Wednesday, August 11, 2010

The Counselor: an Unbiased Third Party Approach

I found it a bit unusual that counseling sessions were so normal in my husband's family when I first met him. That may be because I came from a family where you weren't supposed to express your feelings because that made you weak.

I really do appreciate counseling appointments now.

The family is able to air out emotions or about events that have been troubling them and can find a solution with the unbiased third party in the room. The counselor often knows the right questions to ask and has seen these situations before, and can provide solutions from experience of knowing what has worked for other blended families.

This has been huge for us in negotiating chores and respect. (I also recently learned from a family that hasn't been blended that counseling really helped their relationships between father and mother and two teenage sons). So ladies, even those "normal" families ask for counseling help too.

The other area counseling has been a large part of is negotiating with the birth mother where the boy wants to reside during the school year. This has been a point of contention since she followed the latest flame to his home state 2,500 miles away. Now that our son has had experience with his counselor and trusts her, she can vouch for his desires that he may not want to speak to either us nor his mother and her partner about for fear of hurting our feelings. The counselor being in place also means that the boy may not have to speak with the judge himself since he finds the idea of being in court frightening.

All along the way, however, counseling has provided a safe place for him to voice his thoughts, concerns, and emotions about issues that would be difficult for him to bring up otherwise.

Friday, August 6, 2010

Keep Something for Yourselves

We love the fact that the men we've married (or at least are involved with) are great daddies. We praise them, adore them for it, and admit it, it probably even makes your uterus tingle too.

But sometimes, there just needs to be some special couple time at a special event, place, or date. I'm not dogging the parenting instinct to show kids everything the parent knows or does--we all would like our children to become well rounded people and remember fun experiences with the folks.

But there is the relationship of the couple to be considered. And the couple in that relationship should be considerate of each other with their time and affection. It is far too easy to put the children first and forget the other half of the parenting team. It's okay to take a night off from the kids to go on a date, or to keep that one memorable place you spent with your significant other, a place just for you and your significant other. (Even if it might have a great pool that the kids would enjoy).

I was once pleasantly informed by my stepson that he would be traveling with his father and I on our honeymoon to the Bahamas. Really? Even though we haven't taken it yet, (maybe after our 3rd wedding anniversary) it will still be our honeymoon, party of two.

The point is, Stepmoms, (or Stepdads), you may love those kids with all your heart, but don't forget how you became a stepparent to them; and gently remind your significant others about your half of the parenting team needing some time alone. It's not selfish, and more often than not it does the couple good to spend some time just focusing on each other.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Chores and Regressions

Most children have them, so why don't some stepkids? Some parents feel that because their child only spends part of the time at their house, that the children should have all the fun possible while they are there.

Not that I'm against fun.

But chores teach children integral pieces of growing up by taking care of their own things and learning different skill sets. If they live at your house even part of the time, they can learn how to take care of it, and develop a respect for all the different things that they see the adults do around the house. The kids may even start to pick up after themselves, (not that I've experienced this with a 13 year old boy, and may never see it happen, but I am optimistic).

Chores should be fairly balanced however, as while the stepkids may be at your house only part of the time, they probably shouldn't be doing chores almost all the time. But it is perfectly acceptable to expect them to keep their rooms picked up, laundry put away, beds made in the morning, doing the dinner dishes, and a once a week chore, say, mowing the lawn.

Now mowing the lawn around our house has been a contentious issue. This is the first summer where my stepson has participated in the once a week mowings, and even then he only mows one side of the yard. (I started mowing full yards when I was 10-so I know this muscle bound boy is more than capable.) He comes in and complains that the yard is too big, that he's beat, etc. etc.

My biggest issue with this 13 year old boy is that he still wants to be babied. I'm all about nurturing him and cuddling him when he wants to be cuddled (which surprisingly happens quite frequently) but there are things that 13 year old boys normally do, such as: mowing the full lawn when asked and not whining too much about it, cutting their own steak when they order it at a restaurant (more on this in a minute), and not giving up on a physically demanding sports camp after one day. (See Persistence and Basketball Camp post).

All right, the regressions into "Daddy will you baby me" mode have thoroughly flustered and frustrated this stepmom this summer. One of which is when our son orders a steak at a restaurant, (or Dad cooks a steak at home for that matter), the boy won't cut his own meat, he bats those long eyelashes of his, looks at his Dad with those big blue "I'm your poor little boy" eyes and his Dad cuts his steak into little bite size pieces. Now you're probably sitting back and thinking that I'm a heartless bitch, and maybe I am sometimes, but the boy is 13!

I'm fairly certain this doesn't occur at his mother's house, but for some reason at our house, he regresses a little bit, (and not just on steak cutting either, it happens in other areas, but this is the example that sticks out most to me).

My husband and I had a long discussion on how our son shouldn't be babied any longer and treated more like a teenager. I approached the topic gently, since the boy is his son and I had a feeling that my husband babies his son because he feels guilty for not being there for all his childhood years. My husband acknowledged what I had suspected and agreed that his son is a little soft and that he would start to watch for and work on those aspects of their relationship.

I want their father-son relationship to stay intact and be as close as they are now, but I also desire that his son be able to function in the world on his own as an adult.

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

I Walk Away

I used to handle all the communication between the birth mother and my husband. He didn't want to talk to her, she didn't want to talk to him, and the mediator (me) received the brunt of the attack from both sides.

I don't mediate anymore, I don't talk to the birth mother on the phone unless she or I answer it, and any email communication between my husband and her gets the final okay from our lawyer. Granted, the lawyer is more expensive than I am-but not so expensive as the cost to my sanity.

I am tired of being asked what I think the birth mother is thinking, or what she might do, how will she respond to [fill in the blank]. And it isn't just my husband asking, it's his whole family. How in the hell I became such an expert on the woman I have no idea. We are two totally different people and haven't ever had a conversation with her outside of our son; and the culmination of it usually ended up with me being screamed at over the phone.

I am now entirely hands off, whenever I'm asked anything about the birth mother, I just shrug my shoulders. I no longer make the phone calls or write the emails. It truly isn't my concern. I love my stepson dearly, and I would rather him be with us, but it isn't my battle.

I am happy now that he is 13 and that much closer to being of the age where he can decide where he wants to live. Though I'm not sure if the birth mother will listen to his wishes since she deems most of what he wants as "whimsical".