Ten Tips to Stepparenting Without Guilt
by Maurine Doerken, MS, MA, MFT
1
Be prepared from the beginning that stepfamilies do
not function the same as intact, nuclear families.
There can be a lot of adjustments to work through,
both practical and emotional.
2
Good stepfamily relationships can exist without love.
They do, however, require consistency and trust.
Fairness goes a long way toward earning respect.
3
Question the natural parent when he or she promises
"to take care of everything." No matter how sincere
and well intentioned your future spouse may be, it
may not work out that way in day-to-day stepfamily
reality.
4
Stepparenting (and biological parenting) are not
about winning a popularity contest. They are about
doing the job that is called for, and sometimes that job
is tough.
5
Know the virtue and necessity of accepting what you
cannot change and work from there. Do not try
to "fix" everything all at once. Sometimes with
stepparenting less can be more.
6
Playing "Who's to Blame?" is a no-win situation in
stepfamilies. It only serves to fuel further antagonism
between stepfamily members rather than fostering
mutuality and compromise.
7
Your stepfamily may experience a lot of emotional
reactivity because members can hurt in a lot of places.
Often it is both useful and important to take a deep
breath and count to ten before responding.
8
There is a point where your biological children come
first, and this has nothing to do with being a "mean"
or "wicked" stepparent. You do not have to save your
stepchildren at the expense of your own offspring.
9
If you honestly and sincerely cannot deal with your
stepchild, do not lie to yourself that you can. Accept
your limitations and work from there.
10
The greatest gift you can give your stepchild (or child)
is permission to be happy in both homes. We do not
all have to act or think the same way, and learning how
to honor differences is vital to this way of life.
Copyright © Maurine Doerken, MS, MA, MFT, all rights reserved
Reprinted here by permission of the author