Project 8 of 12 for high-nurturance families and relationships

Plan a Successful Co-parent Wedding

Consider Many Complexities - p.1 of 4 

by Peter K. Gerlach, MSW

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The Web address of this four-page article is http://sfhelp.org/08/wedding1.htm

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        This is one of over 150 articles focused on building high-nurturance family relationships and preventing divorce. This introduction describes the Web site's purpose and the best ways to use its resources. Each article is part of a mosaic of ideas, so the more you read, the more sense they'll all make.

        These articles augment, vs. replace, other qualified professional help. The "/" in re/marriage and re/divorce notes that it may be a stepparent's first union. "Co-parents" means both bioparents, or any of the three or more related stepparents and bioparents co-managing a multi-home nuclear stepfamily. 

        Before continuing, reflect: why are you reading this - what do you need?

+ + +

        This four-page article is part of a series on Project 8 - co-create a high-nurturance primary relationship and keep it second.

        Typical stepfamily weddings are much more complicated than first-marriage ceremonies. This is partly because they involve (a) one or more kids from a prior union, and (b) three or more sets of relatives and friends, including one or more ex mates. It's also because (c) there are no well-established social norms to guide couples (or clergy) on resolving uncertainties about who to include, and how.

        This article explores courtship preparation, re/wedding planning, problem-solving tips, honeymoon considerations, and useful re/wedding resources. It does not focus on etiquette, clothing, music, toasts. pictures, or menus. This article is for co-parent couples and adult stepchildren who want a satisfying public-commitment ceremony. The ideas below will make more sense if you first read...

  • Key factors promoting a high-nurturance family and a healthy relationship;

  • This introduction to five common re/marital hazards, and essential stepfamily knowledge;

  • This overview of the toxic [wounds + ignorance] cycle that may stress you all;

  • This perspective on the three phases of divorce;

  • How to raise your odds of making three wise commitment choices;

  • Common courtship danger signs, and key courtship questions;

  • How to "map" your multi-generational stepfamily and decide who belongs to it; and...

  • Perspectives on your stepfamily identity, and what it means;

  • Overviews of membership, values, and loyalty conflicts, and associated relationship triangles.

        So you're getting re/married?! Probably for the first (and only?) time, all your available stepfamily relatives and other well-wishers will convene. You want this to be a happy experience for all of you, including the kids. You want your ceremony and celebration to be emotionally and socially successful - a truly joyous, uplifting celebration of your commitment to each other and your child/ren.

        Unlike first-time weddings, a high majority of American stepfamily nuptials follow the divorce of one or both new mates. Others follow a prior mate's death. For many reasons, this makes planning and attending a co-parent wedding "challenging." To understand why and what your options are, let's first explore...


   What's a "Successful" Wedding?

        The English verb "to wed" comes to us across the centuries from the old root weddian, meaning "pledge." Why do you suppose all societies have wedding ceremonies? Apparently we humans have primal needs which foster this global custom in all eras and cultures. This suggests that a "successful" ceremony will fill everyone's needs "well enough." What needs?

societal needs for healthy citizens (e.g. blood tests), well-nurtured children raised by capable adults (vs. teen parents), and for "law and order;" plus...

family-members' needs for dignity, respect, role-clarity, and publicly acknowledging a major shift in family roles, titles, names. and status; plus...

the couples' needs to publicly declare their commitment and love, formally accept the roles of committed partners; and to experience the support of friends and family in starting their life together; plus...

spiritual people's needs to sanctify the sacred union of two loving people in the presence of God and community; and...

friends' and well-wishers' needs to demonstrate their support for the couple and to re-affirm the profound specialness of a primary-relationship commitment.

        The adults and kids whose lives are affected by a re/wedding ceremony share basic needs for respect; dignity; acceptance and inclusion; physical and emotional comfort and security; companionship; and clear wedding and group roles, boundaries, and expectations.

        It's inevitable that some of these many needs will conflict a little or a lot.

  Re/weddings Are More Complex

        Compared to first-time weddings, all these needs are often harder to fill "well enough" in typical encore nuptials because...

Partners have to consider the needs and feelings of (a) one or more minor or grown kids, (b) the child/ren's other bioparent/s and any stepparent/s and stepsiblings, and (c) all their genetic and legal relatives; and...

Average American re/marriers are more likely to have opposing religious backgrounds and preferences, wider age differences, and different races and cultures. All these can promote complex values conflicts between the couple and/or their relatives; and...

Romantic love and widespread divorce are relatively new social phenomena in America, because of improved health, longevity, and women's rights, and religious liberalization. One result is that there aren't any well-accepted social norms and traditions to guide stepfamily wedding and reception planners. That's compounded by over a dozen alien new stepfamily roles (step-uncle, step-cousin, ex father-in-law...) that adults and kids aren't used to. Together, these generate more social uncertainty and confusions in deciding "How are you and I supposed to behave at this celebration?"; also...

