Project 11 of 12 - help each other evolve and use a support network

support.gif (2236 bytes)

Special Family-support Topics

concluded - p. 4 of 4

By Peter K. Gerlach, MSW

The Web address of this four-page article is http://sfhelp.org/11/support.htm

This concludes an article on finding and using family supports - co-parent Project 11.

5)  Supports for Improving Co-parents' Teamwork

        Roughly 90% of American stepfamilies follow the divorce of one or both co-parenting mates. Because a high percentage of divorcing mates and people attracted to them seem to be psychologically wounded, one or both often carry major unresolved psychological tensions about their marriage and divorce for years. This stresses them as persons, committed mates, and co-parents. 

Online order form for hardback and softcove editions        Several factors can contribute to this: co-parents' false-self wounds and self- unawareness, ineffective communication, and few wholistically-healthy, stepfamily-aware social supports. The guidebook Build a Co-parenting Team after Divorce or Remarriage explores options for improving relations between co-parenting ex mates. Here are several summary recommendations:

Co-parents encourage each other to form cautious trust that patiently working at all 10 prior projects may help to resolve major values, membership, and loyalty conflicts and divorce-related stressors over time;

Work together for an attitude of genuine (vs. ambivalent or forced) compassion toward a hostile or withdrawn ex-mate. See them as a suffering major false-self wounds they must deny and cannot heal (yet), vs. escalating an endless feud by blaming and/or rejecting them.

        This does not mean you have to agree with them or ignore or condone hurtful things they've done. If wounded ex mates (and their relatives and your kids) sense that you’re trying genuinely to empathize with (vs. pity) them, they may start to build trust, open up, and co-operate more.

Invite your kids’ non-biased biorelatives (if any) to empathically appeal to the kids’ other parent to stop blaming and/or hiding and explore healing their psychological wounds - including blocked grief . If you feel such relatives are often controlled by a false self, I recommend not trying this.

Ex mates take self-responsibility for seeking qualified professional support to heal your own shame, guilts, hurts, and resentments related to your biofamily breakup. Stepparents support your mates as they take this courageous, long-range healing step. 

        Let the other divorced mate and key others know informationally vs. righteously, that you’re doing this to help the kids and the stepfamily. When it feels right, consider forgiving yourself and making genuine, specific amends to your ex mate in person or in writing.

        "I’m really sorry I…" is probably the most powerful medicine of all, if sincere and not self-shaming… "Making amends" is step 9 in the "Anonymous" 12-step program. Any open 12-step community meeting can offer much wisdom and compassionate support on this difficult healing challenge.

        Another option for supporting conflicted ex mates is to...

Invite (vs. demand) a withdrawn or hostile co-parent into post-divorce therapy – for your descendents' sakes. Research your community for veteran clinicians who are specially qualified to do this difficult, high-reward work.

Do your best to keep visiting biokids from being spies, weapons, or agents in a post-divorce war. Similarly, do everything in your power to avoid using litigation to resolve intense conflicts with ex mates over child-related issues like custody, financial support and visitation schedules. Legal force aggravates the underlying conflicts and wounds.

Scan the Internet for resources to help you, including "chat groups" and "news groups" of others in similar situations. Seek groups focused on practical problem solving, vs. whining, blaming, and playing "Ain’t it awful."

        There are other common kinds of stepfamily situations meriting special supports – like recovery from addicition and abuse, and adapting to disabilities like Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD), "Seasonal Affective Disorder" (SAD), and chronic or clinical depression. In my clinical experience since 1981, these seem unusually common in divorcing families and stepfamilies.

        We’ve covered a lot here. To regain the "big picture," lets…

 Recap – Project 11: Build and Use a Co-parent Support Network

        Most co-parents, kids, and relatives need empathic, knowledgeable support while (a) adjusting to family divorce, and (b) building a high-nurturance, multi-home stepfamily over four or more years. The term "support" spans at least 21 different factors that kids and adults can provide for themselves and each other. Co-parents naming what specific supports they each need situationally, and teaching their kids and relatives to do the same, will raise their odds of getting needed help.

