “Maureen,” Adam said – he calls me “Maureen” because he was seven when Bob and I got married and that was what he had called me before. “Maureen,” Adam said, “are we going to have a Christmas tree?”

“Yeah,” I said, “of course.” After thinking a moment. “Adam, why didn’t you think we were going to have a Christmas tree?”

“Because of the new house,” he said, rather matter-of-factly. “I thought you might not let us.”

It is strange to find that you have become the kind of person who might ban Christmas trees.

We joke about me being the evil stepmother. In fact, the joke is that I am the Nazi Evil Stepmother From Hell. It dispels tension to say it out loud. Actually, Adam and I do pretty well together. But the truth is that all stepmothers are evil. It is the nature of the relationship. It is, as far as I can tell, an unavoidable fact of step relationships.

We enter into all major relationships with no real clue of where we are going: marriage, birth, friendship. We carry maps we believe are true: our parent’s relationship, what it says in the baby book, the landscape of our own childhood. These maps are approximate at best, dangerously misleading at worst.

Dysfunctional families breed dysfunctional families. Abuse is handed down from generation to generation. That it’s all the stuff of twelve-step programs and talk shows doesn’t make it any less true or any less profound.

The map of stepparenting is one of the worst, because it is based on a lie. The lie is that you will be Mom or you will be Dad. If you’ve got custody of the child, you’re going to raise it. You’ll be there, or you won’t. Either I mother Adam, pack his lunches, go over his homework with him, drive him to and from Boy Scouts, and tell him to eat his carrots, or I’m neglecting him. After all, Adam needs to eat his carrots. He needs someone to take his homework seriously. He needs to be told to get his shoes on, it’s time for the bus. He needs to be told not to say “shit” in front of his grandmother and his teachers.

But he already has a mother, and I’m not his mother, and no matter how deserving or undeserving she is or I am, I never will be. He knows it, I know it. Stepmothers don’t represent good things for children. When I married Adam’s father it meant that Adam could not have his father and mother back together without somehow getting me out of the picture. It meant that he would have to accept a stranger who he didn’t know and maybe wouldn’t really like into his home. It meant he was nearly powerless. It doesn’t really matter that Adam’s father and mother weren’t going to get back together, because Adam wanted to see his mom, and he wanted to be with his dad, and the way that it was easiest for him to get both those things was for his parents to be together.

It’s something most stepparents aren’t prepared for because children often court the future stepparent. You’re dating, and it’s exciting. Adam was excited that his father was going to marry me. He wanted us to do things together. But a week before the wedding, he also wanted to know if his mother and father could get back together. It wasn’t that he didn’t understand that the two things were mutually exclusive; it was more that they were unrelated for him. When I came over I was company. It was fun. But real life was Mom and Dad.

Marriage stopped that. That is the first evil thing I did.

The second evil thing that stepparents do is take part of a parent away. Imagine this: You’re married, and your spouse suddenly decides to bring someone else into the household, without asking you. You’re forced to accommodate. Your spouse pays attention to the Other, and while they are paying attention to the Other, they are not paying attention to you. Imagine the Other was able to make rules. In marriages it’s called bigamy, and it’s illegal.

What’s worse for the child is that they have already lost most of one parent. Now someone else is laying claim on the remaining parent. The weapons of the stepchild are the weapons of the apparently powerless, the weapons of the guerilla. Subterfuge. Sabotage. The artless report of the hurtful things his real mother said about you. Disliking the way you set the table, not wanting you to move the furniture. And stepchildren – even more than children in non-step relationships – are hyper-alert to division between parent and stepparent.

I was thirty-three when I married. I had no children of my own and never wanted any. I’m a book person, so before I got married I went out and bought books about being a stepmother. I asked that we all do some family counseling before and during the time we were getting married. The books painted a dismal picture. Women got depressed. Women felt like maids. Women got sick. There were lots of rules – the child needs to spend some time alone with their natural parent and some time alone with their stepparent in a sort of round robin of quality time; a stepmother should have something of her own that gives her a feeling of her own identity; don’t move into their house; start a new house together if you possibly can.

