Baltimore Sun Sunday

Accepting difference­s in one another key to ensuring success of bonus family

- By Jann Blackstone

Q: My girlfriend and I moved in together about 4 months ago. We both have sons about the same age. They are nothing alike and it’s really difficult for her — and me — because she compares the boys all the time and it makes it very uncomforta­ble. For example, her son is very athletic, mine is not. He prefers to draw and she has out and out said my son was weird because he doesn’t want to play soccer! Weird! There’s more, but in the name of keeping this short, what’s good ex-etiquette? A: I have found one of the most common reasons why many combined families don’t make it is that there is very little acceptance of difference­s. By that I mean, most parents attempt to combine their families based on what they believe to be a convention­al two-parent family mold where the children are brought up together from the beginning and have many of the same likes and dislikes. They have many of the same memories.

Bonus families are nothing like that. Their memories are created later. Their personalit­ies are different. Their histories, what makes them tick, are different.

Therefore, using a convention­al family as your model just doesn’t work. It frustrates everyone.

The kids don’t feel understood. They feel as if they can’t do anything right. The parents are frustrated because “Your kid doesn’t listen.” Or, “Your kid is so spoiled!” Or, “You know it’s a little weird that your kid doesn’t like soccer. What kid doesn’t like soccer?”

Just as a child will personaliz­e it when one of their parents badmouths the other, parents personaliz­e it when their partner says something derogatory about their child. Now you’re cutting down each other’s children. Once that starts, the family breaks into factions — your kid and you against my kid and me. That’s difficult to repair. The damage is very quickly done.

If bonus family members want to ensure bonus family success, each family member must learn to accept their family member’s difference­s. That means you don’t make comments like, “Your kid is a little weird.” Instead, you support his artistic abilities. Instead of buying him soccer cleats, you’re having his art framed so it can be celebrated just as family members celebrate when a soccer game has been won. Or they offer positive reinforcem­ent when a soccer game has been lost. Acceptance. That’s good ex-etiquette.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States