        My experience with hundreds of typical troubled co-parents since 1981 is that few seek or find appropriate help for themselves, their dependent and grown kids, and/or key relatives. One result is that they struggle alone for years with a stream of confusions, anxieties, and complex inner and relationship conflicts - and often divorce psychologically or legally. 

        Co-parents who try to find effective stepfamily support often don’t know clearly what they (or their kids or relatives) need, how to evaluate potential support, or where to find it. Even if they look, most find that there’s none available locally. I propose this is one of five causes of widespread stepfamily distress.

        While co-parents work to build an effective co-parenting team (Project 10), they can also take three steps toward building an effective support network:

Co-parents and other family adults accept your group identity as a normal multi-home stepfamily (Project 3), and learn what that means ( Project 4). Then teach your minor and grown kids and key supporters. Then…

All your adult members accept that typical stepfamilies like yours are more complex and conflictual than most intact biofamilies, and that your co-parent couples really are at significant risk of eventual psychological or legal re/divorce. Therefore, informed (stepfamily aware) support for you all is not "nice" to have – it’s vital. So accept that all your co-parents need to …

Intentionally build an effective support network for yourselves, your kids, and your key relatives, over time – and use it together. "Fast-track" co-parents will begin this before re/wedding. The majority of (troubled) stepfamily co-parents I’ve met never do.

        For this third step, there are at least four bountiful sources of support that typical co-parents like you can develop: (a) yourselves, (b) some other members of your stepfamily, (c) selected non-family lay-people and professionals, and (d) the media and some organizations. 

        The print and electronic media increasingly offers supportive information about effective stepfamily co-parenting. However, co-parents need to learn how to evaluate whether advice is qualified and useful, or. inaccurate, impractical, or toxic. Practical help is available, but typical co-parents must persevere to find it. An exception: I’ve rarely seen community supports for stepkids and/or step-relatives - at least around Chicago.

        This eleventh long-term safeguard project is like co-parents finding experienced consultants to help hand-build a three-story home from scratch. A similar metaphor is the vanishing rural tradition of relatives and neighboring farm-families working together to erect the massive timber framework of a new barn.

        The challenge for you three or more related co-parents here is to acknowledge without guilt or shame that you will need stepfamily-aware help to succeed at your complex multi-year, multi-family merger. That invites learning what help your adults and kids need, and where to find it. 

        The best time to start this project is before re/wedding or soon afterward. Check your support-network status and progress regularly together using a worksheet like this. Your success in evolving an effective support system will reflect your accumulated progress with all prior safeguard projects – specially building an effective co-parenting team (Project 10).

        In the real world, you'll build your support network while working at up to 10 other stepfamily-building projects, over time. The complexity of this long-term, multi-level effort justifies a final project for you partners: balancing where you each put your personal, re/marital, and co-parental energies every day, for the four or more years it will take you all to "raise your barn." 

        I've seen that co-parents who help each other adapt and work steadily on all these sequential projects are most likely to keep their personal and re/marital balances. That promotes (often) enjoying the whole bumpy, challenging, rewarding stepfamily-building process as it unfolds. Can you imagine that?


   Options

Take a reality check: on a scale of one (I'm not interested in building a support network now) to ten (I'm committed to building a support network for our stepfamily now), I'm a __. Bonus question: who just answered this - your Self or "someone else"?

Try out this stepfamily-support inventory; or...

Study how to shop for an effective stepfamily counsel, and/or evaluate stepfamily advice; or...

Explore the set of Project 11 pages on starting and running an effective co-parent support group; and/or...

Learn about keeping your personal, re/marital, and stepfamily balances while you co-parents work at all these concurrent safeguard projects; or...

Take a well deserved breather!

 Recap – Project 11: Build and Use a Co-parent Support Network

        Most co-parents, kids, and relatives need empathic, knowledgeable support while building a high-nurturance, multi-home stepfamily over four or more years. The term "support" spans at least 21 different factors that kids and adults can provide for themselves and each other. Co-parents naming what specific supports they each need situationally, and teaching their kids and relatives to do the same, will raise their odds of getting needed help.

        My experience with hundreds of typical troubled co-parents since 1981 is that few seek or find appropriate help for themselves, their dependent and grown kids, and/or key relatives. One result is that they struggle alone for years with a stream of confusions, anxieties, and complex inner and relationship conflicts - and often divorce psychologically or legally. 

