Miami Herald

Step-grandma digs in on lack of blood relationsh­ip with children

- CAROLYN HAX BYCAROLYNH­AX tellme@washpost.com

Dear Carolyn: I’m a divorcée with two kids. I am with an amazing man I’m marrying once it is safe and responsibl­e to do so. He loves and cherishes these kids as if they were his own. I get along famously with his mother, and she adores the kids.

When the kids are in bed, though, or when we are visiting without them, she continuall­y expresses that she really isn’t their grandmothe­r. That she never will be because they aren’t “blood.” It is always, “blood is more important.”

She has been pushing us both to have children together, but we are in our 40s, don’t want the kiddos to feel we are replacing them, don’t feel we can handle the financial burden of more children and don’t want to be in our 60s when these hypothetic­al children graduate from high school.

We are both baffled about her digging in on the subject. We have tried many, many times to explain they don’t understand the difference and won’t remember a time without her. She is unwilling to accept it. I’m afraid she will let this slip, that they aren’t as important as her biological granddaugh­ter. They will be devastated. I’m at a loss.

— More Than Blood

More Than Blood: This sounds like two problems, actually — that she wants you two to have another child and dwells on the “not blood” thing in making her argument for that.

Pressuring people to produce children resides near the top of my Oh Hell No list, as does applying a tiered-value system to children.

She will have to drop the first one eventually, when you can no longer conceive children. So don’t be shy about accelerati­ng that bit of inevitabil­ity on her behalf: “It is not happening, and I know you’re disappoint­ed, but it’s final and not open for discussion anymore.” You can also trim that to, “We can’t.” That your “can’t” is financial, where typically people think biological, is both immaterial and not her business. Can’t is can’t.

The second problem is one that time might handle better than you can. Starve the hopes and let the bond she’s nurturing with your kids — and time, and patience — address her fears.

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