Posts Tagged ‘Expert Advice’

Stepmom in the Spotlight: La Belle Mere

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

bw_lbmIntroducing Ms. August!

Rebecca from Bristol, UK writes the humorous blog La Belle Mere: confused musings of a stepmother on the edge, and is a member of Stepchicks, the popular online community for steps.

She’s been married less than five years and is stepmom to two kids. She says, “Blending into an existing family brings with it a whole host of trials and tribulations, most of which have been dealt with by tears (mine), tantrums (also mine), excessive wine drinking and emergency fag smoking (definitely mine!).”

Rebecca has a great attitude and spirit and when I discovered her online, I courted her right away. Here’s our interview:


1. How did you meet “Hubbs” and what was your reaction when you found out he had kids?

Well, Simon (yes I’m revealing his name, on Stepmothers Milk, Live & Exclusive!!!) is the brother of a friend of mine, so I’d met him a few times before we actually started dating. I thought he was totally hot (and he thought the same about me – naturally!) but we were both in relationships with other people. A year or two later, when both of our previous relationships had ended for various reasons, Simon asked me if I’d like to go out with him for a drink so I happily accepted. We got along brilliantly and there was lots of chemistry! The rest, as they say, is history. I knew that he had kids long before we started dating so it was no great shock. In fact, as I never really wanted kids of my own, I quite liked the idea of a little “ready-made, weekend family” as a sort of half-way measure!! I thought it would be great fun! Oh the naivety!!!

2. At the time, did you know many other single gals who were also dating divorced men with kids? What’s the general attitude about this in the UK?

Well I have one good friend, Sophie, who married a man with a daughter who lives with them weekdays and with her bio-mum at the weekends. But Sophie is one of THE MOST laid back people I know and isn’t much of a complainer. She takes everything in stride. So I’d never heard her utter a word about how difficult it was. It was only once I was in too deep and asked her about her experiences that she admitted she often finds it hard!! Well thanks for the warning mate!! ;-)

There is no real understanding of step-family issues in the UK. People have lots of “opinions”, especially on what’s best for the kids, or feelings of sympathy for the bio-parents but there is no real understanding of the emotions and issues faced by step-parents. The general opinion seems to be “Well you knew he had kids when you married him!”. Do we tell people that have troublesome mother-in-laws, “Well you knew he had a mother when you married him?” It’s ridiculous.

3. You discovered the online community stepchicks in the U.S, joined and quickly became an active member. Is there anything comparable to this in the UK?

For the past two years I have been using a UK forum site called Childless Stepmums Forum which is fantastic. There are lots of our stepchicks on there, although most of the ladies are from the UK. It’s great because it’s totally anonymous so the ladies are painfully honest. I don’t think I could have gotten through the first year or two without that site! I started a secret Facebook group for the CSM forum so that regular users could join up and we could all see what each other looked like and what our real names were. We’ve all become really good online buddies and I’ve even met up with a couple of the ladies for lunch which has been great. We’re actually all meeting up for a picnic in Hyde Park in London in August which I’m really looking forward to! It makes such a difference to be able to share difficult feelings with people that understand where you are coming from.


4. Tell us a little bit about your blog, La Belle Mere. Why and when did you start it?

It dawned upon me that writing a little anonymous online diary would be a great cleansing experience where I could vent my woes. I got such great response from fellow bloggers that I’ve got no woes to moan about any more! Seriously, it’s made me a much happier person! It’s so lovely to get a regular drip feed of ego-stroking positivity, and I generally feel much happier as a result. So the blog has become less about my problems and more witty and fun. I’ve been writing the blog for a month now and I’ve been blown away by the response. It’s been such an uplifting experience for me and I’m totally hooked. It’s great to count all these amazing, intelligent, inspiring women as friends of mine!