I liked that there were rules so I followed them and they helped a lot (even though I suspect that, like theories of child-raising, our theories of step relationships are a fad and the advice in the books will all be different fifty years from now.) But I was still evil, and that was the most disheartening thing of all. I felt trapped in a role not of my own choosing. Becoming a stepmother redefined who I am, and nothing I did could resist that inexorable redefining. I suppose motherhood redefines who you are, too. Part of the redefinition of me has been just that – sitting on the bench with the row of anxious mothers at the Little League game or at martial arts. Going to school and being Adam’s mother. Being Adam’s mom. It has made me suddenly feel middle-aged in funny ways. I used to go through the grocery line and buy funky things like endive, a dozen doughnuts, a bottle of champagne and two tuna steaks. Now I buy carts full of cereal and hamburger and juice boxes. I used to buy overpriced jackets and expensive suits. Now I go to Sears and buy four sweat shirts and two packages of socks in the boys’ department.

When I bought endive and champagne, the checkout clerk used to ask me what I was making. But no one asks you what you are making when you buy cereal and hamburger.

Beyond all this loomed the specter of Adam at sixteen. The rebellious teenage boy from the broken home, hulking about the house, always in trouble, always resentful. Like many stepchildren, Adam came with an enormous amount of behavioral baggage. He acted out the tensions of his extended family. He was sullen, tearful, resentful of me and equally resentful of his mother. I knew that Adam was the victim in all this, but when you’re up to your ass in alligators, it is hard to remember that your original intention is to drain the swamp. I had read that I would be resentful, but nothing prepared me for a marriage that was about this alien child. I didn’t marry Adam, he didn’t marry me, and yet that is what my marriage came down to. By the time Adam was dealt with, my husband and I were too exhausted to be married.

My relationship with Adam was good, better than the relationships described in all those books. He was a happier, healthier, better-behaved child than he was when I married Bob – after all, it is easier to parent when there are two of you. People complimented me on what a fine job I had done. I was the only one who suspected that there was a coldness in the center of our relationship, which Adam and I felt. I could console myself that he was better off than he was before I married Bob, and he was. But I knew that something was a lie.

One day Adam said angrily that I treated the dog better than I treated him. Of course, I liked the dog, the dog adored me, and Adam-well, Adam and I had something of a truce. The kind of relationship a child would have with an adult who might ban Christmas trees from the house. So the accusation struck home.

I started to deal with my stepson the way I deal with my dog. Quite literally. A boy and a stepmother have a strange tension in a physical relationship. I hug Adam and I kiss him on the forehead, on the nose, anywhere but on the mouth. I am careful about how I touch him. I suspect that the call from Child Protective Services is the nightmare of every stepparent. But after his comment about the dog, I began to ruffle his hair the way I ruffle the dog’s ears. I rubbed Adam’s back. I petted him. I occasionally gave Adam a treat, the way I occasionally give the dog one. At first it was all calculated, but within a very short time, it was natural to reassure Adam.

It has made all the difference.

Adam is almost twelve, and the specter of delinquent teenager in the dysfunctional family still haunts me, but it doesn’t seem so likely at the moment. As Adam grows older, my husband and I have more time to be married.

Speaking from the land of the stepparent, I tell you, this business of being evil is hard. It is very hard. Being a stepparent is the hardest thing I have ever done. And what rewards there are, are small. No one pats me on the head for having given up the pleasures of endive and champagne and tuna steaks for spaghetti sauce and hamburger. That’s what mothers do. Except, of course, they get to be the mom.

 

 





Stepmoms Speak

27 10 2008

 Jean is a bio mom of three kids and has been a stepmom for 23 years. She’s a Soleil Lifestory Network Certified Instructor and a Heritage Makers Personal Publishing Consultant who believes everyone has stories that need to be written down and given to their families. To find out how you can publish your stories, visit her website at www.lifestorykeepsakes.com, e-mail her at jtravis42@comcast.net or call 952-831-0698.

