Remarriage may
seem unlikely shortly after you
divorce. Actually, 75% of women and
80% of men do remarry--usually
within 5 years.
Of these, 80 %
divorce again. Why?
I certainly don't
want to discourage remarriage. In
fact, remarriage and the stepfamily,
is the gift that the stepfamily
gives the kids. That is, the chance
to live in a working and loving
family and to see things hold
together.
There are factors
which make stepfamilies at high
risk, however. It is important to
know what they are.
Before I go into
those, let me also point out that
therapy with a good relationship
person post-divorce is also very
important. That is because it is
important to learn what each of us
has done to contribute to the
failure of the marriage. This
hopefully, helps us learn from our
mistakes.
Second, it helps
us learn how to interview in the
dating game to pick someone the next
time around who has the skills it
takes to be married as we need to
learn them as well.
So, you have
picked a relationship therapist and
now you are looking at the possible
pitfalls ahead.
The first is
money. Becaue money symbolizes
power and success, and is such an
important element in most people's
lives, it can be used to control an
ex-spouse. Added to the usual
stress on fonances caused by divorce
and the need to support two homes, a
second marriage and its inherent
obligations can burden everyone
involved.
To deal with the
issues of money, it is important for
someone marrying someone with a
former family to recognize
emotionally as well as
intellectually, that there will be
less overall because resources must
be shared overall with a former
family.
Ex-Spouses are
another pitfall. There are many
weapons an ex-spouse can use to
wreak havoc on a subsequent
marriage. The ex-wife or husband
who won't let go is still
emotionally involved with the
ex-spouse and often uses the
children, guilt, and money to beat
down the ex-spouse. Often one
partner is obsessed with the idea
that they have been mistreated
during the marriage and can't bear
the fact that the ex-spouse would
leave them.
Often marriages
break due to infidelity (98%) and
the anger runs high and the jilted
spouse wants to get even even if the
children are punished in the
process.
There then is
hassle over how the ex-spouse is
dealing with the children, denying
visitation rights or support, and
all of this keeps the two former
partners involved with each other
and the fight goes on into the
second marriage. Sometimes it is
very difficult to keep an ex-spouse
from turning a new marriage into
chaos.
Then there is the
issue of the children. Stepchldren
can and often do break up
remarriages. Childen know how to
aggravate and punish adults. They
can make life miserable. Therefore,
if you allow guilt and fear of
losing a child's acceptance to rule
you, you have lost the battle.
Instead, act firmly and warmly and
be patient. Ultimately the odds are
with you to win the child's respect.
When stepparents
are successful it is because they
have faced a period of testing and
readjustment and patiently won the
friendhip of their stepchilden by
not pushing and by taking their side
whenever possible.
The relationship
with stepchildren is a friendship,
slow to build. There is no instant
parenting. You need to get to know
your stepchildren before trying to
tell them what to do.
You need to take
a look at whether your future
partner has grown close to the
children over time when he or she
was alone with them. If it has been
a very close relationship, the kids
are more apt to resent you.
Be atuned if the
children are kept in the background
during courtship and if they have an
over-idealized view of their mother
or their father.
At the other
extreme, be wary if the children are
hostile or mistrustful because one
parent or the other treated them
badly.
Take the children
on outings with you on your own.
However, be wary that marriage
changes everything. A good
relationship before marriage may
collapse when you become permanent
and dreams of their parents
reconciling become clearly only
dreams.
It is possible to
make a remarriage work. especially
if you remember that the remarriage
is for the partners and not for the
kids, at least at first. Everyone
needs to parent their own kids,
build a relationship with the
stepchildren, and demonstrate what a
real partnership looks like.
There ae MANY
rewards of stepparenting if one can
be patient as the family re-forms
and moves ahead.