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

When a Minor Child Changes Homes - p. 1 of 2

Plan for, Grieve, and Manage Many Changes

by Peter K. Gerlach, MSW

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The Web address of this two-page article is http://sfhelp.org/Rx/spl/kid-moves.htm

        Clicking links below will open a full window or an informational popup, so please turn off your browser's popup blocker or allow popups from this nonprofit Web site.

        This is one of over 150 articles focused on healing psychological wounds,  building high-nurtur-ance family relationships, breaking the [wounds + unawareness] cycle, 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?

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        Some years ago, a research study estimated that in about one of every three U.S. stepfamilies, a minor child went to live permanently with their other bioparent at some point. This is one of the many divorced-family and stepfamily dynamics that intact-biofamily members don't encounter. Typical adults in both homes and their relatives and supporters have no experience in anticipating and managing the many impacts of such a residence change.

        This two-page article...

  • overviews common family impacts of a minor child's long-term change in primary residence,

  • highlights what typical kids need, and...

  • suggests options for managing your complex set of changes well.

        You'll get more from this article if you read these first: 

  • Factors that promote high-nurturance families and relationships;

  • This array of stepfamily basics and implications;  

  • An overview of five reasons many U.S. stepfamily re/marriages eventually fail psychologically or legally, and the core problems they cause;

  • how typical stepfamily co-parenting environments differ from traditional intact bioparenting;

  • The developmental and special family-adjustment needs typical minor stepkids must fill;

  • This overview of co-parent Project 10: learn what your dependent kids need, and form an effective co-parenting team to help fill them; and...

  • These suggestions on managing complex family-system changes well.

        The process of a minor stepchild changing their custodial residence can vary between "very harmonious" and "very conflictual." The degree of harmony or conflict depends largely on how much co-parent communication and planning went into deciding if, when, how, and why to make this important family change.

        Other key factors are whether all co-parents (a) accept their stepfamily identity and what it means, (b) have resolved any serious barriers to caregiving teamwork, (c) understand the special needs of the child/ren involved, and (d) know how to resolve values and loyalty conflicts and associated relationship triangles.  

        We'll start exploring how to make a harmonious residence shift by hilighting typical changes you'll want to plan for. Then we'll look at options for making the best of an unplanned child-residence change. 


Basic Premises

        Three keys to successfully merging three or more biofamilies over many years are co-parent awareness, planning, and change management. Helping everyone keep their balance during a child's residence change is a subset of this overall challenge.

        One way of managing change effectively to clarify "who needs what, before, during, and after the child moves?" Another way is to assess "Who will lose things they value, and who will gain?" A third approach is "Which of our stepfamily members will be most impacted by our child(ren) changing homes?"

        Compare your beliefs to these: note whether you A(gree), D(isagree), or (?) aren't sure...

      1) The degree of harmony or heartburn that results from a minor child changing homes is directly proportional to who's really making this change: co-parents' false selves or their true Selves. Implication: co-parents who have worked patiently at Project 1 (assess for false-self wounds)  have the best chances for managing a residence transfer that fills everyone's primary needs well enough. (A  D  ?)

        2) Residence changes are best viewed as family-system changes, not just "address changes" for the relocating child/ren. Implication: residence shifts work best long-term when everyone affected feels their needs and opinions have been thoughtfully respected are easier to adjust to than unplanned or forced changes. (A  D  ?)

        3) Child-dwelling and custody changes should be made by all affected co-parents, including stepparents - not by minor kids, siblings, legal or counseling professionals, or relatives. Asking a child "Do you want to live with me or your Mom / Dad?" abdicates parental responsibility and risks overwhelming a child with confusion, guilt, and anxiety. Learning and considering kids' feelings and wishes in choosing their primary residence is important and respectful. (A  D  ?)

        Premise 4)  With enough (a) awareness, (b) respectful assertion (vs. demands or ultimatums), and (c) empathic listening, everyone affected by a child shifting homes can feel "reasonably OK" with their version of the web of changes below. Restated: all co-parents feeling balanced self and mutual respect raises the odds for a harmonious residence and custody change. (A  D  ?)

        5) Bioparent (and grandparent) guilt and shame can be minimized by choosing not to see this residence shift as some kind of caregiving "failure" in the original home. The surface reason for some crisis-based dwelling changes is "I or we (bioparent and stepparent) can't handle this child - you (the receiving co-parent/s) do it." (A  D  ?).

