Archive for the ‘Guest Bloggers’ Category

Shuttling Kids Between Homes- Who Benefits?

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

GUEST BLOGGER: Susan Wisdom, author of Stepcoupling: Creating and Sustaining a Strong Marriage in Today’s Blended Family

In the old days, my lawyer friends tell me, child custody/visitation agreements used to be vague and loose. It was common for the non-custodial parent, almost always the father, to have the kids on alternate weekends with seasonal and reasonable longer visits in the summer. Divorced couples usually alternated the holidays. Sounds fair, one would think, back then.

But times have changed. More visitation is exercised now…. and they don’t call it “visitation” in the court system. They now call it “parenting time” so as to put everybody on equal footing. Divorced couples today demand more. They claim, “It’s only fair that I get the kids at least half time!” Take Bill for example. He and his ex wife live miles apart, completely across town from each other. They share custody of their two school aged children with a 50-50 time split. During his weeks with the kids, Bill is on the road early to take the kids to school and returns again in the afternoon to pick them up. He shows up at almost all of their games and after school activities. He and his new wife live in a big new house with her two children. He desperately wants his kids to feel welcome and at home in his new stepfamily.

That’s what’s happening these days. It takes a lot of sacrificing and work to get enough time with the kids. As parents they naturally want to provide the best of the best. It seems equally important, however, for some ex-spouses to compete with each other over the kids. My question is what drives this need and is it in the best interest of the kids? And how does it affect new stepcouples and stepfamilies?

Precious time is lost when kids are always on the run.

I’m amazed to see how far parents will stretch themselves to be what they think are good parents after divorce and remarriage. I suspect some want to make up for what they weren’t before? Somewhat guilt driven, they try harder. But is it good parenting to exhaust yourself and the kids by driving back and forth between homes, schools and after school activities like this? Precious time is lost when kids are always on the run. It’s anything but quality time. The important question is “Can children stay connected, feel loved and cared for by divorced bio parents… but not have to be driven grueling long distances to accomplish this?

These are hard questions with no easy answers.

I would urge all parents of back and forth children to do some serious soul searching about what is truly in the best interest of the kids. Begin by having a conversation with yourself and your partners. Understand the difference between ‘quality time vs. quantity time’? Put yourself in the kids’ shoes. Kids don’t want inconveniences. They want to be with their friends. And yes, they need to be with their biological parents. They want to fit in and belong in both families. But mostly they want normal and happy lives…don’t we all?

To be honest, solving these almost impossible problems and making everyone happy is just about as easy as solving our health care needs in this country. But don’t give up trying!

Susan Wisdom is a licensed professional counselor and author of Stepcoupling. She blogs regularly at Stepcoupling.com

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Living Out Loud

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

GUEST BLOGGER: Erin Erickson of The Erin Experiment

In my 34 years on this planet, there are two things that I’ve learned about myself that I think might be helpful for understanding me and my blog:

* There is a special gravity that pulls me to the written word. It’s why I was a journalism major in college and why I find blogging so cathartic.
* I like to live outloud.

What exactly is ‘living outloud’ you may ask? To me it means processing whatever is going on in my head through the written word. From diaries and journals as a kid to blog posts and Facebook updates as an adult, if it’s in my head and it’s not pornographic or horribly mean, then I’m likely to post it.

For me, publicly declaring my thoughts helps me process them. I’ve learned throughout my life that I don’t like to keep my emotions bottled up inside. Ask anyone really close to me what happens if I do that — I explode into a fury of rage.

And so I write.

When I first started this blog, I wrote on it like it was an online diary. I often forgot other people read it and so I filled my posts with anger, sadness, grief and frustration. Once I started writing about being a stepmom, I noticed that other stepmoms would tell me that they didn’t feel as alone anymore. That my authentic writing helped them feel like they had a friend.

Other stepmoms… didn’t feel as alone anymore.

When biology didn’t afford me my own children, I used technology to create something similar to them. Thanks to Ning, Wordpress and Blogger, I’ve watched sites like Stepchicks and the Stepfamily Letter Project grow into these amazing beings that I’m extremely proud of.

As my sites evolved, so did my life. I went from one extreme of stepmotherhood to another. Every time I thought I’d found solid ground, I was swept back out into chaos. No matter how desperate I was to find my footing, I continued to write, because that’s what I do. I needed to live outloud in order to process my feelings and emotions.

And then I fell victim, not once but several times, to one of the top 10 things you don’t want happening in social mediadom: I was heard.

My living outloud didn’t sit well with some people.

No one had a problem with Erin, the strong, nice, sweet, helpful, friendly woman/friend/family member. It was when I started talking about my feelings that people started to take offense.

