Project 9: merge several biofamilies and resolve many conflicts

 

Manage Sexual Attraction
Between Stepsiblings
- p. 2 of 2

Co-parents Clarify and Resolve the Real Problems

By Peter K. Gerlach, MSW
Member NSRC Experts Council

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

Continued...

        Toward co-parents making wise decisions about sexuality between stepsiblings, we just explored basic family "sex education" topics." Let's build on that by considering...

2)  What's Different About Sex Education in Stepfamilies?

        Just as typical stepfamilies are like  intact biofamilies in some ways and very different in others, some things are the same about stepfamily sex education, and some things aren't. As they approach and experience puberty, kids in all families need thoughtful, informed answers to questions like those above. See how you feel about this summary of key environmental sex-education differences between typical stepfamilies and biofamilies: A = "I agree," D = "I disagree," and ? = "I'm not sure," or "It depends on (what?)"...

        Difference 1)  Again, the normal incest taboo is considerably weaker in average stepfamilies compared to healthy biofamilies. Average stepsiblings, and stepkids and their stepparents, haven't grown up with each other, so they're more apt to feel sexual with each other than biofamily peers. That means the family needs for adult (a) clarity and harmony on (b) accurate adult sexual knowledge, values, limits, and policies, are higher in typical stepfamilies.

It also means that stepparents, stepkids, and stepsiblings are more apt to have sexual feelings for each other. That can significantly affect if, when, and how new stepparents and relatives (a) provide needed sexual guidance and limits, and (b) react to their stepkids' sexual beliefs, values and behaviors. (A  D  ?)

        Difference 2)  Typical stepfamilies have three or more co-parents in several different homes, and six or more co-grandparents. This means (a) there are more people to provide support (+), and (b) higher odds for serious (sexual and other) values conflicts among several or all of these people (-).  (A  D  ?)

        Difference 3)  While child-care goals are pretty similar between stepparents and bioparents, there are ~ 40 environmental differences (psychologically, legally, financially, and socially) between those roles. That means that typical stepfamily members can judge a stepparent's sex-education responsibilities, values, and actions differently than "standard" bioparents. 

        That invites stepparent confusion (internal conflicts) and anxiety, and values and loyalty conflicts and associated triangles  with other stepfamily members ("Ellie has no right to talk to your daughter about her menstruation. That's Jackie's (biological) Mother's job!"). Typical bioparents don't experience these as often or as intensely. (A  D  ?)  See Difference 5 below.

        Difference 4)  Most typical divorced-family and stepfamily adults, kids, and kin seem to suffer from significant psychological wounding. This means that if adults' false selves are often in charge, the adults more apt to be psychologically disturbed and reactive and reactive about many issues, including sex edu-cation and effective limit-setting. To see if this applies to you and/or your kids, invest time and energy doing Project 1.  (A  D  ?)

        Difference 5) Typical people in stepfamilies are more prone than peers in intact high-nurturance biofamilies to re/maritally-toxic loyalty conflicts  and divisive relationship triangles. Sexual behaviors be-tween stepsiblings (or any kids) guarantees complex interactive groups of these stressors!  (A  D  ?) If your co-parents are unclear about them and options for combating them, follow the links.

        Bottom line: educating minor kids on healthy sensuality and sexuality in stepfamilies is similar in some ways to any family, and unique in at least five important ways that co-parents need to help each other be aware of. This implies that your co-parents must be able to communicate effectively together on these sensitive topics. Can your co-parents do that, so far? If not, see this.
 

3) What If We Co-parents Disagree Over Sexual Matters?

        The larger problem you all face is "How can we co-parents effectively resolve any major disagree-ment over family roles, relationships, values, loyalties, and resources?" The universal answer is: "Help each other to...

  • put and keep your true Selves in charge of your personalities (work at Project 1);

  • learn and use these key attitudes and Project-2 communication skills, and...

  • admit and patiently work to reduce any major barriers to co-parenting teamwork (Project 10), and...

  • stay clear on the difference between surface and primary problems, and...

  • adapt these premises to identify, rank-order, and resolve your primary problems, one or a few at a time." Option: use this problem-solving checklist as a group resource. 

        Notice what your inner voices (subselves) are saying now... Do you know who is "speaking"?


  But What if We Have a Stepsibling Crisis Now?

        Crisis usually implies someone feels there is significant danger now to someone or something important. In your stepsibling situation, can you name (a) who is in immediate danger (b) of what, in (c) whose opinion? Then select among or adapt these options for resolving any personal or group "crisis":

  • Unless someone's health or life are threatened now, STOP. Slow down, and breathe well...

  • Decide whether your true Self is guiding your other personality subselves. If not, you may have trouble thinking and problem-solving effectively .

  • Keep your perspective: this is (probably) a short-term situation that's part of a complex multi-year stepfamily merger. If you focus on building some strong foundations now, you raise everyone's odds of not living from one stepfamily crisis to the next for the next decade or more.

  • Reaffirm that each person involved in this situation - regardless of age, genes, or gender - has equal dignity, and equally-valid human needs, values, feelings, human rights,  and opinions. Also - some of you have more life wisdom than others...

  • Get undistracted, and use this "dig-down" technique with other family adults to... 

    • identify what each of the current primary problems are, and rank-order them;

    • who is responsible for solving each identified problem. Then... 

    • use your win-win problem-solving skills to brainstorm a best-fit short-term solution. 

Recap

        Because the incest taboo is weaker, the chance for significant sexual attraction or action between stepsiblings is higher than for biological siblings. Because "sex" is such an emotionally-charged subject, sexual attraction between stepbrothers and stepsisters can evoke intense values and loyalty conflicts and relationship triangles in and between their homes.

        This is specially likely if (a) one or more co-parents ignore or minimize their stepfamily's identity and what it means; and/or (b) have personal problems with their own sexuality. Presently, there are few social guidelines for managing stress over stepsibling sexuality - even among human-service professionals.

        This article offers perspective on key aspects of stepsibling sexual attraction, and hilights typical surface and primary problems and solutions. The theme is: such attraction or behavior is a family prob-lem, not a "child problem.

        The article also explores three core questions which will govern how you co-parents react to - and set limits on - their stepsiblings' sexuality. The article closes with options for restoring emotional stability and direction in a "stepsibling sexual crisis."

        Reflect - why did you read this article? Did you get what you needed? If so - what do you need to do next? If not - what do you need now? Who's answering these questions - your wise Self or 'someone else'? 

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Updated  January 02, 2009