Transcript Document

Pre-Re-Marriage Workshop for Couples Entering into
Blended Families
• “LIVING IN STEP”
And
Reaching for the Top
How and Why we do Our work
together:
Purpose of Doing this Work Together
 Awareness
 Understanding
 Support and Validation
 Strategies and Skills
 Implement a Plan that will
take you forward
 ENJOY WHAT YOU HAVE
CREATED
How We Use our Day Together
 Explore some of the Common Issues and Dynamics as a
Preparation for your Blended Family
 Look at the Priority Issues and Areas you’ve identified and
Choose appropriate Approaches
ISSUES AND DYNAMICS – Areas for Discussion
• So, What’s the Problem?
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Dynamics
Myths
Unrealistic Expectations
Differences
Dragons
No Model of the Family
Conflict
Unpredictability
Chaos
Competing Demands
SOME THINGS TO KEEP IN MIND
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The Main Rule is that there are few Hard and Fast Rules about exactly how to
build a blended family…..
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Whatever works and you can agree upon, will probably be the best route to
take. Negotiation and compromise are key…..
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Often it is a matter of trial and error and that’s okay as long as you understand
that going in and both agree to support each through the trials…..
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The spirit in which you do things, make choices and conduct yourselves is as
important as what you do…..
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In many respects, you are in uncharted territory because no one has done
exactly what you are about to embark on in your unique family situation…..
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Choosing to be a “CONSCIOUS” Parent, Partner, Step-Parent, Ex-Spouse is
invaluable….
Our Goals for our Work and Our
Family
#2. Couple Strength as
the Foundation of
the Family
 Modeling Good Partnering Skills
and a Healthy Relationship
 Establishing a Plan around how you
communicate, support one another
and get time to PLAY, PLAN and
Deal with Issues
 A PLAN that gets Everyone “some”
of what they need.
Our Goals for our Work and Our
Family
#1. Priority Focus on
the children and
how to navigate this
transition with them.
 What can we expect?
 What to put in place?
 What to make an issue
of?
 What to leave alone?
 Where to start?
VISION FOR THE FUTURE
EXERCISE
Combined Vision of
Your Family
Individual Visions
Three Wishes or
Goals for
Our Work
Together
The Plan – How to
Get You There
Stages of Stepfamily Development
 Fantasy Stage (sometimes called Illusion)
 Romance is in the air; we’ll be one big happy family.
 Confusion Stage
 Something is wrong but WHAT? The new family isn’t working out the way we had planned.
 Crazy Time
 The stress and inaction of the previous stage makes it’s way to the surface.
 Family members experience pain, anger, dissatisfaction, guilt.
 Make or Break Time
 Stability
 When handled properly, this is a time of coming together
 Family Members begin to relate to one another in ways that are more natural
and begin to see their own roles falling into place.
 Commitment (Acceptance) Stage
 The beginning of this final stage means being able to accept change as non-threatening and when you
can feel good about saying “this is probably as good as it can get.”
CONFLICT
 Conflicting Forces of
Blood and Sex – Who
comes first, my partner or
my child?
 Conflict of Loyalties:
parent vs stepparent re:
child, partner vs partner
re: ex, child vs stepparent
re: biological parent
 Colliding Interests and
Competing Needs
Dynamics around the Individuals
• Consider each person in
their various roles and the
dynamics that surround
these roles.
• Each role has a particular
set of dynamics,
challenges and
expectations
• Mom, Dad, Stepmom,
Stepdad, Child, Stepchild,
Ex-Spouse, Sibling,
Stepsibling
Children, Teenagers, Young Adults,
Adults
 Each stage has it’s own
individual needs, roles, and
developmentally appropriate
challenges
 Navigating these against the
backdrop of loss and
disruption brought on by death
or divorce, can be difficult
enough.
 Introduction of the emerging
new parental union and
subsequent blended family can
be a huge transition for any
young person.
Building and Maintaining Couple
Strength
 Appreciating Each
Other’s Reality.
 Being aware of
Communication Styles.
 Continually nurturing and
building the relationship.
 Modeling positive
relationships for your
Children.
Tools for Building a New Family
 Planning: Vision, Family
Plan, Time for
Relationships (Time,
Money, Energy Grid tool)
 The Six “Rs”: roles,
rules, respect,
responsibility,
relationships, rituals
(p. 35 of Family Rules)
Tools for the New Family
(continued)
 Building a Joint Vision for
the New Family
- Getting everyone some
of what they need
 New Partnering and
Parenting: Learn it and
Apply it (rule #8 in Family
Rules)
 Couple Strength as the
foundation of the family
Ask Yourselves the Following
Questions:
 What’s in Place and What do we need to work on? How do we plan to
work on this together?
 Does it Fit for Me? For Us?
 Assessing the situation honestly, your individual needs and
expectations, getting to know yourself and making your own needs
part of the equation are critical. Are you doing this now?