        6) Co-parents who know how to dig down to discern the primary needs (plural) that motivate a child's residence change have better chances for a smooth transition than adults who focus only on surface needs. (A  D  ?) A final premise:

        7) Co-parents who (a) understand values and loyalty conflicts and relationship triangles, (b) expect them to erupt before, during, and after a child changes homes, and who (c) can use effective-communication knowledge and skills to resolve all three stressors are more likely to have smooth transitions. (A  D  ?)

        Notice what you're thinking and feeling. How do your beliefs compare with these premises? What do the other adults taking part in your child's residence change believe? Your beliefs govern your behavior.


Why Change Residences?

        Premise: there are healthy and unhealthy reasons to change. Healthy means "the overall long-term quality of everyone's (a) personal growth and (b) stepfamily relationships is improved by this change." An alternative definition is "the nurturance level of both homes remains the same or improves over time because of this change." Reasons refer to the co-parents' primary needs that cause the child to change homes. What are some healthy primary needs (reasons)?

We co-parents need the safety and the wholistic health of all our kids to increase.

We need the frequency and intensity of child-related conflicts in and between both homes to decrease.

We need this child to experience a balance of nurturing from male and female co-parents.

We need to protect and strengthen the primary relationship/s (e.g. re/marriage) in each co-parenting home, long term.

We need to resolve a local family crisis (e.g. a disabled custodial parent), and can see no better solution than a (temporary or permanent) residence change.

        Do you see other healthy reasons for a child's residence change? Here are some unhealthy primary reasons...

  • To punish or get revenge on someone

  • To improve someone's financial security

  • To appease an aggressive family member or other person

  • To accommodate a child's desires for more freedom, less limits, and/or things like a bigger room, a PC, car, TV, phone, pet, "better school," different friends, "more fun,"...

  • To provide companionship and/or life-purpose for the receiving co-parent

  • To lower conflicts between a stepparent and a stepchild and/or stepsiblings who "don't like each other" and "can't get along"

  • To avoid admitting that someone made wrong re/marital choices

  • To avoid responsibility for improving co-parents' communication effectiveness

  • To appease someone who feels strongly that some child "needs a sibling"

  • To reduce a co-parent's excessive shame and guilt

  • To follow the advice of some lay or professional "expert"

  • To avoid challenging co-parental responsibilities

  • To end stressful co-parenting court battles and legal expenses

  • To avoid someone's grief over major losses (broken bonds)

  • (Add your own) 

        Do you agree that some primary reasons for a child's residence change are healthier than others? Note that there are more unhealthy reasons than healthy ones; and there are lots of chances for denial here - i.e. co-parents' masking or ignoring their real motives for a residence change. Such denials occur when one or more co-parents are ruled by a false self and don't know it, or aren't ready to face it.  

        Whether your adults have healthy reasons and an effective change-management plan or not...


What Changes Can You Expect?

        Each resident in your two homes will experience subtle to jarring changes as the child's relocation "sinks in." The combined changes will affect your individual and family harmony or stress. See which of these shifts in and between both your homes are likely to be significant in your unique situation...

Priorites  - who's needs get the most attention, from whom, and what needs?

Daily and special routines - like who gets the bathroom first, getting ready for school and work, rejoining after school or work, who watches what on TV, dinner times, home-maintenance chores, laundry, grocery shopping, getting ready for bed, and what happens in the house on typical weekends.

Household roles and rules  - a role is a set of home and family responsibilities, like taking out the trash, paying the bills, feeding pets, and setting and enforcing disciplinary limits. Your child's moving will alter many responsibilities and rules (how roles are performed, and by whom) in both homes - specially if accompanied by a legal-custody change. Role and rule changes will probably create some disputes over who gets to do what, or doesn't have to do what.

Finances - this may be a significant source of transitional conflict, as regular and special child-support and living expenses shift and stabilize. Insurance coverages and/or visitation expenses may shift. Conflicts are specially likely if the child's residence, custody, and child-support changes are court-ordered. Conflicts over "money" are never really about money!

Companionships and alliances - residents in each home will adjust who they spend time with, and how. Siblings may lose or gain a playmate, or a nurturing or antagonistic older (step)brother or sister.

        More changes to expect from a child changing homes...

Personal and couple privacies - adults and kids all will experience a little to a lot more "alone time." The noise level in both homes may shift, which may affect privacies and intimacy.

