The Second Marriage: Conflicts & Problems in Starting a Second Family & How to Handle Them

Conflicts for blended families fall in six different categories. If you enter the "state of step-parenthood" without prior discussion, planning and agreement with your spouse-to-be, you will certainly be caught by one or more of these conflicts.

A second marriage means a second or blended family for many persons.

Conflicts for blended families fall in six different categories. If you enter the “state of step-parenthood” without prior discussion, planning and agreement with your spouse-to-be, you will certainly be caught by one or more of these conflicts.

And, frankly, even the best planned, discussed, and agreed-upon-in-advance blueprints will meet with some problems such as the six discussed below. It’s the nature of the beast: blended or second family!

1. Unrealistic expectations of marriage.

  • Belief that romance will conquer all.
  • Belief that marriage will “jumpstart” his/her life.
  • Belief being married will solve all problems, including loneliness.
  • Belief that life will continue to be like the courtship phase was.
  • Belief that romance will stay alive in a marriage unaided, or even with lots of help.

2. Unrealistic expectations of a blended family.

  • Belief that a blended family will be immediately loving: the instant family myth.
  • Belief that stepchildren will love you.
  • Belief that the stepchildren will respect and/or obey you.
  • Belief that a blended family will be like a nuclear family.
  • Belief that the biological parent, your spouse, will support you in ways that are not happening.
  • Belief that the biological parent, your spouse, will see your side.
  • Belief that the biological parent, your spouse, will intuitively know what you want–that he/she can read minds.
  • Belief that the stepchildren will be fair to you.
  • Belief that the stepchildren can think like adults.
  • Belief that the biological parent, your spouse, will want to function as a team.

3. One spouse is not involved in the care of his/her children.

One partner, say dad, seemed very involved with this children while the couple were dating. After marriage, however, Dad seems to forget about the children.

Stepmom takes on most of the care. In fact, Dad and the world seem to expect that this will be the case.

One partner, say mom, turns over the care of her boys to stepdad or vice-versa.

One partner wants authority without involvement.

4. One spouse feels his/her children are treated unequally in the family.

His and her children: One parent, say dad, feels he is trying much harder with her children than she is with his children.

One parent, say mom, feels she is doing everything possible to be fair to his children. He is not being fair to her children. Over time even small inequities can build up to major problems when relatively consistent.

5. Problems with the biological parent.

A biological parent will be a real portion of your new married life, dead or alive.

Alive biological parents present practical problems such as holidays, major family events, involvement with school, sports, and other outside activities, plus continued contact between your new spouse and his/her old spouse.

Dead parents bring discussions of death, grief, visits to cemetery, emotions, and living up to an idealized parent and possibly an idealized former spouse.

Pearl Ketover Prilik, in her book Stepmothering, Another Kind of Love, gives advice that can apply to stepmothers or stepfathers. She writes, “It’s uncomfortable to have someone in your life whom you may never have seen and may not like when you finally meet…. Stepmothers often resent being forced by their husbands of stepchildren, either directly or indirectly, into contact with a woman they would not, under normal circumstance, choose to have in their life in any context whatsoever.

But in order to keep your sanity, you will have to learn how to integrate this woman’s existence into your life.”

6. Underestimating the bond of the biological parent who is now your spouse with his/her children.

Quote: Taube Kaufman in her book The Combined Family A Guide to Creating Successful Step-Relationships writes, “One-parent families develop their own standards of conduct and methods of communicating. The longer parents and children are together,, the more entrenched they are likely to become in their own unique culture. There is a special bond, a silent code, between single parents and their children that is closed to outsiders.”

Underestimating this bond can give rise to negative feelings ranging from jealously to resentment of the children to feeling left out to a complete feeling of being unloved by your new spouse and his/her children.

Prilik writes, “Some stepmothers are shocked to discover that they feel resentment, anxiety, jealousy, indifference, or even downright dislike for their stepchildren. These negative feelings are perfectly normal, but they are difficult to admit and still more difficult to face.”

Unfortunatley, Stepmothering, Another Kind of Love by Pearl Ketover Prilik is no longer in print. If you can locate a copy of this book through a local library or an used-book store, it is an excellent book to read and/or buy to keep.

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