5. How would you describe your approach to stepparenting? And how do the kids feel about you?

My approach to stepparenting is much more relaxed than it used to be. I used to be totally over-sensitive of every little thing that the kids did or said, and bent over backwards to make them like me and got distraught if I thought they didn’t. If they were disobedient toward me I’d take it really personally and totally lose the plot. Now I don’t give a monkeys! I tell them off if they’re naughty, I make them do chores and I say NO to them a lot more than I used to. If I don’t want to spend the day with them I have no qualms about taking time out and going to the hairdressers or out with friends instead. I take each day as it comes – if I’m having a “Mary Poppins” day I sit and do crafts with them and take them to the library. If I’m not really in the mood, I get the hell out of there! But I don’t feel guilty if I do.

I’m lucky in that I have a pretty good relationship with both the sproglings. Max is 7 and Teagan is 6. I’ve always had a strong bond with Teagan. Max, who is a little older was a tougher nut to crack! We didn’t click straight away. It took a while for trust to form on both sides. But we all have a great relationship now and I get lots of cuddles and kisses although Max thinks kissing girls is pretty gross so he tends to opt out of that one. I wonder how long he’ll think that for?!


6. What’s your husband’s attitude about your new role in the family?

I thank my lucky stars every day for my wonderful, supportive husband. Right from the start he has made it clear to the kids that he will not stand for them treating me disrespectfully. He has always trusted me to discipline them as I see fit and we always operate as a united front. Hubbs grew up in a stepfamily environment so I think these values were instilled into him as a child – thankfully for me! I hear lots of horror stories about women whose husbands are “permissive parents” and who don’t back them up and let the kids treat them disrespectfully because of their own guilt. It doesn’t work. I’m sure I wouldn’t have stuck it out if that had been the case. I do think he, like me, was naive at the start of our relationship and had unrealistic ideas about how it would work. He very often just couldn’t understand why I struggled to adjust. We’ve both come very close to walking away a few times but we always manage to work through things and learn from it. We are both honest communicators and we are now more than aware of what it takes to make things work and we’ve both made lots of changes to make that happen. It has definitely made our relationship stronger.

7. What’s been the hardest thing/best thing about becoming an insta-mom?

The hardest thing for me has been adjusting emotionally. Us stepmothers can come up against a whole lot of judgment, scrutiny, jealousy and resentment when we join an existing family so we have to grow a thick-skin and fast! I also discovered a dark-side to myself that I never knew I had! I have had lots of therapy and suffered from some fairly severe bouts of depression. I recently went through a course of CBT therapy which has been absolutely fantastic for me and totally changed the way I think about things.

The best thing is having the kids in my life. I’ve grown a huge amount as a person and done a lot of work on myself which has been hugely beneficial. And finally, I’ve discovered a whole community of amazing women, and have friends across the globe through my blogging and online stepmum groups. Adversity really DOES bring people together and it’s a really great bonus!

8. What advice do you have for other new steps?

A. GO EASY ON YOURSELF!!!!! Do not beat yourself up for struggling with difficult emotions – it’s completely normal. Seek out other online stepmothers for support. Get a good therapist if you can afford it. If not, invest in plenty of stepmothering literature! And if you need a “Time Out”, take it – tired and resentful does not a good stepmother make!

B. Don’t struggle in silence with arrangements that you are not happy with, thinking that you have no right to ask for what you want or set boundaries. Make it clear from the start what you will stand for and what you won’t.

C. Never try and replace their real mother. You’ll fail. You’ll also pee the BM off! Remember your role and try not to “over-step”. .

D. See the funny side – write a blog! If you’re not brave enough (or stupid enough!!) to publish your innermost emotions on the web, then keep a diary – but make it as humorous as possible. Seeing the funny side in these things helps to neutralize them.

E. Make a note of 3 positive things in your life every day. Even it’s something really small and trivial. Stop and smell the flowers!

You can continue the conversation with Rebecca at La Belle Mere

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Stepmonster: A Review

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

stepmonster_cover_sm Stepmonster: A new Look at Why Real Stepmothers Think, Feel and Act the Way We Do by Wednesday Martin, Ph.D.

If you are a stepmother, this book should occupy a permanent position on your nightstand!