I remember writing a Facebook post about being sad about my grandmother. Her nurse was sure she’d die within a few weeks and being the owner of my emotions, I publicly mourned for the future loss in a status update. I’ve since found out that relatives have alerted other relatives who have instructed my mom to tell me to take the update down or to not post things like that.

Almost near the same time, I also found out my stepkids’ mom found and read my blog. She wasn’t happy, to say the least, and was offended by my posts. Life as I’d known it suddenly changed again and I was on the defensive for approximately 36 hours as I tried to figure out what to do.

As someone who lives outloud, my blog was, and is, my space to process my emotions. Both of these instances have shown me that some people aren’t quite the living outloud realists I am and that they feel I should cater to their needs instead of my own.

Here’s the thing: I don’t, nor will not ever, apologize for my feelings or emotions. They are mine and I own them.

I’ve never claimed to be perfect. I am a living, breathing human being with a lot of feelings. I am also a stepmom who can’t quite figure out her place in her blended family and who also has a husband that travels 5 days a week, 50 weeks a year. My nearest family members are 30 miles away and I do not have friends in the town we live in.

And so I write. And I live outloud.

I write to reach out to other women like me. I write to, as strange as it sounds, reach out to myself.

I could have told the people who don’t like my blog or Facebook content to piss off, but that’s not the kind of person I am. The kind of person I am accepts that people will do what feels comfortable for them whether that be publicly acknowledge reality and the feelings that go along with it or not.

And so I will continue to live outloud.

I will continue to write about my life although, like any good little journalist with a personal blog, I am also going to try to write more posts about Stepmom issues in general — not just my own.

I will adopt a blog statement that I will proudly display on my slightly redesigned homepage. That blog statement being that I’m a stepmom who writes about stepmom issues in order to help other stepmoms feel less alone.

I will ask that if anyone is offended by my blog posts or Facebook updates that they take it up with me through e-mail or phone rather than through gossip mill. If you’re going to take offense at my feelings, at least have the decency to ask me about them. Nothing will worsen my mood than being the subject of pisstivity and not being given the chance to explain things.

I will not back down and I will not change my feelings or my realist outlook because others don’t like it.

It’s not who I am.

Erin writes at The Erin Experiment and is the founder of Stepchicks

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Love, Sex, Romance, Marriage: Is Marriage Necessary?

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

marriage_ring

As we count down to Valentine’s day, Wednesday Martin, author of Stepmonster, asks the question, “Is Marriage Necessary?”

What can psychologists and couples therapists–and married people–learn from the history and sociology of marriage?

Read the full article on Psychology Today HERE

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Why Did I Get Married?

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

kelatilttnGUEST BLOGGER: Kela Price, Founder of Today’s Modern Family

Marriage is HARD work and love alone is not enough. It requires nurturing, attention, patience, loyalty, understanding and trust, among other things. Remarriages with children are even more difficult, due to the external forces (ex-spouses, children and emotional baggage) that often times make it difficult for couples to make their marriages a priority. But, it really isn’t that difficult at all and it’s crucial to make your remarriage, just as you would your first marriage, priority number one! Why? Because if your marriage fails, your blended family fails and your kids have to experience a second divorce. It’s as simple as this – families can’t and won’t blend if the marriage isn’t the first to blend. If the ex-spouses get along great, but your marriage is headed for divorce, then it is highly likely that you’ve put too much energy into your divorce and not enough into marriage.

I’ve talked to many wives who have stated that they feel unsupported by their husbands. They feel as if what his ex-wife says holds more weight than what she, his wife, says. They feel as if their husbands walk on eggshells around the ex-wife, but have no problem stating their opposing view to them, their wives. Simply put, they feel as if the fear of them (husbands) not seeing their children, forces them to be more of a partner to their ex-wives than their wives.

Then I talk to the husbands who say that they feel they HAVE to do everything their ex-wives say because they just want to see their children. They are not trying to neglect their marriages and often believe that they make their marriages a priority simply because they are still married. Many believe that their wives need to be more understanding of their situations and realize that it’s nothing personal, they just want to see their kids.

The advice that I offer to these men is this: Marriage is extremely personal! Your wife wants to feel valued as your partner; the co-captain of the team in which you are the captain. Not as a bench member on a team in which you and your ex-wife are the captains. How much sense does it make for you to always think about not upsetting your ex-wife, for whatever reason, when your wife is constantly upset? Expecting your wife to just always understand and put her feelings aside is taking her for granted. Your wife shouldn’t be solely responsible for understanding your situation (divorce). It is your ex-wife who needs to understand and respect your marriage. Simply put, your marriage comes first because blended families don’t fail, (re) marriages do!

