Ronni
Well-known Member
- Location
- Nashville TN
I'm not officially a step-parent yet, but I spend enough time with Ron and at his house, and with his girls, both of whom currently live on the property for various reasons, that I not only feel like a step-parent already but the girls are treating me as a surrogate Mom, and grandparent to his youngest daughter's two small boys. I love that and am flattered and touched that they feel that way!
Actually the step-parenting part of the thing is easy. It's navigating how to orient to Ron's ex Julie regarding the children that I'm having a bit of trouble with. Both the girls have admitted to dysfunctional relationships with their Mother, saying it's complicated, she's complicated, sometimes it's a minefield etc. She's opinionated, self-focused, a bit narcissistic. I've seen the traits, I don't disagree. In spite of that, Ron has managed to forge an amiable relationship with her after the divorce (15+ years now) and with her husband Chris, and they continue to celebrate family things together very comfortably. I admire that. The girls have lived with their Dad since the divorce, they tried with their mom but after three months asked him to come get them.
His oldest daughter has become engaged, and she asked if I'd please go look at wedding venues with her and her Dad. I was thrilled! Turns out she didn't ask her Mom, and doesn't intend to. Similar things have happened before, where she's included me in invitations, news (like about their engagement...it was a week or two after they'd told Ron and me that she finally told her Mother) and requests for help or advice. I've felt a bit weird at times, thinking how *I* would feel if my kids did this. Hard for me to envision though, as I have a very close relationship with all my children, who include me in everything.
Here's what I'm currently thinking about all this: My primary allegiance and focus should be on the girls. If they want to include me in things and not their Mom, it's not MY job to try and change their minds about that. Their issues with their Mom are THEIR issues, and not my problem to solve. It's not my job to try and foster or repair their Mother's dysfunctional relationship with her girls. If their choices result in their mom having issues with ME, I'll deal with that if/when it comes up, (knowing full well that I can completely hold my own if we end up going toe to toe. )
Right?
Actually the step-parenting part of the thing is easy. It's navigating how to orient to Ron's ex Julie regarding the children that I'm having a bit of trouble with. Both the girls have admitted to dysfunctional relationships with their Mother, saying it's complicated, she's complicated, sometimes it's a minefield etc. She's opinionated, self-focused, a bit narcissistic. I've seen the traits, I don't disagree. In spite of that, Ron has managed to forge an amiable relationship with her after the divorce (15+ years now) and with her husband Chris, and they continue to celebrate family things together very comfortably. I admire that. The girls have lived with their Dad since the divorce, they tried with their mom but after three months asked him to come get them.
His oldest daughter has become engaged, and she asked if I'd please go look at wedding venues with her and her Dad. I was thrilled! Turns out she didn't ask her Mom, and doesn't intend to. Similar things have happened before, where she's included me in invitations, news (like about their engagement...it was a week or two after they'd told Ron and me that she finally told her Mother) and requests for help or advice. I've felt a bit weird at times, thinking how *I* would feel if my kids did this. Hard for me to envision though, as I have a very close relationship with all my children, who include me in everything.
Here's what I'm currently thinking about all this: My primary allegiance and focus should be on the girls. If they want to include me in things and not their Mom, it's not MY job to try and change their minds about that. Their issues with their Mom are THEIR issues, and not my problem to solve. It's not my job to try and foster or repair their Mother's dysfunctional relationship with her girls. If their choices result in their mom having issues with ME, I'll deal with that if/when it comes up, (knowing full well that I can completely hold my own if we end up going toe to toe. )
Right?