Ladies, do yourself a favor and go pick up a copy of Stepmonster today. It’s cheaper than therapy and it just might preserve your sanity and save your marriage. I’ve been carrying it around for weeks now, sneaking five minutes here and there to commit the more significant points to memory. The challenge is that there’s just so many. A few of my favorites:

Nobody wants a stepmother and nobody wants to be a stepmother either. Just as our stepchildren do not choose us, we do not choose them.

We need to learn as soon as possible– to experience firsthand– that being disliked is an occupational hazard for stepmothers, not a referendum on our worth.

There is no single way to be a stepmother. Nor, it turns out, is there a “right” one.

AHA! I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been slumped over this book in a public place where I suddenly sit straight up and exclaim, “I knew it!” I wasn’t even finished with Chapter One before I felt compelled to track Ms. Martin down and thank her for validating so many of my mixed-up stepmommy feelings. And by explaining why we feel and act they way we do, the old, familiar feelings of guilt and inadequacy suddenly had less power over me. I went from I suck to I’m totally normal!

I went from I suck to I’m totally normal!

In one of the more provocative chapters, “She’s such a Witch!” Martin studies a common trap the modern-day stepmom falls into. She describes an overly-accommodating woman who contorts herself in an effort to be likable. In hopes of gaining love and approval from her new stepkids, she puts her marriage second and shoves her own needs aside. Sound familiar?

To avoid the old, witchy “stepmonster” accusation, Martin explains, many of us tip-toe around our stepkids, “overcompensating out of fear.” Martin shows us how destructive this can be on our marriages and similarly bad for the kids, “giving them an uncomfortable amount of power.”

I thought, Oh No. We’ve traded in wicked for wimpy? Say it isn’t so!

Thankfully, Martin provides us with a different approach, one that is realistic, attainable and allows us to reclaim our power and stop apologizing for our *appropriate* behavior. Props are due, Ms. Martin. Pretty soon we’ll be talkin’ bout a Stepmother Revolution!

Izzy_Rose

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Stepmom in the Spotlight: Peggy Nolan

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

Introducing Ms. July!

Peggy Nolan is author and creator of the popular blogs, The Stepmom’s Tool Box and Serendipity Smiles. She is also the founder of The Mother’s Day Dare Project and a regular contributor to StepMom Magazine. As a self-care advocate, certified yoga instructor and breast cancer survivor, Peggy is passionate about helping others help themselves.

peggy_famFrom top to bottom: Richard, Peggy, Jessica (her oldest, getting married Oct 17), Richie (his oldest), Kelly (his oldest daughter), Christina (her youngest), Katie (his youngest daughter aka the New Mommy, getting married Aug 28), Chris (aka Junior, now 17)

1. What inspired you to start your blog The Stepmom Tool Box and how would you describe it? And why did you start it when you did?

Cathryn Bond-Doyle’s been a big inspiration in my stepmom journey. Just as I was about to pull my hair out in 2007 with my youngest stepson, Junior, I found Cathryn’s Step Moms on a Mission (http://smoms.org) community. What a life saver! I became friends with many stepmoms and found myself becoming the resident advice-giver when Cathryn had to take a leave of absence. I began blogging about my experiences on Serendipity Smiles, but realized that my stepmom stuff needed its own blog. I also found myself giving the same recommendations, suggestions and resources on SMOMS, so after a little brainstorming with my husband Richard, I came up with “The Stepmom’s Tool Box: Tips, Tools and Advice” This blog was born on April 1, 2009 and after only 3 months, the traffic has far surpassed my other blog and my expectations!

2. Tell us a little bit about the Mother’s Day Dare project.

The Mother’s Day Dare appeared in my head after attending the kick-off networking event for women called Dare To Be Phenomenal. I woke up with this idea that if I could get moms to send their kids’ stepmoms a Mother’s Day card and stepmoms to send their stepkids’ bio mothers cards, then maybe this could start healing the mom/stepmom conflict. Although this idea came to me three weeks before Mother’s Day, the results were amazing. For the moms and stepmoms who participated in 2009, olive branches have been extended and in some cases, once adversarial relationships are turning into working co-parenting relationships! Be on the lookout to see what I have in store for 2010.

Self-care, self-care, self-care! The more you work on becoming a better you, the more your life simply falls into place.

