Project 10 of 12 - evolve a high-nurturance co-parenting team

Confront Disapproval from Step-Relatives

Help each Other Reduce Up to
Seven Primary Problems
- p. 1 of 2

by Peter K. Gerlach, MSW

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The Web address of this two-page article is http://sfhelp.org/Rx/kin/disapproval.htm

        This is one of a series of Web articles suggesting practical solutions to common divorced-family and stepfamily relationship problems. This Solutions sub-series focuses on solving common problems between step-relatives. Most ideas apply equally to divorced biofamilies. This gives perspective in this nonprofit divorce-prevention Web site and how to best use it. The ideas here aim to augment, not replace, other qualified professional counsel. Links here will open a popup or full browser window. Use your browser's "back" button to return from the latter.

        This article (a) begins with a brief perspective on typical step-kin relations, and (b) suggests key surface reasons that step-relatives disapprove of each other. Then we'll explore (c) the primary stressors, and (d) hilight options re/married co-parents have for confronting and/or adapting to judgmental kinfolk.

        Get the most from reading this by first reviewing...

Perspective...

        Typical stepfamilies are formed from three or more multi-generational biofamilies, often totaling over 100 kids and adults. The co-parents'  biofamilies are often from different ethnic cultures, religions, geographic regions, and even races. These differences mean that the odds of conflicting values and traditions among all these people is higher than in typical intact biofamilies.

        A century ago, ~90% of American stepfamilies formed after the death of the stepkids' biomother or father. Thanks to better nutrition and health care, women's (partial) emancipation, and increased social acceptance of divorce, now ~90% of U.S. stepfamilies form after the legal divorce of one or both new partners. 

        When a minor child's father or mother dies or parents divorce, each child and emotionally-bonded relative must grieve their web of losses before being able to form new bonds with a new stepparent and their (kids and) relatives.  

        Divorce usually implies (a) wounded, unaware relatives in both co-parents' biofamilies, and (b) complex webs of current relationship barriers among blood and legal relatives.

The Seeds of Family Discord

        Typical parents of kids who divorce agonize over whether their grandkids' family disintegration is somehow "my or our fault." This is specially true in grandparents who divorced themselves. Many have strong religious training that decrees divorce to be a sin, and remarriage to be unholy in God's or their church-congregation's judgments. They want their kids to be happy anyway, and their grandkids to be safe and nurtured.

        Grandparents may have grown strong bonds with their former son or daughter-in-law and/or their relatives. When a divorced parent chooses a new partner, grandparents, aunts, uncles, and siblings may or may not want to accept and build relationships with the new mate and any stepkids and relatives. This mutual-acceptance dance can breed a bewildering array of plastic smiles and loyalty conflicts for years after nuptial vows. In the best cases, it can also bring immediate good chemistry, and fine new bonds and good times.

        We all long for love and harmony, specially in the home we wake up in each morning, and among the relatives we're share special occasions with. This is specially true for the grandparents, parents, and kids who have known years of tension prior to divorce, then more stress during the grinding separation and legal-divorce process. 

        Relatives surviving the sudden or drawn-out death of a child's parent live with their own longing for family stability and happiness to replace their anxiety and sorrow.

Meet Re/marital Dreams and Expectations

        The joy and hope of a fresh-start re/wedding often rekindles everyone's dream that somehow the spirit of the TV Brady Bunch will infuse all the new (alien) kinfolk, starting with the three or more co-parents, their minor and grown kids, and six or more co-grandparents. Why does that seldom happen? This is a complex topic, so let's create some structure to ground us. What follows focuses generally on the key problems typical re/married co-parents face when one or several of their blood or legal relatives disapprove of or reject them and/or their kids. What does that "look like"?

        To illustrate, let's meet a mythical couple who just re/married - Joe and Barbara Silverman. She has two custodial minor kids, and he's a childless first-time husband. He was raised in a Detroit suburb by well to do, traditional Jewish parents, while her childhood culture was small-town southern Baptist. Barbara's ex, Frank, grew up in an Appalachian coal town amidst a clan of hard-working blood relatives with little formal education and a lot of calluses. To keep it simple, we'll say that Frank and Barbara's divorce was granted two years ago, and he's starting to date, but has no new partner yet.

        If Barbara, Frank, and Joe are under 45, all six of their parents may be alive. They total (6 grandparents + 3 co-parents + 2 kids) = 11 people. This means they have [(11 x 10) / 2] = 55 relationships to re/negotiate. Adding the brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles, and cousins in their three families, they might total (say) 64 people - with [(64 x 63) / 2] = 2,016 relationships to stabilize! How would you begin to do that? If 40-something Frank remarries a divorcee with several kids (which is likely), that could easily double.

        Each of the three co-parents have stable adult relationships with their respective parents. Barbara and Frank "know" each other and their kids, and the kids "know" (what to expect from) their four grandparents from over ten years' shared experiences. Joe and his parents are faced with "getting to know" (i.e. to understand, trust, accept, evolve stable boundaries, care about) these eight people, and merging their traditions, values, and beliefs with theirs to form a stable (step)family.

        In several years, Frank might eventually remarry Sarah,  who has an A.D.D. (Attention Deficit Disorder) son failing high school, a hostile, guilty ex husband Jose in San Juan, and has 47 blood and legal relatives living in 14 homes scattered over North America and Puerto Rico. Their union would initiate another merger of 16 groups of  tangible and invisible things that they - or any new stepfamily members - must combine and stabilize after commitment and moving in together. 