Traditional wedding ceremonies involve vows - solemn personal pledges of love and primal commitment "in the sight of God and this company." A reality in most re/weddings is that for one or both partners, their former vows were "broken" by one or both prior mates. This may cause partners to feel that vowing "'Til death do us part" isn't real. From painful experience, some divorced brides or grooms may need to vow something like "I'll love you as long as I can" to acknowledge reality. This can cause significant discomfort in traditional well-wishers, and sets a "non-traditional" example for observing kids;

        A sixth major nuptial difference the second time around is...

The emotional mosaic of all people involved in a stepfamily commitment ceremony and reception is "richer" - i.e. there are usually more concurrent, conflictual emotions and needs among more present and absent people. This mosaic is affected by...

  • how wounded everyone's ancestors were;

  • how recent and how traumatic prior divorces or mate-deaths were, and how well everyone has grieved their losses;

  • how key relatives and most guests feel about divorce, kids, and re/marriage - in general, and in their families; and...

  • whether an affair and/or a child-conception brought you two together, and how other people feel about that.

        For reasons like these, the odds of significant internal and social confusions and conflicts over (a) the new couple's relationship and (b) the nuptial celebration are higher in a typical stepfamily re/wedding. Who's invited to special meals and parties, the ceremony, and reception - and who accepts or declines - hilight who supports the re/marriers and their families and who doesn't. The presence or absence of a stepchild's other bioparent and relatives, and any new stepparent and stepkids, is a powerful statement about stepfamily membership and allegiances. The odds of major hurt, resentment, and hostility from re/wedding rejection and exclusion (or inclusion!) are usually significant. 

        The special nature of the nuptial ceremony and reception inevitably focuses adults' and kids' on emotionally-charged prior weddings, baptisms and family gatherings, spousal separations, and divorces or funerals. This can stir up unexpected mixes of old shame and guilts, hurts, disappointments, angers, sadness, and regrets.

        Another reason re/wedding's emotional climates are often "richer" is that the chance for repressed or fresh grief to erupt around the ceremony is high, for many reasons. Stepfamily re/marriage implacably affirms the painful reality of prior losses from divorce or death, and  causes new losses (broken bonds) for the adults and kids involved. 

        Feeling intense warmth and joy and sadness or despair at the same time often signals false-self control. This can amplify wedding guests' impulsive behavior - e.g. drinking too much, crying, fighting, sexual acting out, confronting, and withdrawing. Divorce and re/marriage are clues that co-parents and mates carry significant psychological wounds.

        These are six typical reasons why people feel and need more things at average stepfamily showers, weddings, and receptions, and why they have a harder time getting enough needs met in acceptable ways. So you partners and your key supporters do well to discuss...


   Whose Wedding Needs Come First - and Last?

        In planning your wedding, you partners will probably encounter four concurrent conflicts which will recur and test your relationship for years. They are disputes inside you and between you over (a) personal and co-parenting values and priorities, (b) family loyalties, (c) stepfamily identity, and (d) stepfamily membership (inclusion).

        In resolving complex stepfamily priority conflicts, I propose that your odds of long-range re/marital success rise steeply if you partners each agree without reservation to usually put...

  • Your personal integrity and wholistic health first, without undue guilt or anxiety. This includes commitment to personal recovery from any false-self wounds;

  • Put your primary relationship solidly second, and then...

  • Put everyone else's short-term needs third - including your kids, except in clear emergencies.

        How does that feel? If either of you partners is a shame- based Grown Wounded Child who's used to automatically pleasing others to gain acceptance and approval, this priority scheme will be alien and uncomfortable.

        This is your wedding, not your mother's, uncle's, daughter's, brother's, ex mate's, "the Baptists," or "society's"! If an inner voice answers "I know, but...," caution - that's probably not your true Self (capital "S"). Option: read about Project 1, and then thoughtfully fill out this self-evaluation worksheet to get a sense of whether your and/or your partner's false self is co-planning your wedding.

        For perspective, edit this sample Bill of Personal Rights to fit each of you. Then apply your rights to unraveling and resolving your significant wedding conflicts. For each nuptial-planning dispute you two teammates encounter, help each other negotiate...

  • "What option is best for my dignity, serenity, and self-worth here?; then...

  • "What wedding option is best for yours?"; then...

  • "What option seems best for the long-term health of our relationship?", and then...

  • "What's best for our other key people, starting with the kids?"

        If you both agree you can fill everyone's wedding needs well enough, great! If you believe you can't, this long-term priority scheme offers a way to tie-break. How does this ranking scheme compare to how you each are used to making emotionally-complex decisions? Have you ever discussed that?

        Whatever the details, your commitment rites will confront you with some uncomfortable choices about "What wedding options best fill the needs of 'our other key people'?" Which people, and how do you prioritize their needs with minimal anxiety? First marriages traditionally rank the wedding needs of bride's and groom's parents and grandparents high on the priority scale. Stepfamily re/marriages add kids' needs and their other parents' (and relatives') needs to the mix. Have you two tried to sort that out yet? 