 Blind Sacrifice and Denial will get you somewhere – but it’s not a place
you would ever want to go. Do you find it difficult to face things head
on? Are you inclined to meet everyone else’s needs before your own?
Just going through the process of asking yourself these questions raises your
own awareness and increases your chances for success in a blended family
WHERE TO BEGIN: Getting to
Know Each Other
• Our Stories
• Our Expectations
• Our Strengths
• Our Challenges
• Our Hopes
De-Bugging the Relationship:
Exercises for Couples
Notion of the Family…
Time / Money / Energy Grid…
Your Job or Mine??
A/B Reality- Honoring the Differences…
The Lake Placid Exercise…
Walk a Mile in the Other’s Shoes…
“Fite Fair”
Sending and Receiving, Calling a “time out”…
Make it a Date…
Getting to Understanding
 Explore Families of Origin
 Individual Expectations of
Marriage and Family
ie Do we spend time together as
a family or does everyone do their
own thing?
 What is in common –
what is unique?
 What do we see as our
combined strengths?
 What are our Challenges
– things to be worked on?
Applying What We Know and What
We Want to our New Family
Our Vision
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The Children (In the Home and
Outside)
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Remember Who made the
choice to combine the families
and Who didn’t have a choice in
the matter.
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Some Things will stay the
same; Some Things will Change
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Different Sets of Rules can
apply to different sub-families
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Some Rules and Expectations
will apply to Everyone
The Children at Home and Outside
of the Home
 Give them the Time they
need to adjust.
 Validate their personal fears,
anxieties and concerns
about the new situation.
 Parents and Stepparents
focus on relationships; keep
your expectations in check;
don’t force the relationships.
Children/Young People in the
Home
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Keep parenting and discipline styles as much the same as possible, at
least in the beginning; too much change too fast will set off alarm
bells for them…
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Biological parents continue as Primary Disciplinarian with own
children…
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Differential parenting can be okay with older children/adolescents;
Different strokes for different folks; and how to explain this…
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When to make adjustments and exceptions. For example, if a child
from one family can make a case for having a similar later curfew and
the parent sees no reason why not, then make the change.
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Remember, we’re also modeling for our children how to work out our
differences, how to be reasonable with other people and how to
negotiate change. What better training ground than a blended family?
Structure in Your New Home
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Develop Guidelines and Common
Expectations that Apply to All.
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Use the Four “R”s as a guideline for
acknowledging individuals, their
place and contributions in the
Family.
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Roles, Rules, Responsibility and
Respect
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Rituals and Relationships also play
a part.
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Create Family Memories by making
room for everyone without forcing
them to comply or take part,
especially adult children.
FAMILY MEETINGS
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Use this as a Time to Present Parents’ agreed
upon Rules and Responsibilities.
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Replace the word Rules with Expectations or
Guidelines if you wish.
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Parents invite children’s input but make the
final decisions.
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Expectations include household chores or
tasks.
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Respect for each other is expected at the
meetings as well as in general.
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Explain consequences for not cooperating,
doing one’s part or respecting one another.
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Let everyone know that family meetings will be
a predictable time and place for them to discuss
issues.
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Explain why this is an efficient and healthy way
to keep your new family functioning. A blended
family is not unlike merging two corporations
where planning and continual cooperation and
communication is essential.
Family Meeting Format
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Rules as crafted by parents will be presented…
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There will be changes and Children’s ideas are listened to, respected
and taken into consideration…
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Adults run the meeting…
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Children help decide consequences…
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Children are encouraged to discuss what jobs they would like to do…
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Respectful behavior or manners are expected at the meetings…
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New Issues can be brought up to parents before the meeting; parents
decide before hand which issues to discuss; new issues can be
discussed or tabled…
Design a Family Meeting
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Time and Place (predictable schedule is best)
Issues for First Meeting
Explain Reasons for Meeting Together
Establish some ground rules for making meeting
fun and productive
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Value of Establishing “FAMILY RULES
and ROLES” in the Household
• Come up with some
common house rules, roles
and responsibilities.
• Use your existing or
previous family structures
as a place to start.
• Are meant to impart fairness
and to encourage working
as a team. Not meant as a
power hold by the parents.
P. 35 Family Rules
The Older Adult Children or
Stepchildren
The Adult Children’s Issues and Reactions to
Re-Marriage
 While you the new partners see this opportunity for love as a
great unexpected gift and a chance to savor love, your adult
children rarely share your unbridled pleasure.
“The children often resist the change they know the marriage will bring. And
they intensely resent being expected to act enthusiastic about it.” (p xii
Stepwars)
 Expectations are that adult children have their own lives and do
not present any challenges to the newly remarried couple. This
couldn’t be further from the truth.
The Wedding – Why Isn’t Everbody
Happy?
 Here comes the complexity!!
 At a time when everyone is
expected to share the
happiness, self-interest and
anxiety rule the day.