Space - A bed, closet, drawers, and part or all of a bedroom will empty in the original dwelling, and fill up in the receiving home. Kids may gain or lose a roommate, wanted or not. Meals will feature an empty chair in one home, and a filled chair in the other.

Household conversational focus - the pattern of what residents talk about, and with whom, will change - probably including telephone and e-mail patterns.

Household relationship structures  - the complex pattern of roles, boundaries, ranks, and communication dynamics - i.e. how each home "runs" - will alter. So will the emotional "tone"  - the sets of most-prevalent emotions in adults and kids. The [peace > stress], [secure > anxious], and [fun > serious] balances are likely to shift in one or both dwellings.  

Child-visitations routines - the frequency, duration, and logistics (like who plans, packs, and drives), of shuttling one or more kids to visit their other parent will change. 

Legal parenting responsibilities and documents - child custody and parenting agreements may shift informally or by court order. So will primary adult supervision of the child's schooling, church, hygiene, health, socializing, and special activities. Day-care and/or baby sitting details may change.

Daily and special meals - the patterns of grocery shopping, food preparation, eating and "table-talk," snacking, and cleaning up will transform.

Holidays and special rituals (both homes) - birthdays, anniversaries, graduations, vacations, prayers, and other traditional events will change;

Relations with some relatives, friends, and acquaintances will change. Adults may lose or gain relationships with the child's friends' parents; the child will probably gain new friends and lose old ones. The frequency and nature of contact with some relatives may grow or shrink for each person in both homes. If a bioparent is single, their dating attitudes and behaviors may change.

Personal identities - here, identity is how each adult and child labels themselves as individuals. "I'm the custodial father of two sons" becomes "... of one son." "I'm a full-time stepmom" turns into "...a part time..." "I live with my two sisters, my mom, and my stepdad," shifts to "I live with my dad and his Basset Hound."

School routines and study habits - the child may shift schools, courses and teachers. The attitudes and rules about homework and school performance in the receiving home may be significantly different.   

Respect - co-parents and co-grandparents may gain or lose self respect when a child changes homes, as in "I've done a good/bad job as a caregiver." Relatives and family friends may shift their opinions of the child's co-parents as persons, and/or in their caregiving roles. Custodial stepparents may feel differently about themselves and/or their partner, too.

Expectations, hopes, and fears about the future - changes in these can range from minor to major, as in "This summer won't be the same," to "I thought I'd be able to use my sister's car when I got my license," to "Now we can (or can't) think about moving to Colorado and having a baby!"  

Each person's set of losses to grieve - dwelling changes usually cause tangible and invisible losses (broken attachments, or bonds). These add to each child's and adult's set of prior childhood, divorce or death, and stepfamily-formation losses that need to be mourned and accepted. And...

Participation in child-related activities or groups will shift, like T-ball, church groups, Rainbows, Indian Princesses or Scouts, school bands or teams, etc.  

        Add your own changes...

       
       

       

        Did you realize how many things would change when your child relocates? Like dominos, each of these 20 (!) shifts causes secondary changes to ripple through your multi-generational stepfamily's many homes.  The whole intricate web of your emotional lives and relationships will oscillate for months or years, until each of your stepfamily members grieves what they've lost well enough and stabilizes their new routines, plans, and expectations. This is another reason for you co-parents to assess for blocked grief, and invest conscious effort in evolving a meaningful Good Grief policy for your homes and family (i.e. to work at Project 5).

        The more change-planning discussions your co-parents and kids have had, the more chance you've had to do anticipatory grief (mourning before your losses occur), and the faster you may recover your personal and household balances and move on. Does anything hinder such discussions among you?

        I hope this summary of changes motivates you co-parents to (a) plan the change well, (b) be aware of your thoughts, feelings, and needs while the residence-change is stabilizing, and (c) asking for  the support you need from each other without undue anxiety, guilt, or shame. Each of your adults and kids will adjust to all these changes at their own pace, in their own way - e.g. privately or socially, quickly or slowly, intellectually or emotionally, dramatically or calmly... There is no "best" way to adjust, like there is no "best" fingerprint.

        Before continuing, reflect: why did you begin reading this article - what did you need? Are you getting what you needed yet?

Continue by exploring (a) what typical kids need in making a residence change, and (b) options for managing unplanned dwelling changes well enough.
 

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Updated  August 29, 2008