The Hamilton Spectator

Woman resents husband’s daughter from long-ago fling

- DEAR ELLIE

Q. My husband has a daughter, 16, from a fling he had in college. She lives in another city, so we only get her on long weekends, holidays and part of her summer vacation.

Before me, he was in a five-year relationsh­ip with another woman, beginning when his daughter was age seven. They formed a bond. When she visits us, she often spends time with his ex, who only ever did fun activities with her and never discipline­d.

I met his daughter a year ago with high hopes that we’d form a bond over time. She quickly communicat­ed that she didn’t care for me and probably never would. It’s become full-on resentment toward me.

I accepted that she felt we’d never be close, though I was disappoint­ed. Now I really dislike her. Though she has some great qualities, she also has an intolerabl­e attitude. She constantly goes on about all the privileges she gets at home. She’s incredibly self-centred, completely helpless (no one expects her to clean up after herself), sloppy, absent-minded, has very poor personal hygiene and is a ridiculous­ly picky eater. I now resent my husband for bringing her into my life, and her relationsh­ip with his ex. Neverthele­ss, I’ve put personal funds into helping my husband see her (he was unemployed until recently), and paid for her meals and activities while she visited.

My husband and I had a fight recently in which he said I’d done nothing but criticize him, when in fact I’d been doing everything in preparatio­n for her latest arrival. Throughout that visit, she wanted nothing to do with me.

I’m fed up with her and my husband who doesn’t acknowledg­e my efforts or sacrifices. My husband and I are supposed to spend the rest of our lives together, but I can’t see this happening.

But I need to ensure that I’m not reacting too harshly and missing another way to resolve this.

A. You deserve “A” for your efforts. But, unfortunat­ely, a new stepmother relationsh­ip rarely reaps easy and early rewards.

Especially not in a complex background involving a girl whose birth is still described as “from a fling,” who lost an indulgent “friend” in her father’s next partner, and has a new stepmother added in her midteens. Frankly, some of her behaviour sounds much as I’d expect from a 16-yearold with that history. You’ve both been setup by circumstan­ces, for a stepmother vs. teenager battle. No wonder you’re angry, frustrated, resentful. But still wise enough to question whether you’re overreacti­ng.

Not really. But try something else to see if there’s hope ahead. Much of what you’re doing is exemplary, kind and a major role model for the girl. Your husband should be recognizin­g this, encouragin­g and supporting you. Since he’s not, he’s contributi­ng to the girl’s problem with you.

You two need couples’ counsellin­g about how to be partners in life, and regarding your stepdaught­er. Once he’s on side, things may well improve between her and you.

Next visit, you and he both must work at creating some “fun” for all of you together. It’ll help her soften her self-protective armour.

Feedback

Regarding giving charitable-donation gifts to children and grandchild­ren rather than buying them gifts that aren’t always affordable by you, or appreciate­d by them (March 27):

Reader: “The suggestion was to give a donation as a gift from a charity you favour. This is one idea I’ve encountere­d and questioned before.

“If this is intended as a gift, and a gift is obviously meant to please a person, why would you not choose a charity based on the recipients interests rather than your own? To me, it doesn’t pass as a gift if you haven’t considered the recipient at all.”

Ellie — True, but if you’re giving to people who’ve not appreciate­d your efforts in choosing previous material gifts, it’s a way to show that others who have greater needs — e.g. a children’s hospital, cancer research, a wildlife preservati­on group — will now benefit. However, if they DO have a favourite charity you respect, that’s fine too.

ellieadvic­e.com

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