 Biological Adult Children view
remarriage for their mother
more positively than Biological
Children of the Father.
 Daughters have more difficulty
sharing their father’s with
“another woman” and giving up
their responsibility for him.
Five Furies of Couples and Adult
Children
 Fear of Abandonment and
Isolation
 Fidelity to Family
 Favoritism
 Finances
 Focus on Self to the
Exclusion of Other
p. 7 Stepwars
The Five Furies in Blended
Families: Definitions
Fear of Abandonment:
The fear that you will lose a
relationship that you depend upon for emotional and/or financial support
and the fear that you will be pushed aside and left in a lonely limbo.
Fidelity to Family: Worry about changes in loyalty.
Fidelity
problems occur when members of the original family worry that the parent
will lose his/her old loyalty after remarriage. The children may also feel that
they themselves are demonstrating a lack of fidelity by supporting their
remarrying parent. In the new family, either spouse may feel that the new
partner is overly committed to his or her old family. Stepchildren also may
feel that the new stepparent’s biological family has too much influence.
Favoritism:
Concern about who is now number one. Whose wishes
get top priority when choices have to be made.
Five Furies (continued #2)
 Finances: For adult children, fear that they may lose money and or
property that they expected to be theirs; for parents, fear that their
children care more about their inheritance than about the parent.
 Focus on Self to the Exclusion of Others: Anger that a parent or
adult child is concerned only about himself or herself and no longer
cares about the needs of others.
A word to the wise: Learn early on to distinguish between “what you
think or feel” and “what you say.” Words can be destructive. As a
first step in taming the Five Furies, you must recognize each one
accurately and honestly. Only then can you construct an appropriate
response.
Empathy with other family members can be encouraged by
understanding the human needs that are not being met; to be loved
and appreciated, to belong, and to have control over one’s life.
The Five Furies (continued #3)
Look at Handout of p.8-18 from StepWars
which looks at 5 Furies of Parents who are
remarrying, and the 5 Furies for Adult
children.
What Furies do you expect to be dealing with
and with whom?
What will be some of the messages you
choose to send?
Step Matters: Which Role will You
Play?
 The Joiner:
A proactive stepfamily member who wants connectedness with the new
stepfamily.
 The Guardian Angel: A Joiner who, in addition, helps a new stepfamily member to
become a part of his/her family.
 The Unifier: A stepparent or adult stepchild who attempts to make all members of both
families feel that they belong the larger single unit.
 The Indifferent: A stepfamily member who has little interest in becoming part of a
stepfamily. Doesn’t think much about the stepfamily.
 The Distancer: A stepfamily member who consciously chooses to have no involvement
with the new stepfamily or its members.
 The Destabilizer: A stepfamily member who actively attempts
to disrupt the building of new bonds between the two stepfamilies. Usually this person feels they
have everything to lose and nothing to gain in the new family.
Handout, p 41-44 of StepWars
Suggestions in the Beginning…
 Slow down or just “go slow” from the beginning…
 Don’t expect smooth sailing…
 Don’t expect the new family to heal wounds or losses from the past; it
may actually exacerbate them or bring them to the surface…
 Whatever Happens, KEEP TALKING!!
 If possible, move to a neutral ground (New Home) ***
 Give a lot of thought to planning a new home and the spaces that
everyone will occupy (particularly with teens and young adults; space
and privacy is everything to them!)
More Suggestions….
 Normalize the situations, the feelings and the reactions. Everyone has
difficulty with major transitions, this is to be expected and will be
accepted….
 Give everyone room to breathe and time to adjust….
 Open up the issues and discussions but don’t force them. Just
knowing you are willing to talk about things or understand that they
(the children) have their own feelings or thoughts on the matter, that
may very well differ from your own, and that you accept that, will make
them more open and receptive to you. This will ultimately mean so
much more than outward displays of affection that don’t come
honestly or easily….
 Remember that children and adult children, are very perceptive; they
would rather experience or receive genuine respect or caring than
insincere love or a forced display of affection. Their radar is up for
people who are real and genuine in their responses….
Other “Niggly” Issues
 What do we call each other?
 How do we approach each
other’s children in a way that
conveys openness and respect
and also seems normal and
natural?
 Is there anything wrong with
treating one’s own children
differently when it comes to
affection?
 Remember, everyone has their
own comfort zone with these
things and only by talking about
it, do we reach understanding.
Our Goals for our Work and Our
Family
#3. A Family Plan that gets
Everyone “some” of
what they need
 Begins with a Vision…
 Includes the steps along the
way…
 Fills in the details of how to
reach your Vision…
 What specifically are we
prepared to do to make this
work?
What will Help You Get There?
 A Solid Plan…
 A Sense of Humor…
 Much Prayer…
 “The serenity to accept the
things you cannot
change…”
 “The Courage to change the
things you can…”
 “And the Wisdom to know
the difference…”