3. You seem to prefer the term “bonus mom.” Why is that? What do you call your stepkids and what do they call you?

Step has so many yucky connotations! I thought, who am I in relation to my husband’s kids? I’m a bonus. They have a mom and a dad and a great extended family and I’m the bonus…the cherry on top. My youngest stepson decided he liked “Bonus Mom” and the first high school open house I went to, he introduced me as his bonus mom. My husband’s kids are a bonus in my life as well and I often refer to them as my bonus children.


4. You have biological kids and stepkids. Talk about blending a family. What was the biggest challenge for you and the kids in the beginning?

I have two daughters from my first marriage who are now 24 and 21. Richard has two boys and two girls from his first marriage who are now 24, 23, 21, and 17. When we first got them together, Richard and I hoped for polite civility. What we got far exceeded our expectations. The girls (mine and his) refer to each other as sisters and my youngest daughter is trekking home from Vail, Co to be in Richard’s youngest daughter’s wedding in August. All of the kids (the boys included!) will be together when my oldest comes home from Portugal to get married in October. I think the biggest challenge we face with our kids is having enough chairs when they all come over for Thanksgiving Day Brunch, because now it includes husbands, fiancés, and our first grand baby!

5. How would you describe your stepparenting style?

There’s only one left at home that requires hands-on parenting. Junior is 17 and both Richard and I approach parenting him as a benevolent dictatorship. As far as parenting goes, Richard and I are on the same page when it comes to discipline and privileges. I’m tough but fair. As a parent, my main job is to teach. I just hope Junior’s learning!

6. Almost all of your kids are all grown now. How has your relationship with them evolved over time?

With the older kids, I’m like a trusted adviser. I’m usually the first person they call when things fall apart because I’m the one who helps them find the “opportunity” when things don’t go according to plan. When it comes to Junior, I still have to wear the “mom” hat. Junior benefits because I have a little more patience and a lot more wisdom [than I did in the beginning.]

7. Describe the relationship you have with your husband’s ex-wife who he was married to for 17 years.

A little back story: Back in 1980, Richard and I met when I had to re-take Geometry to graduate from high school. I couldn’t help but notice the cutest boy in class! I was wowed by his blue eyes and drop dead gorgeous smile and within a few weeks, we were boyfriend and girlfriend. He was the first boy I fell in love with, but he broke up with me 6 months later and his second girlfriend would eventually become his first wife. (I’m the first girlfriend who became his LAST wife!)

Now, Richard’s ex-wife and I have a great working relationship that borders on friendship. When she found out he was dating me, she remarked, “I remember Peggy…I liked her in high school!” When it came time for me to meet Richard’s family, he brought me to meet his ex-wife’s family (they kept him after the divorce). Picture this: Mother’s Day 2006, I’m sitting in Richard’s ex-wife’s mother’s living room meeting everyone in her family, including her second husband who, as it turns out, I already knew and was friends with because he was the first person I met where I currently work! (Does this make sense or does it make your head hurt? It made my head hurt at first!)

I credit the relationship that Richard’s ex-wife and I have to her mom and stepmom. They are best friends and have given us a framework and an exceptional example in which to build our relationship. Additionally, her family kept Richard and welcomed me in as a daughter and a sister. Given this framework, it’s kind of tough to have anything but a good relationship!

8. Talk about your Thai kickboxing and your strong belief in self care. Is this your way of relieving stepfamily stress?

I have been enamored with martial arts ever since I saw the cheesy Jean-Claude van Damme movie “Blood Sport,” the story of Kumite champion Frank Dux. I still can’t help but watch this movie every time it’s on [TV].

Not only does kickboxing relieve stress (of any kind), but it compliments my yoga practice and it is something I love to do so I don’t feel that “ugh, I gotta hit the gym” dread. I blogged about a recent Thai Kickboxing class on Serendipity Smiles.