        Notice what your and your partner's dominant subselves ("inner voices") are saying now. They may proclaim something like "No way - my (or the) children come first!" If so, consider two key points:

        From my 27 years' professional experience with hundreds of typical stepfamilies: If either of you feels "My kids' needs come first with me compared to my partner's needs," RED LIGHT! Expect increasing re/marital stress and probably eventual re/divorce. If you don't believe this opinion, reality-check it with the nearest re/divorced co-parent. There are millions of us.

        Secondly: Here's the benefit to putting your and your co-parenting ex-mate's wedding needs higher than your kids' needs, when you can't find a compromise:

  • Your kids' other bioparent/s and any new mates existence, behaviors, and needs will powerfully affect all your stepfamily relationships for decades - whether you love-birds want that or not. Their impacts will be genetic, psychological, legal, social, and financial. This may be true even if the other co-parent/s aren't active caregivers now.

  • How much stress you and your kids feel from this implacable reality will be proportional to how respected your ex mates and their new mates (if any) feel by you partners, and how much they trust you two in co-parenting matters.

        To achieve stable independence, your minor kids need you three or more adults to want to build co-parenting teamwork for all your sakes. If your re/wedding increases co-parenting barriers, that inexorably lowers the nurturance level of your multi-home stepfamily. That hinders your kids' development, and puts you all at risk of eventual psychological or legal re/divorce.

        The moral: think long range, and put your kids' current (short term) needs second to their long-range needs for cooperative caregiving from all you family adults. The best option is to compromise among all your needs. You'll probably need to rank and compromise issues like these...

  • How do we pick a stepfamily-aware clergyperson?

  • Whose church shall we use (if any)?

  • Should we invest in pre-re/marital counseling?

  • How should we word our wedding announcement (i.e. who's announcing the re/marriage and giving away the bride?) 

  • Who shall we invite to (a) our wedding and (b) the reception?

  • Who will walk the bride down the aisle?

  • How shall we include the child/ren in the ceremony?

  • How shall we compose our vows, and whom shall we include in them?

  • Who will toast whom, for what?

  • Who sits where in the church?

  • Who gets included in the reception line, in what order, and in the wedding pictures?

  • Who sits where, and with whom, at the wedding dinner (if any)?; and...

  • Who pays for what wedding expenses?

Most first-marriers have these decisions too, but with many fewer people and conflicts in making them! 

        The main points so far are...

Successful weddings fill "enough" of the couple's + relatives' + kids' + friends' needs. You partners are the key judges of whose needs, what needs, and what qualifies as "enough." Other people will have different opinions.

Typical stepfamily re/weddings are significantly more complex than traditional first weddings, so nuptial success takes significantly more awareness, planning, and negotiation; and...

Where compromises can't be found for inevitable disputes over values, loyalties (priorities), stepfamily identity, and membership, (a) choose a long-range view, and (b) put...

  • your respective personal dignities, integrities, serenity, wholistic health, and needs first,

  • your primary relationship second;

  • your other co-parents' needs third, and...

  • everyone else's needs last, starting with your kids' needs.

        If you partners can genuinely adopt and act on this priority scheme with empathy, humor, and respect, your adults and kids will harvest the value of it for years to come. Restated: in resolving re/wedding conflicts, accept your identity as a stepfamily and what that means, and rank your long-term nuclear-stepfamily harmony higher than your short-term wedding satisfactions.

 Prepare to Plan

       Because of your stepfamily re/wedding's complexity, thorough planning is more important than in first nuptials. Here are nine ways you can prepare to plan your wedding effectively, starting in courtship...

       1) Make major progress together on co-parent Projects 1-7 before deciding to commit. Each of you invest time and energy in answering these key questions honestly. Ignoring this suggests well-meaning false selves are making your key decisions. That risks your re/wedding vows and dreams going unfulfilled over future years.

        If you partners take months to work at these seven courtship Projects together, your key stepfamily adults will have...

  • assessed themselves and each other honestly for significant false-self wounds,  and learned (a) what to do about them, and (b) where to get qualified help; and they will have...

  • discussed what it takes to build a high-nurturance family; and...

  • accepted your identity as a multi-generational stepfamily and what that means; and...

  • mapped your stepfamily, and resolved key membership (inclusion) disputes; and...

  • intentionally changed stepfamily myths into realistic expectations together; and...

  • learned the seven problem-solving skills and begun teaching and modeling them to each other, kids, and relatives; and your key family adults will have...

  • assess yourselves and each child for frozen grief, and begun thawing any you found; and you will have helped each other to...

  • draft a stepfamily mission statement together, and used it to...

  • assess each minor child's needs co-operatively, and drafted related job descriptions for your three or more co-parents.

    If you've done all these, then you partners will be motivated to...

Continue with eight more nuptial planning-preparation options.

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