How to be a confident step-parent
The new buzzword as far as stepfamilies
are concerned is "Blended Family".
This term is used for when two
families, normally with two sets of children, become one because
of a split up in previous relationships or marriages.
Being a confident stepparent is
all about knowing what lies ahead and being prepared for both the
expected and unexpected!
So how do you become a confident
stepparent?
Here are some pointers. We have
teamed up with Step Family Counsellor Jeannette Lofas who has kindly
written these TOP TEN LISTS.
Step 1.
Recognise that the stepfamily will
not and can not function as does a natural family. It has its
own special state of dynamics and behaviours. Once learned, these
behaviours can become predictable and positive. Do not try to overlay
the expectations and dynamics of the intact or natural family onto
the stepfamily.
Step 2.
Recognise the hard fact that the
children are not yours and they never will be. We are stepparents,
not replacement parents. Mother and father (no matter how AWFUL
the natural parents) are sacred words and feelings. We are stepparents,
a step removed, yet in this position can still play a significant
role in the development of the child.
Step 3.
Super step parenting doesn't work.
Go slow. Don't come on too strong.
Step 4.
Discipline styles must be sorted
out by the couple. The couple, ideally with the help of a Stepfamily
Foundation trained professional, needs to immediately and specifically
work out what the children's duties and responsibilities are.
What is acceptable behaviour and what
are the consequences when children misbehave? Generally, in the
beginning, we suggest that the biological parent does the disciplining
as much as is feasible.
The couple together specifically works
out jobs, expected behaviours and family etiquette.
Step 5.
Establish clear job descriptions
between the parent, stepparent and respective children. What
specifically is the job of each one of us in this household? We
need to be as detailed as we are in business.
Step 6.
Know that unrealistic expectations
beget rejections and resentments. There is no model for the
step relationship except for the wicked stepchild and invariably
cruel stepmother of fairy tales.
Note the absence of myth around the
stepfather.
It is vital for the survival of the
stepfather to be able to see and delineate expectations for each
member of the family, especially the primary issues of upset in
step: e.g., money, discipline, the prior spouse, visitation, authority,
emotional support, territory and custody.
Step 7.
There are no ex-parents . . . only
ex-spouses. Begin to get information on how to best handle the
prior spouse.
Step 8.
Be prepared for conflicting pulls
of sexual and biological energies within the step relationship.
In the intact family, the couple comes together to have a child.
The child is part of both parents, generally pulling the parents'
energy together for the well being of the child.
In step, blood and sexual ties can
polarise a family in opposite energies and directions.
Step 9.
The conflict of loyalties must
be recognised right from the beginning. The conflict is particular
to step and is a round robin of confused emotions. Often, just as
the child in step begins to have warm feelings toward the stepparent,
the child will pull away and negatively act out.
He/she feels something like this:
"If I love you, that means I do not love my real parent."
The feelings are normal and must be dealt with. The pulls of "Who
am I loyal to first?" go all the way around in the stepfamily.
Step 10.
Guard your sense of humour and
use it. The step situation is filled with the unexpected. Sometimes
we don't know whether to laugh or to cry. Try humour.
10 STEPS
TO BUILDING COUPLE STRENGTH
Step 1.
Schedule time to go out alone,
to dine alone. Don't talk about step. Talk about the movie you
have just seen, Russia and the United States, the latest gossip,
poetry, anything but step. Talk about the things you used to talk
about when you first fell in love.
Step 2.
Strong leadership provides
stability for the new relationships forming in the stepfamily. Discipline
is dealt with authority and unity from the couple. Anger and dissension
between the couple over discipline and other issues are better discussed
privately. Learn to agree and learn to disagree. Table negative
issues. Resolve them with a counsellor.
Step 3.
Use the Time, Energy and Money
grid described in Jeannette Lofas' book Stepparenting
to structure the household. All members will know their role and
duties in the family. There will be rewards for completing chores
and consequences for not competing duties. All are spelled out and
known to family members.
Step 4.
Clearly sort out discipline and
guidance methods and styles as a couple. Couples decide on discipline
and bio-parent generally directs behaviour. In the absence of the
bio-parent, the stepparent reminds the child of household rules.
He/she might begin "in this house we . . .". An effective
parent or stepparent disciplines the action and the behaviours and
does not put down the child, thereby keeping the child's self-esteem
intact.
Step 5.
Don't take kid's negative behaviour
as a personal insult. Speak to the children about feelings,
fears and concerns. When you notice 'acting out behaviour' the need
to act out diminishes in direct proportion to the child's feelings
of being acknowledged.
Step 6.
"Make wrongs" don't work
in good relationships. "I" messages work. "You"
messages make wrong. Being righteous and right allows one to feel
good only for moments.
Step 7.
Know the dynamics of step.
Know when to attribute (blame) the step situation and know when
it is something that you as a couple must sort out.
Step 8.
Love is respecting and dealing
with each other's neuroses. Love entails going above the negative
data, without blame, and going for the desired outcome as an individual,
a couple and as a stepfamily.
Step 9.
Learn how to work the A-B reality
described in Stepparenting.
Step 10.
The couple presents themselves
as male and female heads of the household. Remember, there is
no sense of family or stepfamily without the couple strength.
Jeannette Lofas is President of the Step Family Foundation. Visit
Jeannettes website at
http://www.stepfamily.org/
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