My belief in self-care stems from my year of breast cancer treatment. It was my own realization that no one was going to care for me better than me. Most women and stepmoms that I come in contact with are so busy doing for others that they don’t put themselves on their priority list. We make time for what we value, so if you are not taking care of yourself, you are not valuing yourself or honoring your self. And then you wonder why you’re exhausted, stressed, or diagnosed with a crappy disease. My message to women everywhere is to take care of you! If you are not running at optimal efficiency you don’t benefit anyone, so take the time to refill your pitcher, recharge your batteries, revive your emotional well-being and re-ignite your creativity!

9. I love your positive, Zen-like approach to life. What inspires you to stay positive?

On January 5, 2004, I had my coming to Jesus meeting – I was diagnosed with breast cancer. I had a disease that affects 1 out of 7 women in our lifetime and 200,000 women a year. When I was diagnosed, I had just celebrated my 40th birthday. The ink on my divorce that ended my 19 year marriage was barely dry. I had two teenage girls who still needed me. The night before I had my mastectomy, I had to have my living will notarized – it was in the town clerk’s office that I realized “it’s time to start living…really living.” As the clerk notarized my life away, I felt a peace I’ve never felt before.

I had a disease that women die from every day. And I had a choice. I could let the disease rule my life, be miserable, feel sorry for myself OR I could pull myself up by my combat boot straps, fight like a dog, and come out stronger and happier. It’s this experience that reminds me that life could be worse than every bad day I’ve ever had. It’s this experience that reminds me to live each day to my fullest – to be the best me that I’m supposed to be. And it’s this experience that reminds me to teach other women what I have learned.

10. What’s your best piece of advice for new stepmothers?

Self-care, self-care, self-care! The more you work on becoming a better you, the more your life simply falls into place. And if you don’t believe me, I dare you to experiment and work on you and only you for the next 90 days. See what happens…and don’t give up five minutes before the miracle!

You can continue the conversation with Peggy at toolboxgrl@ gmail.com

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Being Something

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

I like the quiet, but it’s odd to share it with someone less than three feet across from you every single morning.

But, that’s how it is.

My husband Hank is off to work. His youngest son is two thousand miles away living with his mother. I’m sitting at the kitchen table with my coffee and the paper, two tabby cats nudging me for attention, giving myself just twenty more minutes before I, too, head off to my office in another corner of the house. That’s when my teenage stepson walks into the room, all groggy and as unemotional as the bowl of Cheerios he pours himself, without acknowledging my presence.

On a typical day, I can rise above his casual dismissal of me, reach through the awkward silence and chirp, “Morning,” to which I get a deep, guttural “M-o-r-n-g” in return. It’s a man-like groan, missing some key letters, but a reply, nonetheless.

That’s how I spin it, anyway. Even though he’s been prompted by me, it’s his reciprocated, albeit aloof, reply that lets me know that he does see me, that he probably doesn’t hate me, and that he’s just, well, a sixteen-year- old boy – an introverted one – and completely unaware that his stepmother occasionally needs some recognition.

Most teenagers are mute and moody and act like hormonal aliens

I know from other mothers that it doesn’t matter if they’re your blood or step – most teenagers are mute and moody and act like hormonal aliens – but I’m new at this mother thing and still getting used to our relationship.

It wasn’t until I was thirty-five that I agreed to bring children into my world, and it wasn’t through my uterus, but by marrying a man who already had two of his own. While most mothers go through a long adjustment period – cooing baby, chatty toddler, questioning ten-year-old – during which time they learn their child’s unique communication style, my boys came to me half grown and already speaking their own boy language. While I’m fairly confidant that their daily grunts don’t mean they’d prefer a third cat to a second mother, I’m never quite sure what they’re tying to say. Hank, their father since day one, is much better at interpreting their words, or lack of. When he gets lukewarm reception, which he often does, he can shake it off. But he also has memories of the early years when two little boys greeted him with nothing but delight. He tells me “Babe, you can’t take it personally.”

On most days, when I’m feeling like a big girl, I try it Hank’s way. I go back to reading the paper after our one-word morning exchange without feeling slighted, and knowing I can engage in meaningful conversation later in the day with more reliable sources – my colleagues and girlfriends or my mom in California.