How do these couples begin to repair their marriages so that they don’t end up in divorce battle number 2? What I recommend is something that my husband and I do quite often and it has helped to strengthen our marriage immensely. I tell them to sit in front of each other at least once per month and ask this question – Why did I get married? Then tell each other the reasons why they chose to marry the other. This gently forces couples to bring back all of those happy feelings that led up to them marrying in the first place. It puts the focus on them instead of the drama. It allows them to look into each other’s eyes and remind each other of why they fell in love in the first place. Often times couples allow the drama of ex-spouses and the obstacles of blending a family to consume them, and their marriages are an after thought. This simple exercise allows couples to constantly remind each other of why they love them, and it allows them as individuals to remember why the other should be valued as his or her life partner.

Kela Price is a Certified Stepfamily Counselor and the founder of www.blendedfamilysoapopera.com

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Moms Dealing with Step Moms

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

lauraallardGuest Blogger: Laura Allard of Stepmoms Rock

And now for a perspective shift… Moms dealing with the Step Mom of their children…

Important Note: There are a lot of things at play here, not the least of which is going to be the dispositions of the Mom and Step Mom in question. This post is written with the hope of reaching the hearts of both women while encouraging the idea of working from a place of love and compassion for all involved.

For Moms out there looking for ideas on how to manage a decent and respectful relationship with the Step Mom of your children, the new wife of your ex husband, please do keep this in mind…however you choose to behave and whatever course of action you decide to embark upon, the people who are going to be affected the most are the little ones with small voices…your own precious and adoring children.

This is truly where separation of relationships is key. And of course, there are many different scenarios and reasons for why you are all in the situation you’re in, however, at the end of the day, the adults in this mess should be able to practice a high level of self management and understand that they have to make the best of things while the children still do play an integral role in all your lives.

Marriages end. And new ones begin. Each situation offers the opportunity for new beginnings.

Step Moms…it is incumbent upon us to understand the perspective of the Mom of your new Step Kids (insert gasp), however, make no mistake, just because her bad behavior might be understandable does not mean it is acceptable. At the end of the day, she gets why her marriage failed, she just may not be ready to face the realities of her husband’s new marriage because, well, it stings, and reminds her of what she perceives to be a huge failure in her life. Give her the benefit of the doubt, acting from a place of compassion and keeping the best interest of your new family in mind. You aren’t going to have to contend with her for a lifetime as the distance between you progressively gets larger as the kids grow and wander. Cut her a little slack.

Remember…. she is a woman with a bit of a broken heart who needs time to mend and find her own way…this can go on for years, but it is her own life she is making miserable by not taking the opportunity she has been granted for a little reinvention. It’s a sad state really, for women who remain bitter and cannot move past their divorces, but their choice just the same, so don’t bear their burden, OK?

Moms… you are and forever more will remain the core of your children’s lives. Don’t play with their tender little hearts by waging war on a situation they are going to have challenges navigating through themselves. Your ex-husband’s new wife came along far after the problems in your marriage began. If you need to take someone to task for the situation at hand, dole out the blame equally between your husband, and yourself…just do it out of ear shot of your children. Don’t forget, they have been witness to the demise of your marriage, offer them a little peace and quiet by keeping them out of the line of fire. AND, and this is a big AND, as tough as it might seem, each and every day offers you the opportunity for a new start.

Remember the line from Mama Mia, “Time for a little repair and renovation…”

Make this your new mantra and spend some time doing what’s right for YOU now. Your kids will be so proud to see Mom in a new light, Happy Mom, Surviving Mom….all you have to do is make the choice to make it so. This choice will make it so much easier for you to manage this new level of relationships in your life. You’ll have greater confidence in yourself and it will show in all you do! Take advantage of this time to heal, to reclaim YOU and have a blast doing it…that’s the best possible way to figure out how to handle the new Step Mom of your kids…by being the best YOU you can be!

To both Women…. Just Be Nice. Seriously. Your behavior sets a standard the kids you now share will aspire to…good or bad…consider what you want them to take away from all this, and act accordingly. Be good to one another.

Laura Allard, creator of the Blog Step Moms Rock and the soon to be released line of cards for Step Families “StepSpeak” . Laura is in her 8th year as a Step Mom of 3 and 12th year as a Step Daughter… aka DOFM (Daughter of the First Marriage). Laura’s perspective in this big old mess comes from a place of love, compassion, and empowerment, hoping to reach the heart and soul of the Single Girl turned New Step Mom before she loses her mind.

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