        Try bringing these ideas to life by diagramming your present (step)family now. Reflect on the mix of races, religions, ethnic and educational backgrounds, and lifestyles. Then try computing the number of possible relationships among all your members. What do you learn?

        Let's continue exploring how co-parents can cope with relatives' rejection and disapproval by surveying common...

Surface Reasons That Typical Step-relatives Don't Mesh

        Though details vary richly, the surface kinfolk-relationship problems that co-parents like Joe and Barbara face fall into several categories. See if you see a version of your situation here: 

        1)  A co-parent's bioparent/s and/or other relatives...

Refuse to acknowledge they're part of a stepfamily, and behave as though the steppeople have no personal or social relevance;

Are cool to, distant with, or clearly rude and hostile to, the co-parent's spouse, kids, and/or kin in extended-family activities and decisions. Symptoms include...

  • "forgetting" to invite them to family gatherings;

  • excluding the new adult's name from invitations;

  • not buying presents at gift-exchange times;

  • not recognizing birthdays, achievements, or losses;

  • repeatedly calling and asking "Can I speak to (Barbara)?" Without a genuine "Joe, how are you?";

  • omitting or minimizing step-relatives in estate plans; etc. 

The extreme form of this is a relative cutting off relations with a co-parent and/or their child completely.

Subtly or openly disparage (talk badly about) one or more of these: (a) the new partner as a person, (b) the partner's education, religion, or ethnic, or social background; (c) the partner's child, or parenting skills; and/or (d) the partner's blood relatives - e.g. "Joe, dear, your father and I don't get along all that well with Baptists," or "Barbara, how could you pick an immoral man who got a girl pregnant, and then allowed her to abort?"

Criticize a co-parent's decisions, attitudes, values, or behaviors - "I think Barbara and Frank gave up way to easily. They're obviously immature, and had no sense of responsibility for their poor children;"

Repeatedly decline invitations to visit the new couple's home or to socialize, evasively or bluntly. A variation is they do socialize, and are clearly uncomfortable, bored, disinterested, rude, or critical; or step-relatives can...

Actively participate in a child-related legal battle between divorced parents, or acidly disparage or reject one or both adults for engaging in same;

        Other typical surface problems between step-kin are...

        2) A minor or grown stepchild is rude to, disrespectful of, or "doesn't want to" visit step-relatives - specially a step-grandparent; - e.g. Barbara's teen daughter loudly resists going to have dinner with "Joe's totally boring old-fogey parents."

        3) A stepparent resists social occasions with her/his stepkids' "other" blood relatives - e.g. Joe balks at attending a family party that includes Frank and/or his relatives; 

        4) One or more relatives reject their own child, grandchild, or ex in-law: "I will not be in the same room with that loser / monster / pervert / whore / devil's spawn / addict / ingrate /...";

        5) One or more of the antagonists deny their behavior, and pretend interest, acceptance, and concern that seems insincere: "Of course  we like Barbara's children, Joe!  Your mother and I just... aren't used to having such, uh, active (i.e. loud, rude, ill-mannered, self-centered) young people in our home."

        A last over-arching category of tension over relatives' disapproval and rejection is...

        6) One or more of the conflicted people refuse to problem-solve together. Variation: they'll try, but the attempt always ends up in "fights," "attacks" (blaming and criticizing), "yelling matches," "name calling," "power struggles," or someone "not listening." The worst case is co-parents not talking with each other and/or their grown or minor kids.

        Can you think of other examples of step-kin rejection or conflict?

        For perspective, note that criticisms, discounts, and rejections can erupt...

  • before co-parents divorce,

  • because of a separation or divorce,

  • because of some post-divorce event like an ex mate forcing the other into legal battle, or a child's residence-change;

  • because of pre-re/marriage cohabiting, and/or a re/marriage decision or ceremony; or...

  • as new kinfolk start to merge and "get to know each other." 

        Sometimes several of these are true. One implication is that at any time in a re/married couple's history, there may be little, some, or a lot of tension with genetic and legal relatives. Cordiality during pre-remarital courtship is not a reliable predictor of long-term kinfolk harmony and bonding.

        In sum: all families have tensions and conflicts among their members. Typical stepfamilies have more members, more conflicts, the dynamics are usually more complex, and the social environment is less supportive. One stress can be from relatives disapproving or rejecting their new step-kin.

Two key implications:

average stepfamily co-parents have a higher chance of significant re/marital stress than first-marriers, partly due to inter-relative discord. Therefore...

their minor kids have a higher chance of significant family stress than peers in typical intact, high-nurturance biofamilies. This stress is compounded by stepkids' many concurrent developmental and family-adjustment needs

The second point is in the context of typical stepkids  possible concurrent family-adjustment needs to fill, while trying to evolve into competent, independent young adults!

        This site proposes that most role and relationship problems have surface symptoms caused by a mix of unfilled primary needs. If unaware co-parents focus only on problem symptoms, their discomforts will relentlessly return and expand. Our American divorce epidemic seems to validate this opinion. 

So - what do couples like Joe and Barbara (and you?) really need, and what are your options for filling your needs?

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Updated  October 22, 2008