But this was not one of those days. My usually mild temper had had enough. It wanted to rage. After soliciting another disinterested mumbling, it took every bit of self-control to restrain myself from saying: Would it kill you to acknowledge my existence? Really, I don’t need much. Just something simple like, how’s it going? or What’s up? I looked down at my adoring cats, now licking my ankles. I wanted to scream: How about taking a cue from the cats? Instead, I took a deep yoga breath, got up from the table and left the room, and that’s when I was struck with this self-pitying conclusion: After three years of being this kid’s full-time, stand-in mother, I feel like we are no closer today than we were on day one. And it’s all my fault.

We are no closer today than we were on day one.

Okay, I knew this wasn’t entirely true. We’ve had plenty of sweet moments (just the other night we’d watched repeat episodes of The “Real Housewives of New York” together. How many sixteen-year-old males would be caught dead doing that?). But still, tears rose to the surface like someone had punched me in the gut. Sitting together and sharing Bethenny Frankel’s enthusiasm for New York’s high priced charity events wasn’t enough. I wanted more. All the private worry that I was an inadequate, unlikable stepmom came rushing right out, leaving me deflated and wondering why I thought I could do this in the first place. Oh, yeah…because I’m in love with their father.

I sat down on the living room couch and thought; I’m NO good at this.

And it’s not for lack of trying. In my own imperfect way, I’ve made moves to grow closer to my stepsons without pushing it. Because I’m also a stepkid (my parents divorced when I was nine and remarried others when I was ten), I understand the importance of pacing. I never expected instant love from them or me, and I often reassure other shaky stepmoms that they’re not monsters for withholding the L-word.

That’s the one thing I’ve brought to this relationship. I may not know much about mothering, but I understand the code of the stepworld: You don’t walk in the front door and fling yourself on a kid. As it is with any relationship, forced love gets you nowhere, except maybe in jail. If you want to establish a natural connection, one that doesn’t label you as lame, annoying, pathetic, or your basic life suck, you have to let things develop slowly, or organically, as so many say these days.

As an adult stepkid, I get this, so I’ve kept my getting-to-know-you conversations short and my hugs reserved for holidays, and all I really want is some acknowledgment, like an “Atta Girl” for good behavior. But no, most of the time all I get is a strangled “morng.”

Now that I think about it, I seem to have adopted my stepfather’s bonding technique. When Mom’s new husband, Stanton, came along, I already had a dad who was very much in my life, so I didn’t really need another one. Stanton seemed to understand this and took a backseat role to parenting me. Likewise, he didn’t push us into a snuggly relationship.

As a kid, I was pretty broken up by the unexpected twist in my own after-school special: When Divorce Hits Home. I appreciated that Stanton kept a respectful distance. That’s not to say that he wasn’t an active influence in my life. He was and still is. As a stepmom, I’ve similarly given my stepsons space and time to warm up and let me in. But shouldn’t they be warmed up by now?

Later that afternoon, I arrived at my all women’s therapy session still feeling wounded.

“Who wants to begin?” Sarah, the shrink asked.
“I’ll go,” I barked.

Before she could give me the nod to go ahead, I launched right into it. “When it comes to my older stepson, I feel invisible a lot of the time, and it dawned on me today that he really doesn’t need me.” (Actually, it hadn’t dawned on me until I’d just said it and now that I had, I started to feel angry… and sad… and resentful… and weepy.)

“So, you know what,” my voice pitched a little higher, “ I’m done. I’m not trying anymore. I’m tired of giving, giving, giving and not getting anything in return. It’s true what my friends warned me in the beginning – ‘stepparenting is a thankless job,’ so screw it. He’s not my kid. We’re not obligated to love each other, and we’re better off just acting like roommates.”

Whew. Maybe it wasn’t the grown-up thing to say, but damn, it was a relief to speak my ugly thoughts out loud. The group gave me their supportive smiles, their looks of understanding, and then they told me I wasn’t behaving very much like a parent. One woman started to give me the tsk,tsk,tsk face and then said softly, “He does too need you. He might not show it, or know how he needs you, but if you’re raising this kid for any amount of time, he sure does need you to be SOMETHING.”

