Break the [wounds + unawareness] cycle and guard your descendents


 

Same-gender Stepfamily Couples

Co-manage Your and Your
Kids' Extra Stressors
- p. 2 of 3

By Peter K. Gerlach, MSW

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        This continues a 3-page article on eight extra concurrent relationship stressors that typical same-gender stepfamily partners must admit and resolve together, compared to average heterosexual stepfamily mates.

        Another common extra stressor is...

3) Unique Conflicts With Relatives and Supporters

         Each mate is somewhere between deception and denials to first public disclosure of their same-gender identity and partnership, to having key people fully accept them as worthy persons and legitimate, committed co-parenting mates. If same-gender couples don't get enough genuine acceptance after coming out, they need to...

  • grieve and accept that,

  • help their kids and supporters adapt to that, and...

  • decide if they need to acquire an alternate (non-genetic) family who does fully accept them and their stepfamily.

        I suspect that few heterosexuals, including health and religious professionals, can really empathize accurately with the personal stress (shame, guilt, fears, ambivalence, weariness, relief, ...) of coming out. Genuine  acceptance of same-gender preference spans honest (vs. dutiful or pretended), unambivalent, loving (vs. intellectual) recognition and respect for each partner as...

  • a unique, talented person of inherent dignity and worth with universal human rights,

  • a valued member of their own biofamily, their stepfamily, and society,

  • a committed, effective co-parent; and acceptance of both partners as...

  • a respectable committed couple with legitimate human needs, feelings, opinions, anxieties, hopes, goals, and dreams.

        Relatives' genuine (vs. pretended) acceptance of each partner as a competent co-parent (vs. as a person / man / woman / relative) hinges on evolving trust that they are (a) clear on what each dependent child needs, and are (b) dedicated to, and (c) effective at, filling those needs (nurturing) cooperatively with another bio-parent, unless he or she is dead.

        Building trust among new relatives requires (a) two empowered true Selves, (b) much honest, respectful assertion, listening, and conversation; and (c) direct observation of co-parents and kids alone and together. A primal factor is whether each partner (i.e. their ruling subselves) trusts themselves and each other as competent co-parents in their complex, alien stepfamily.

        Many things can hinder approval and trust within each stepfamily member and between them:  ignorance, homophobia, shame, guilts, biofamily dysfunction and wounds, biases, unrealistic stepfamily expectations, child custody and visitation disputes, ineffective communication skills, fierce values and loyalty conflicts, relationship triangles, and disagreements on what each child needs, from whom.

        Core issues are whether each child's other bioparent...

  • is guided by their true Self, and...

  • can grieve and communicate effectively; and...

  • can forgive and accept that their former mate prefers a same-gender partner over them; and...

  • understands and accepts stepfamily basics and realities (has realistic expectations); and...

  • can solidly trust that each biochild is safe enough in their complex, alien new stepfamily.

An important acceptance factor is whether each bioparent, sibling, and concerned relative feels that minor kids’ male / female identity, development, and moral values are safe from (irrationally) feared "contamin-ation" or "perversion."

        Dependent stepkids are best served if all their genetic and step relatives and family supporters (e.g. teachers, clergy, tutors, and counselors) can openly discuss confusions and questions about a same-gender co-parent’s nurturing responsibilities.

        Ideally, that can lead to any family adult or supporter saying something like "Yes, Frank is your father's partner, and your stepfather. You are his stepdaughter, and we (or you all) all are a normal step-family." Adult power struggles over this force kids into stressful, confusing loyalty conflicts on top of many other concurrent needs and stressors.

        Post-divorce legal battles over child custody, visitations, finances, and parenting agreements are probably more common in same-gender-co-parent stepfamilies. I suspect that U.S. family-law attorneys and judges are as vulnerable to ignorances and unconscious biases about same-gender parents’ com-petence as anyone else.

        In addition to personal, partnership, and co-parenting struggles, same-gender partners often face...

