Break the [wounds + unawareness] cycle and guard your descendents

Should Stepparents and Stepkids
 Love Each Other?

Seek Mutual Respect First

By Peter K. Gerlach, MSW
Member NSRC Experts Council 

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The Web address of this article is http://sfhelp.org/Rx/spsc/love.htm

        This is one of a series of Web articles suggesting effective solutions for common divorcing-family and stepfamily relationship problems. This subseries focuses on solving common problems between stepkids and stepparents. Most ideas apply equally to divorced co-parents and their minor kids. Read this for perspective on this nonprofit divorce-prevention site and how to best use it. These ideas aim to augment, not replace, other informed professional counsel.

        This article hilights (a) the surface "instant-love" problem common in many stepfamilies, (b) probable primary causes of this problem, and (c) options for reducing these causes over time. Before continuing, say out loud why you're reading this article. What do you need?

        This article assumes you're familiar with these ideas...

  • basic suggestions on stepparent-stepchild relationships

  • this introduction to normal personality subselves (like yours) - slides or text.

  • five basic hazards that promote stepfamily stress and re/divorce, and the primary problems they cause

  • the key ingredients for high-nurturance relationships and families

  • an overview of what typical minor stepchildren need;

  • perspective on effective co-parenting;

  • frameworks for analyzing and resolving typical role and relationship problems; and...

  • these questions and answers about stepparenting and stepkids.


color button.gif What's the (Surface) Problem?

        Typical stepfamilies differ from intact biofamilies in over 60 ways. Typical co-parents and stepchildren aren't aware of these differences. They long for their stepfamily to feel and act "normal" - i.e. like an ideal-ized biofamily. Among dozens of myths (unrealistic expectations) this unawareness causes, one of the most stressful is "stepparents and stepkids should love each other (like bioparents and their children)." Similar myths are stepsiblings, and stepkids and stepgrandparents, should love each other.

        After re/marriage and/or co-habiting, an implacable reality usually emerges: stepparents and stepkids real feelings for each other range from dislike to indifference to friendship (liking) - but rarely become (bio-family) love. When stepfamily adults and kids feel they're "supposed to" love each other and they don't, they can feel blame, self-doubt, guilt, anxiety, confusion, resentment, and hurt.

        If co-parents and kids (a) don't know how to discuss this problem openly, and/or (b) feel unsafe doing so, these normal feelings promote dishonesty (pretense) and double messages - like saying or writing "I love you" when you really don't.

        This myth can cause re/marital problems, if a bioparent expects their new mate to love their step-child/ren and feel and act like a bioparent. The reverse problem occurs when a stepparent criticizes their partner for not urging their resident or visiting stepchild child to love them. Both of these cause stressful relationship triangles and loyalty conflicts.

        This surface problem is common, despite most stepfamily writings and programs alerting co-parents and supporters to not expect "instant love." As we'll see, the expectation is a symptom of some deeper problems. If the "instant love" myth is causing significant problems in your multi-home stepfamily, what are the underlying causes, and what options do you co-parents have to resolve them?


color button.gif  What's Really Going On?

        In my 27-year clinical experience, when stepfamily members are conflicted over adult/child "love" issues, typical adults are unaware of most or all of these 11 primary problems:

        1) One or more co-parents (like you?) bear significant false-self wounds, and they (a) deny it, or (b) don't know what to do about it. This is a common root of most significant stepfamily role and relationship problems, and the justification for co-parent Project 1. A tragic minority of survivors of early-childhood abuse and neglect suffer from being unable to genuinely bond with (care about) some or all other people - including themselves. Such tormented, lonely adults and kids often feel desperate to find idealized biofamily love and security.
 

        To make this more vivid, try this reality check: (a) identify the adult you love the most in life (non-sexually). (b) Breathe well, recall being with them, and experience the love you feel. Then (c) get undistracted, gaze steadily into your eyes in a mirror, and see if you feel the same loving feelings for that person. Notice how your subselves react to this idea now...

         Another widespread core problem is...

        2) One or more co-parents are denying or ignoring their identity as a normal multi-home stepfamily, and they don't (want to) know what that identity means. One result: They mistakenly expect their family roles and relationships to feel and act like those in an intact biofamily.

        They may c/overtly deny their denial or minimize it ("OK, so we're a stepfamily - so what?"). This denial and ignorance breeds many problems, not just the stepparent-stepchild "love" myth. In this site, co-parent Project 3 provides options for correcting this core problem.       