        Co-parents who try to find effective stepfamily support often don’t know clearly what they (or their kids or relatives) need, how to evaluate potential support, or where to find it. Even if they look, most find that there’s none available locally. I propose this is one of five causes of widespread stepfamily distress.

        While co-parents work to build an effective co-parenting team (Project 10), they can also take three steps toward building an effective support network:

Co-parents and other family adults accept your group identity as a normal multi-home stepfamily (Project 3), and learn what that means ( Project 4). Then teach your minor and grown kids and key supporters. Then…

All your adult members accept that typical stepfamilies like yours are more complex and conflictual than most intact biofamilies, and that your co-parent couples really are at significant risk of eventual psychological or legal re/divorce. Therefore, informed (stepfamily aware) support for you all is not "nice" to have – it’s vital. So accept that all your co-parents need to …

Intentionally build an effective support network for yourselves, your kids, and your key relatives, over time – and use it together. "Fast-track" co-parents will begin this before re/wedding. The majority of (troubled) stepfamily co-parents I’ve met never do.

        For this third step, there are at least four bountiful sources of support that typical co-parents like you can develop: (a) yourselves, (b) some other members of your stepfamily, (c) selected non-family lay-people and professionals, and (d) the media and some organizations. 

        The print and electronic media increasingly offers supportive information about effective stepfamily co-parenting. However, co-parents need to learn how to evaluate whether advice is qualified and useful, or. inaccurate, impractical, or toxic. Practical help is available, but typical co-parents must persevere to find it. An exception: I’ve rarely seen community supports for stepkids and/or step-relatives - at least around Chicago.

        This eleventh long-term safeguard project is like co-parents finding experienced consultants to help hand-build a three-story home from scratch. A similar metaphor is the vanishing rural tradition of relatives and neighboring farm-families working together to erect the massive timber framework of a new barn.

        The challenge for you three or more related co-parents here is to acknowledge without guilt or shame that you will need stepfamily-aware help to succeed at your complex multi-year, multi-family merger. That invites learning what help your adults and kids need, and where to find it. 

        The best time to start this project is before re/wedding or soon afterward. Check your support-network status and progress regularly together using a worksheet like this. Your success in evolving an effective support system will reflect your accumulated progress with all prior safeguard projects – specially building an effective co-parenting team (Project 10).

        In the real world, you'll build your support network while working at up to 10 other stepfamily-building projects, over time. The complexity of this long-term, multi-level effort justifies a final project for you partners: balancing where you each put your personal, re/marital, and co-parental energies every day, for the four or more years it will take you all to "raise your barn." 

        I've seen that co-parents who help each other adapt and work steadily on all these sequential projects are most likely to keep their personal and re/marital balances. That promotes (often) enjoying the whole bumpy, challenging, rewarding stepfamily-building process as it unfolds. Can you imagine that?


   Options

  • Take a reality check: on a scale of one (I'm not interested in building a support network now) to ten (I'm committed to building a support network for our stepfamily now), I'm a __. Bonus question: who just answered this - your Self or "someone else"?

  • Try out this stepfamily-support inventory; or...

  • Study how to shop for an effective stepfamily counsel, and/or evaluate stepfamily advice; or...

  • Explore the set of Project 11 pages on starting and running an effective co-parent support group; and/or...

  • Learn about keeping your personal, re/marital, and stepfamily balances while you co-parents work at all these concurrent safeguard projects; or...

  • Take a well deserved breather!

        Pause, breathe, and recall why you read this 4-page article. Did you get what you needed? If so, what do you need now? If not - what do you need? Is there anyone you want to discuss these ideas with? Who's answering these questions - your wise resident true Self, or "someone else"?

+ + +

This article was very helpful  somewhat helpful  not helpful  

<<  Previous page  /  Add to favorites  /  Print page  /  Email this article's address  >>

colorbar

 home  /  site overview  /  directory  /  site map  /  Q&A  /  quizzes  /  solutions  /  site search  /  glossary

  research  /  free course  /  guidebooks  NEW  forums resources  /  feedback  and/or  subscribe  * copyright info

Updated  December 24, 2008