4) Unique Workplace Conflicts

        Typically, both co-parenting mates must work full time. My same-gender clients have taught me about the extra challenges they face in finding a stable, satisfying job - like...

learning whether it's safe to disclose your sexual preference and living with a same-gender partner to your management and co-workers: "Will I be hired? Fired? Demoted? Humilia-ted? Discriminated against? Spurned?" This is specially tough in occupations involving children and/or some religious organizations; and co-parents may face...

subtle or overt discrimination against choice assignments, recognition, training, and/or promotions. For instance, you might be barred from high-visibility positions because of the fear that (biased) customers or clients might take their business elsewhere; and...

co-worker rejection, distrust, and/or harassments, which collectively promote workplace isolation, anxieties, and/or dissatisfying phony (surface) relationships; and possibly you struggle with…

trouble getting your partner covered by health and life insurances, and Employee Assistance Program (EAP) and pension benefits.

        Each job change, reassignment, promotion, and organizational shift, like getting a new boss, down-sizing, or a corporate merger, can reactivate (or ease) these stressors. I suspect that filing effective union or human-rights grievances because of sexual-preference discrimination is harder than in racial disputes.

        Another probable couple-stressor is...

5) Unique Legal and Financial Problems

        Many American divorcing families and stepfamilies are stressed by ex-mate legal battles over child custody, visitations, financial support, and parenting practices. The odds of post-divorce legal disputes like these are probably higher in same-gender stepfamilies. This is partly because of the misguided supposition that same-gender couples will raise gender-confused or significantly-wounded kids, and/or somehow "wreck their lives."

        Another cause for stressful co-parent relations can be the extra hurt, resentment, anger, and shame the heterosexual parent feels for (a) being rejected and/or for (b) having been deceived by or choosing a "sick" partner in the first place. Another cause of expensive legal fights may be (c) covert or direct influ-ence from wounded, ignorant, and unaware relatives and/or close friends.

        Emotions can run extra high in divorces involving same-gender preferences. This is even more likely if the rejected partner is ruled by a shame-based  false self. People who feel abused, victimized, and weak hire attorneys and use the family-law system to supply leverage, righteous vindication, and punitive power. Minor kids are always wounded by lose-lose-lose parental legal battles, unless they’re being neglected and/or abused.

        Another potentially complex and expensive stressor may occur if one of you wants to legally adopt your partner's child/ren. That’s stressful enough in heterosexual stepfamilies!

        Post-divorce legal battles are expensive. Mounting legal bills skew household and family budgets, deplete savings, cause inner and interpersonal conflicts, and can amplify cross-generational bitterness over child-support and estate-planning disputes.

        Typical same-gender couples are more vulnerable to financial stressors, compared to heterosexual co-parenting partners. Besides income restriction from possible job loss or promotion blocks (above), they may battle over child support because of gender-related bitterness, resentments, or fears. They may also incur higher-than usual counseling fees because of the scope and complexity of their personal and stepfamily problems. Most stepfamily mates experience major values and loyalty conflicts, and relation-ship triangles, over insurance coverages, medical and educational costs, and estate plans and wills.

        Same-gender partners may also face…

6) Unique Spiritual and Religious Conflicts

        Average stepfamily couples are more likely to be of different religious faiths and traditions than first-marriers. This may cause significant personal, marital, and extended-stepfamily conflict. Typical same-gender couples and their kids face extra stressors.

        I know a divorced lesbian mother of three who was expelled from her conservative Christian church when she revealed her intimate commitment to another divorced biomother. She was told scathingly she was living in sin, and that God would bar her from salvation unless she repented and rejected her "unnatural and unholy lifestyle."

        Former fellow worshippers and friends pitied and shunned her and her custodial children, and "prayed for their redemption." Her family's rejection and loss of social and Christian support, and the minister's condescending judgment and warning, were devastating. The mom struggled to promote con-tinued faith in scriptural teachings of love, brotherhood, and forgiveness to her pre-teen kids, in the face of rigid, righteous scorn and shaming rejection by their fellow "Christians."

        Believing the Bible as the sacred, revealed word of God, the woman wrestled with questioning the Scriptures, while finding that her (God-created) body and emotions led her to love and desire another woman. She had to make a second-order (core attitude) change to retain her basic faith in the Bible, God, and her soul's safety, while choosing to ignore, minimize, or re-interpret scriptural verses that implied or declared that carnal love between adults of the same gender was "an abomination."