        3) Even if key stepfamily adults intellectually agree "We are a stepfamily," one or more may not know what's normal in a typical stepfamily - i.e. they're still applying biofamily norms and expectations to their alien new roles and relationships, and they don't know that.

        A solution to this is co-parenting partners agreeing to review and discuss these common myths and realities and adjust your expectations of yourselves and each other where needed. One vital adjustment is to accept that "Stepparents and stepkids should work toward earning mutual respect and trust, over time, not love. Genuine bonding (caring), liking, and a special kind of adult-child love may or may not develop over years of shared experiences. If it doesn't, no one is wrong or "bad"!

        Follow-up tasks are to help all other stepfamily adults and kids (a) accept your identity as a normal multi-home stepfamily and what that means, and then (b) grieve the inevitable losses these acceptances cause over time (e.g. "We'll never feel like the ideal biofamily I've longed for"). Co-parent Projects 4 and 5 offer perspectives, guidelines, and resources to help gain these acceptances and grieve losses well.

        If your co-parents, kids, and relatives truly accept your stepfamily identity and norms and still have significant stress over stepchild - stepparent "love," several other core problems may need to be resolved. A common one is that...

        4) the stepchild, the stepparent, or both are early or stuck in grieving their major family-adjustment losses. Typical stepfamily adults and kids each need to make major progress identifying and grieving their significant losses from childhood + parent death or divorce, and their family reorganizing (splitting into several homes) + parental re/marriage and cohabiting before they can form stable new bonds with steprel-atives. False-self wounds + ignorance of stepfamily realities and "good-grief" basics promote slow or frozen mourning. Project 5 suggests practical ways co-parents can evolve a "pro-grief" home and stepfamily.

        5) You co-parents aren't communicating effectively. Symptoms are that you adults can't agree that (a) there is a significant problem, (b) what it is, (c) why it exists; (d) who's responsible to improve it and/or (e) how to improve it. Another symptom is that you (f) can't discuss these topics without fighting, withdraw-ing, or losing focus. 

        Specifically, your co-parents don't know effective-communication basics and skills, and how to help each other reduce their mix of these common communication blocks. For example, can you describe values and loyalty conflicts and associated relationship triangles, and what to do about each of them?

        The solution here is for your co-parents to...

  • admit this root problem without blame or guilt, and...

  • commit to patient work at Project 2 together: learning to use the seven communication skills that empower effective family win-win problem solving. As you do,

  • model and teach these basics and skills to all kids and interested relatives and supporters.

If you have trouble committing to this vital work, false-self wounds + unawareness + barriers like these may be hindering you all.

        6) Another root problem here may be that one or more of your stepfamily adults can't define or agree on bioparent-child love, and liking (caring about), acceptance, and respect among people in related stepfamily roles. If true, you all risk thinking and saying "We steppeople should love each other," instead of "We should help each other respect, understand, and accept each other."

      The skills of awareness and metatalk, and evolving a family glossary like this, can help to minimize terminology problems. Resolving such problems is most likely when all your family adults (a) are guided by their true Selves, (b) share genuine attitudes of mutual respect, and (c) want to improve their Project-2 skills.

         Another possible primary problem promoting your stepchild-stepparent "love problem" is...

        7) Someone's time-sense is distorted (unrealistic). For various reasons, adults or kids may feel "We've all been together in this home or family long enough, so you/we should love each other by now." Reflect on this: how long does it take for genuine adult-child love to bloom? How long to grow true, stable respect between two people? 

        Most stepfamily researchers observe that it usually takes four or more years after re/marriage for typical stepfamily members to know, accept, and trust each other. That may or may not include respect and liking. Learning and accepting this time span is part of adopting realistic stepfamily expectations - # 3 above. If someone in your home or stepfamily is exceptionally impatient (needy) for stepparent-stepchild "love," see # 1 above.

        8) A common core problem here is that - on top of some of the factors above, some combination of disrespect + dislike + distrust + disinterest + hostility + blocked grief may exist in and between the stepparent and stepchild. Each of these deserves individual attention and patient problem-solving by co-parent partners.

When they're all resolved enough for all people, some degree of love may evolve. Option: try nonjudgmentally mapping recent communication sequences between the stepparent and stepchild to evaluate the R-messages that each is probably decoding from the other. Do this to discover and improve, not to blame!