Her advice felt sobering and significant, but what did she mean by – be something? A roommate was something, no?

That evening, I lay in bed next to Hank, staring into the dark and going over my own teen years. Had I acted cool and withdrawn? Probably. Stanton came with two daughters about my same age, so that made three of us who became teenagers at the same time. Mornings in our house were hardly quiet, but that’s only because my stepsisters and I were fighting over our fair share of hot water and equal time in front of the bathroom mirror. Did I make time on those mornings for kitchen table chitchat with Stanton? HA! Who has time for pleasantries when you’ve got unruly curls to blow dry? Perhaps, I thought now, my expectations of my stepsons were a little too high?

Perhaps.. my expectations of my stepsons were a little too high?

I remembered a summer during college when Mom, Stanton and I found ourselves traveling together through the south of France. We were staying in a charming stone farm house run by a classic Provencal woman we called “Madame.” On one particularly blistering day, Mom retreated to the coolness of the bedroom while Stanton and I retired to the terrace under a tangled grape arbor that filtered the oppressive noontime sun. He and I sat there throughout the afternoon drinking du vin rouge ordinaire, laughing and telling family stories.

I woke up the next morning and called Stanton at work.

“What is it kid?” he said in his favorite deadpan style.

“I have some questions.”

“What kind?”

“Questions about stepparenting,” I said. “Specifically about you steppparenting me. Was it terribly… hard?”

“Hmmmm,” he paused. “Well, if you really must know – stepparenting was difficult. Not that you were difficult. You weren’t. But our relationship was a slow simmer.”

“Like you were simmering inside with hostility that you didn’t show on the outside?” I gibed.

“No, you dope. After we moved in together, your mother asked me if I wouldn’t please be more close to you and act more like a father. I told her ‘no.’ You had a father, and I was a stepfather. It was going to take a long time for you and me to get to know, understand, trust, like, and maybe even love each other. I was not going to force anything. I felt that would have been artificial and phony. Instead, I’ve been on this long courtship with you.”

I smiled at this.

“And,” he continued, “I think I made some breakthroughs over the years, and we’ve become close.”

“I think we have, too” I agreed.

I thought again about that summer in France. And how it really wasn’t until that afternoon in the shade of Madame’s piece of paradise, that, after decades of us being on medium-low, I realized how much we liked each other. I sat with this for a minute, feeling grateful for how he kept a knowing distance throughout the years. And yet, it wasn’t the distance itself, that I was grateful for, but the opposite – his enduring presence. For nearly thirty years, Stanton has been a steady constant in my life. He’s shown up every day. And he’s never asked for much in return – except maybe, “Leave me some mint chip ice cream,” and “Be nice to your mother.”

The next morning, I sat in my quiet corner of the kitchen. When my teenage stepson slunk into the room, expressionless and sullen, I said my usual:

“Morning.”

“Morng” he replied.

I’d love to have a meaningful multi-syllable conversation with this kid. But that’s just not where we’re at right now. Today, tomorrow and for who knows how long, he needs his Cheerios to be Cheerios and me to be the other one at the kitchen table, reading the paper and drinking coffee. Routine and dependable. That, I can do. That’s being something.

Izzy_Rose

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Stepmom in the Spotlight: Izzy Rose

Friday, May 1st, 2009

izzy_talk_handIntroducing Ms. May!
I know, I know… it’s all about ME this month. But since I began this monthly feature, many of you have urged me to spotlight myself. Jacqueline Fletcher over at Becoming a Stepmom recently did this great interview with me about my new memoir, The Package Deal, and on stepparenting in general, so I thought I’d post it here for May’s Stepmom in the Spotlight…

1. When you first started your blog Stepmother’s Milk, you were searching for support for other stepmoms. Were you surprised at how little there was available?

I was surprised once I learned some of the statistics– that there is something like 15 million stepmoms in the country today! I thought, if there are so many of us, why isn’t this a mainstream discussion? Why aren’t we on Oprah? Since then, I’ve watched in amazement as our online community has grown. We’re everywhere now! It seems like every day, I discover a new stepmom blog or stepparenting site. It’s very encouraging to see so many women reaching out to each other, connecting and offering advice.