        Mates who aren't particularly religious (vs. spiritual), may bypass these complex inner, parenting, and social conflicts. Religious partners may be in a congregation that accepts same-gender persons as God's beloved children despite interpretations of a Holy book written by unknown authors thousands of years ago. If you're not that fortunate, you must chose between hiding your personal and family realities and leading a false life (below), or revealing it, and seeking a new church community.

        If relatives are religiously conservative, a change of church or religious faith can create major family-system dissension and conflict. This is specially true if an ex mate insists that their church and faith is the one true way, and the immortal souls of the kids are endangered by the same-gender co-parent's "sinful lifestyle" and different church or faith. In such cases, stepkids are caught in an emotional crossfire they didn't cause and can't understand or control.

        Finding an ordained clergyperson to sanctify a same-gender commitment ceremony can be hard in some locales. Having a same-gender wedding service and reception can evoke unexpected biases and upset in some relatives, friends, and fellow congregants. The hurts and resentments from a conflictual commitment ceremony can take months or years to abate.

        On top of these six extra sets of stress, partners may also have to…  

7) Learn to Live a Stable Double Life

        Many heterosexual co-parents are vaguely uncomfortable or clearly embarrassed to reveal that they're in a stepfamily. They hide that identity from themselves and/or other people to avoid facing significant shame, guilts, and fears. In this sense, many stepfamily co-parents live a kind of double life: wanting to appear as "just a normal (bio)family" in public, and living stepfamily life behind closed doors.

        Typical same-gender co-parents must lead an even more complex double life. Because of pervasive social and religious bigotry, they must live cautiously and defensively in choosing who to reveal their relationship and stepfamily identity to, and when. This is specially complex when dependent kids and/or grandkids, and hostile relatives are involved.

        A paradoxic task is couples trying to foster the values of honesty, respect, and responsibility in their kids, while modeling and/or asking them to make exceptions about telling the truth about their own family relationships and reality. An underlying co-parental challenge is the difficulty telling the full truth about (a) same-gender attraction and (b) family reactions to it, to your minor or grown kids.

        Because kids quickly learn of the cruelty of their peers, they develop their own reasons for lying about their same-gender stepfamily status. So they create their own kind of dual life. At the least, they must cope with feeling significantly "different" than most of their peers, just at the time they're desper-ately seeking social "normalcy," acceptance, and approvals.

        Living in an unsafe (wounded) society forces many same-gender partners to choose a dual lifestyle: the "real" one in their home and trusted social circle, and the deceptive public one. Such a double life usually promotes disabled true Selves and related false-self wounds. It inexorably requires lying and giving double messages, which promote shame, guilts, and anxieties. If either partner and/or a child is from a low-nurturance childhood, they have suffered a lifetime of these already.

        After each co-parent comes out publicly, their relatives must repeatedly decide what to "say" socially about this branch of their family. Their stance can range between compassionate, centered, honesty and support, to condemning, pitying, and scorning, to lying, pretending, or avoiding because of their own confusion and insecurity. So all members of a same-gender stepfamily may have to choose to live an honest, authentic life or a dual life to preserve their integrity, pride, and securities.

        People who need to distort or hide things about themselves or their family are often governed by a false self. That's the core problem, not any deceptions they try to maintain. For more perspective on family secrets, see this.

        We just briefly explored these seven extra sources of confusion and conflict for typical same-gender stepfamily co-parents, compared to heterosexual couples:

  • More personal shame, guilt, anxiety, confusion, and grief; and…

  • More co-parenting conflicts with (a) each other, (b) stepkids and (c) their other co-parent/s, (d) school and clinical professionals; and (e) some family-service providers; and...

  • More disapproval and rejection from three or more sets of relatives, specially co-grandparents; and...

  • More employment anxieties and conflicts with ignorant and biased co-workers; and...

  • More legal and financial problems: e.g. custody and child-support battles, and insurance coverages; and...

  • More spiritual and religious conflicts at home and in conservative church communities; and...

  • Striving for a stable double life as necessary - i.e. adapting to guilt about deceptions, fear of discovery, and many frustrations.