        9) It may be that a stepchild feels victimized in an impossible loyalty conflict because their (inse-cure, wounded) bioparent is threatened by their child showing affection and respect for their stepparent. Their bioMom or Dad may be giving the child c/overt signals saying "It is not OK with me that you feel or show affection and respect (much less love) for your stepparent."

        Co-parenting mates probably cannot ease the other bioparent's insecurities (wounds and ignorance), and they can assert that by discouraging the child's feelings, the insecure bioparent is lowering their stepfamily's nurturance level, hindering healthy bonding, and (unintentionally) wounding their child.

        If the insecure adult is too wounded to listen, (a) see if any options here are useful, (b) reassure the child as best you can and (c) lower any expectations of her or him "being affectionate" (vs. "loving"), and (d) remind each other to use these wisdoms regularly.

        10) In typical new stepfamilies, several or all adults and kids are confused and conflicted about their roles and behavioral rules - they haven't agreed yet on what to expect from themselves and each other. Many co-parents can't name or describe the normal and special needs of their minor kids - and/or what an effective co-parent is.

        This justifies co-parent Projects 6 and 10 - (a) evolving a stepfamily mission statement, (b) learning minor kids' needs, and (c) assessing their status with them, and then (d) evolving clear, consensual agreements on what each co-parent is responsible for. Have your co-parents and supporters done this yet?

        An overarching root of your stepparent-stepchild "love problem" (and many others) may be that...

        11) Because of unseen wounds + unawareness + blocked grief + neediness, one or both of you mates may have chosen the wrong adults and kids to commit to, at the wrong time, for the wrong reasons. One version of this is that a partner committed to co-creating or joining a stepfamily despite...

  • having major "bad chemistry" (dislike + disrespect + distrust + hostility) with one or more stepkids, and/or...

  • not _ understanding, _ wanting, or _ being ready to assume the alien, challenging role of stepmo-ther or stepfather among many stressors and complex biofamily- merger tasks.

Projects 1-7 exist to help courting partners make three informed, wise co-commitment decisions. If you're already re/married, these projects can help you understand your situation better - but that probably won't correct making any wrong decisions.

        We've just overviewed 11 possible primary problems that can promote "love" conflicts in and about stepchild/ren and their stepparent/s. These apply to relations among adult and minor stepkids, and steprelatives. Usually (a) several of these factors are present, (b) reinforcing each other until they're reduced, and (c) causing several to many other stressors at the same time reasons.

Options

        To reduce these primary problems, co-parents need to...

be guided steadily by their respective true Selves and Higher Power;

be clear and unified on their personal and family priorities;

be clear and agreed on who's responsible for improving these underlying primary problems. Beware of (over)focusing on a child "acting out" as the main problem. That behavior is usu-ally a symptom of a stew of underlying problems in and between the three or more related co-parents;

be able to admit that (a) they're each part of these concurrent problems, without excessive guilt, shame, and defensiveness; and that (b) "fixing" the problems will involve them (the co-parents) changing in important ways, as well as other stepfamily members;

        And for eventual stability and success, co-parent mates also need to...

each be motivated to work consistently as teammates, vs. opponents, on the several co-parent projects (safeguards) linked above, because they want to, rather than because they have to. Like true priorities, motivation is more accurately reflected by recent actions rather then words. And co-parents need to...

adopt and keep a 15-20 year outlook, and help each other maintain matching patience. Sort and prioritize stepfamily relationship goals and concurrent problems, focus on resolving a few at a time, and keep balanced along the way.

        All this is happening in a dynamic world that keeps changing in, between, and around you. Doing all these things together and enjoying the process often enough is part of what it means to "build a stepfami-ly together."

        We've just covered a lot, so take a breather! Recall why you read this article. Did you get what you needed? Notice your self talk now. For more perspective and options, browse these q&a, resource, and other Solutions articles.

color button.gif Recap

        A common stressful misconception that typical stepfamily members and supporters carry is that stepparents and stepkids (and maybe step-siblings) are supposed to "love" each other soon after co-parents' re/marry, or "eventually." This often never happens - as fast as members expect, or at all. This "lack of love" usually fosters one or more stepfamily members feeling significantly blamed, confused, guilty, ashamed, self-doubtful, hurt, and angry.

        As with most stepfamily role and relationship conflicts, discomforts over stepparent - stepchild love are usually caused by a mix of unawareness + unrealistic expectations + unacknowledged psychological wounds + ineffective communications.

        With steady commitment to building high-nurturance stepfamily relationships, co-parent partners can overcome each of these cha