My stepdaughter was 19 years old when she bounced into my life. She was energetic, enthusiastic, and amazingly accepting of me as the new woman in her dad’s and her life. For the first three years of our relationship, she was away at college, but came home on weekends and stayed with us during one summer. I became aware during our get-to-know-each-other period that along with her enthusiasm came a very direct communication style. She never hesitated to let me or the rest of the family know her opinions or desires.

The summer she lived with us full-time, she informed me the kids (my kids) were to stay out of her room and not get into her things. While the directness of it unnerved me a bit, I respected the request and informed my kids to steer clear of her room.  

Imagine my surprise when I came home one day, walked into my bedroom and the very private den attached to it and found her best friend and boyfriend using the phone at my desk, which was piled high with private papers. I was so choked with rage all I could do was turn around and walk out. There was no shortage of phones in the house. They were all over, in the kitchen, upstairs, downstairs, and even one right outside my stepdaughter’s bedroom door.  

Why I was able to contain myself, I’ll never completely know. I just knew I had to calm down in order to speak coherently. Two days later I told my stepdaughter I needed to talk with her. We sat at the kitchen table and I began by saying, “You know how you feel about your privacy, and how you requested the kids stay out of your private space – your bedroom?  

She nodded.  

“Well, that’s how I feel about my bedroom and my office. I wasn’t happy about your friends using my private area the other day…”  

She understood and honored my request to never send anyone into my office again. We remained good friends. She still loved to come home, and I’m so glad I had the presence of mind to calm down and not blast away. Years later she told me, “When you told me you needed to talk to me, I knew I was in big trouble!”





Stepmoms Speak

27 10 2008

I asked Laura Ruby, author of the novel I’m Not Julia Roberts (www.lauraruby.com), to answer some questions about her experience being a stepmom.  

What is your greatest challenge as a stepmom? 
 
I think it’s the general lack of control. I’m a custodial stepmom and my husband’s two girls live with us, so I’m responsible for all the day-to-day stuff that happens with kids – meals, lessons, doctors’ appointments, help with homework, discipline etc. Yet I didn’t choose this house, the neighborhood we live in, the schools they attend, the doctors they visit, etc. I do have influence, but it’s not the same. I liken the job of a stepmom to an adjunct faculty member at a college: You have all the same responsibilities as a professor, but without the respect or the benefits. 
 
How do you deal with it? 
 
There’s the general stress-relieving activities: going for a run or a walk, taking myself to a movie, watching endless Law & Order reruns, talking to my cats, muttering darkly to myself. Mostly though, I try to remind myself that despite the frustrations, both my stepkids are happy and healthy and I enjoy them. 
 
Also, I redecorate a lot. : ) 
 
What is your greatest reward as a stepmom? 
 
Funny, it’s the little things that feel most rewarding to me. Like when my older stepdaughter, who’s away at school, calls me because she’s not feeling well and wants comforting. Chatting with my younger stepdaughter while we make dinner. Helping both of them dye their hair funny colors; a) it grows out and b) my hair was pink when I was a teen. 
 
For a stepfamily to work, everyone has to compromise. I had to get used to a new family, a new city and a new job, my stepkids had to make room for a new person in their lives, and my husband had to keep us all on an even keel. None of us has had it easy. But after more than a decade of living together, I can say that we did a pretty good job. I’m proud of us. 
 
How do you maintain your boundaries? 
 
One of the first things my husband did when I moved in is to clean out an extra bedroom, load it up with bookshelves, and call it my office. He taught the girls to knock before entering, and they always did. Whenever I felt overwhelmed or angry or resentful, I would retreat to my office to work, read, or just regroup. Having “a room of one’s own” saved my sanity. I think everyone should have one. 
 
What do you do to relieve stress? 
 
I call up a friend and talk it through. When that doesn’t work, I put on my iPod and dance around like a maniac. Hard to be stressed out when “Dancing Queen” is blasting out your eardrums.