        We’ll look at an eighth common stressor - finding effective personal and family supports – when we review your options on the next page. First, pause and reflect... recall why you began reading this article. What do you notice about your thoughts and emotions at this point? How do you feel about what you just read and how it may apply to you and people you care about?

        Now let’s take a closer look at the central co-parenting task: helping dependent kids fill their special needs while filling many other personal and partnership needs. The first step is to learn about…

colorbutton.gif Typical Stepkids' Extra Tasks

        To fully appreciate the scope and feeling of the combined stressors that average stepchildren face, read these outlines of ~60 developmental and family-adjustment needs kids need informed, empathic adult help to fill. Kids in a same-gender stepfamily They often have a mix of additional mental, emotional, and relationship needs like these...

Change Confusion into Understanding

        Typical stepkids need to find answers to questions like these...

"What does homosexual mean? Why are homosexual people called ‘gay’ and ‘Lesbian’?"

"Is my Mom(Dad) bad or sick for being homosexual? Is s/he going to hell?"

"Will s/he ever change back to 'regular'?"

"My minister / Bible / friend / relatives / teacher / says that being homosexual is really bad. Are they right? Who decides? If they're not right, why should I believe anything they say?"

"Is homosexuality 'catching'? Can I or my brother or sister 'get it'?"
 

"If I'm sexual with (a same-gender child or adult) will that make me homosexual?"

"How can I tell the difference between 'regular' touching and play, and homosexual touching?"

"Why don't (most) people like homosexual people?"

"Will I be homosexual, or am I?"

"How can homosexual people have babies?"

"Why don't I ever see or hear about homosexual animals?"

"If one parent is homosexual, does that mean the other one is too?"
 

"If (my) grandparents aren't homosexual, how (did) can they have a homosexual child?"

What exactly is a ‘faggot’? A ‘queer’? A 'dyke' / A 'fairy' ?”

"What is normal, anyway?"

Why don’t I see families like ours on TV, or hear my friends talk about families like ours?

"Are we a real 'stepfamily'? Some people say we aren't." (They’re wrong.)

How am I supposed to behave with my (homosexual) parent and stepparent?

Why did this have to happen to me / us?

"Who am I?" (the dignified biological son or daughter of a respectable man and woman who conceived a child, and a stepdaughter or son in one kind of normal stepfamily.)

        Each stepfamily's unique situation will foster questions like these that each minor and grown child (and unaware adults) need to answer. Kids need their caregivers to (a) want to listen empathically to them, and (b) to encourage discussion, venting, and truth-telling. Do you know which questions your minor and grown (step)kids are trying to answer? Yes, kids of heterosexual parents can have these questions too, but they're usually generic, not personal.

        The nature and complexity of kids’ questions about sexual preference and love depends (partly) on their age and knowledge, specially their understanding of gender-differences and sexuality. Unhealed shame and guilt in your kids, co-parents, and kin can block open family discussion and resolution of important questions like these.

        The more kids' questions like these are validated and well discussed and answered, the lower their chance of significant confusion and emotional upset. That lowers the odds of their "acting out" and raises the odds of their eventually accepting and bonding with a stepparent, stepsibs, and stepkin. This is most likely if their three or more co-parents are (a) clear and calm, and (b) able to nurture as a mutually-respectful team despite significant values differences and other conflicts.

        Gaining stable, accurate clarity on questions like these amidst social ignorance and reactive con-troversy is a vital part of your kids’ grieving their losses of biofamily togetherness and social normalcy. Their co-parents' related task is to clarify and answer their own questions about same-gender unions and families, and then help kids and others answer theirs.

        Major disagreement on answering kids’ questions usually fosters volatile loyalty conflicts and relationship triangles among adults' subselves and in and between their stepfamily's related homes. The solution is for co-parents to evolve an effective strategy on resolving these three common stressors, not to debate same-gender questions.

Besides getting mentally clear on such questions over time, typical stepkids (specially teens) must also manage special emotional turmoils. Do you need a stretch break before reading about them and stepfamily mate's options to manage all these concurrent extra challenges?
 

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Updated  November 07, 2008