2. Your book describes your first year as a stepmom. How have things changed since then?

I’m more relaxed. I no longer refer to myself as the Ruler of Cleanliness and Order. I just couldn’t keep that role up. I was outnumbered– a husband, two boys and two male kitties! In addition to adjusting to filth and fur, I’d moved across country, given up my career and left friends and family behind. Needless to say, I was a little on edge. Two years later, the newness and panic has worn off. This is a good thing– for everyone’s sake.

3. What three things do you think a new stepmom has to have to survive the first year of stepmotherhood?

1. A surplus of wine

2. A sense of humor
3. Lots of therapy (with you and your man, alone, and maybe with the kids, although you might want to wait on the whole family combo deal until they unpack).

4. Do you still have full-time custody of the kids?

No, my oldest stepson, The Tall One, is the only kid living with us full-time now, and you’ll have to read the book to find out why.

5. What has been your greatest challenge as a stepmom?

Balancing my own needs with those of the kids. I’m sure every mother struggles with this, but because I married into my parenting role and don’t have kids of my own, I’m never quite sure how much I’m expected to give and compromise. To be honest, it was really tempting early on to shirk some responsibilities because I was “just the stepmom.” But, the reality is that if kids are living full-time under your care, you’re responsible. My stepmom rule is to compromise, but not sacrifice myself. I’m a big believer that if you don’t take care of yourself, you’re no good to anyone else

6. There’s been a large debate going on about stepmoms who blog or write books about their families and how it will affect their stepchildren and relationships with their husbands and the ex. How do you decide what you’re going to write about? Do you share your writing with everyone in your family?

I’ve made jokes about moving to Mexico or going into hiding once the book came out to avoid a family mob attack, but truthfully, I think the need for that is slim. In writing The Package Deal, I worked hard to be fair to everyone involved and I made drafts of the manuscript available for family members to read throughout my writing process, and I encouraged them to speak up if something felt wrong or icky.

That said, I’m very honest and I suppose you do run the risk of offending people when you expose your insides. But when you start self-editing to please the crowd, you lose your voice.

7. Have you ever had someone in your family object to or been hurt by something you’ve written?

Not that I’m aware of and I hope that’s because I’ve made a conscious effort to be respectful. Before I started my blog Stepmother’s Milk, I asked my stepkids if they would be okay with me writing personal stories about our family. It was really important to me that they be on board. Every step of the way, I’ve reminded the boys to come to me if there’s something they don’t want me to write about or if they’ve read something they don’t understand. I’m constantly mindful of their privacy and how far I can push the boundaries.

8. What have been your greatest rewards as a stepmom?

As someone who thought she was missing the mom-gene, it’s been a sweet reward to realize I’m capable of taking on someone else’s kids and not failing horribly at it. The boys showed me a reserve of love I didn’t know was there. I said yes to a marriage proposal and I ended up with a family. A pretty good deal, if you ask me.

9. If a dear friend told you she was marrying a man with kids what would you say?

Welcome to the club! Becoming a stepmom is so “in” right now. One might say– stepmom is the new black.

10. Do you think you made the right decision when you said yes to your husband, moved to Texas, and signed up to be a custodial stepmom?

Absolutely! I’m in love with my husband, Austin is a fantastic town and in addition to their entertainment value, the kids have helped me grow up. That said, I didn’t always feel that way. There were many days early on when I wanted to scream, WHAT WAS I THINKING! HOW DID I END UP RAISING ANOTHER WOMAN’S KIDS? My therapist (and yes, every stepmom should have one) helped me realize that in order to survive, I had to adjust my expectations and be willing to reinvent myself. That’s powerful stuff. I remember thinking, OK, I can shift. I can do this.

11. What advice would you give to a stepmom who is struggling?

Seek out one good girlfriend who is willing to listen to you spill the good, the bad and the revolting. And then spill. I truly believe that laughing and groaning over our shared stories is one of the best antidotes for warding off insanity. It’s worked for me.

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