she’s poisoned the kids against us

Dear Suzie,
I met my partner and his children after he had been separate from his ex for 6 years. He hates her after she has blackmailed him, bad mouthed him (saying he has never paid for his chilodrens upkeep) to professionals and family. None of this is true. She has told the children that they wre naturally going to love her more than their father because babies are held first by their mothers. She has consistently poisened the children against their father and myself.

We have done the same more recently and although I know it is wrong, I just couldnt help myself after 8 years of abuse from her. It has made things worse and I resulted in telling the daughter that I hated her Mother. I think it is damage beyond repair and do not know what to do next.

It sounds really sad, and i’m sure you’d like to make it better. Nothing is ever damaged beyond repair – it just takes extra work when it’s gone especially sour, that’s all. Separated and stepfamilies are such minefields. When a family had come apart, there will be so much pain, grief, guilt, anger, jealousy and simple need around that it’s easy to get confused and start hitting out. And when new people and new families come along, it can get even worse.

It sounds to me as if all of you need to call a time out and look at what is to be done here. The fact is that whatever happened in the past ought to be settled and laid to rest. What really matters is what you’re going to do in the future. Your partner has children and will always be their father, and ought always to be in their life. I can understand why his ex tried playing “You love me best” games – that’s common in such a situation,. And I can understand why you felt the need to play them back. But it’s time to put the needs of the kids first. And if you were able to do so, actually all the adults in this would benefit too.

My advice would be to get hold of a copy of my book – Stepfamilies – Surviving And Thriving In A New Family published by Simon and Schuster (you’ll find a link to amazon.co.uk where you can buy it if you want on the books page in this site) and read it. You’ll see all these issues are covered in there – which reassures you how common it is and tells you what you can do about it. Then write to her, acknowledging you feel what has happened has to been good for any of you and offer to make a fresh start for the sake of her children, for her and for the two of you.

You could offer to meet with the support of a mediator, so each of you would get a chance to speak and be heard, and to agree on how you are all to manage best for the kids happiness in future. National Family Mediation can tell you of your nearest centre. Call them on 0117 904 2825 or go to www.nfm.u-net.com . For north of the border, Family Mediation Scotland 18 York Place, Edinburgh EH1 3EP, on 0131 558 9898 www.familymediationscotland.org.uk
Good luck!

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first kiss

Dear Suzie, i’m 15 years old and good friends with a guy I’ve always fancied slightly. He’s going out with a friend of mine and he has been known to get quite touchy feely when he’s drunk. Recently me and him were at an alcoholic party that she wasn’t at. He kissed me and after a big talk that night in which he said he’d fancied me for ages but only never asked me out because he thought i’d say no. Later i fell asleep next to him and woke up to him feeling me up as i slept but i moved to another bed. The next morning he didnt remember anything, but when i told him he said everything he said to me was true. Since then we’ve texted eachother so many times (its half term – we havent seen eachother). We text about the night and i help him out when he’s worried about his relationship with her and when he’s down (he feels depressed a lot) and i’m always there for him. He’s said that he would love to go out with me but i’ve pursuaded him to stick with her, they love eachother and i know it would wreck them both if they split up. The only problem is they’ve started arguing. I know if they do split up i will be the one with them crying on my shoulders. If he asked me out i wouldnt be able to say yes anyway because i would be betraying her! I keep thinking about the kiss, it was my first and i like him a lot. He doesnt know it was my first. I’m really confused, please help me sort things out.

First kisses can be confusing, and sad and bad, as well as amazing. You like him and I’m sure he’s a nice, kind young man but the problem is even nice people can do unkind things, especially when they are young. Feeling you up when you were asleep wasn’t a good thing to do – it was taking advantage and I’m not impressed with him whatever he swore he felt about you. Being touchy feely is nice – being hands everywhere whether you like it or not isn’t!

If you don’t want to upset your friend, I’d say you have to put this guy off limits at the moment, and keep the memory of that first kiss as a treasure you don’t share, except perhaps with your Mum. You may find this an amazing thought but Mums have been there too and be surprisingly helpful, reassuring and supportive when it’s the first kiss you’re worrying about.

Stop with the texts, cos they’re going to lead you into wanting to repeat the exercise, and if he and she are still seeing each other, she’s going to blame you if they split up, and so may he.

The fact of the matter is that young love seldom lasts; they aren’t going to be an item for life – or even for the next whole term! My advice if you would like to go out with him is to wait and see, and give it a decent interval after they break before seeing him as anything more than a mate.

But I might also say this; because boy/girl relationships don’t last when you are at school, you might like to consider whether it would be best to keep both of them as friends instead of letting the knotty issue of sex and love get in the way. Boyfriends can be two a penny; good mates are few and far between! Good luck!

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my 18 year old is causing me concern

Dear Suzie, I dont know where else to turn, I have been having a terrible time with my only child, the problem is that all this started when she was 16 and she is now 18 nearly 19 and there doesnt seem to be anyone who wants to help families with young adults unless they have a drug or alcohol problem. I am frightened that our relationship is breaking down beyond repair and I am going to lose her for good, she has moved out of the family home and we havent spoken for six weeks now. It is complicated and I would desperately like to talk with someone for guidance but who?? I am willing to travel and pay fees, but it is a lottery and I am frightened that I might spend time and money with someone who isnt very good. I have seen your programs and you seem very good at what you do, could you advise or recommend anyone or any association?

Yes I can and please don’t despair; you aren’t alone. There is an excellent charity that is there for anyone in a parenting situation – and by that I mean it’s for grandparents and foster parents and stepparents as well as birth parents. And they’re there for you whether your child is 9 days or 19 years old! It’s called Parentline Plus, and is the first and best place for help with any parenting or family dilemma.

Their Helpline is free, confidential and open 24 hours a day every day of the year; it’s on 0808 800 2222. You can write to them at Unit 520, Highgate Studios, 53-79 Highgate Road, Kentish Town, London NW5 1TL or go to their website at www.parentlineplus.org.uk to read or download a range of helpful materials, or contact them by email. They offer a range of support from one to one phone counselling to phone conference calls with other parents and face to face courses, all FREE. I can highly recommend them – and that’s not just because I happen to be a trustee!

Please, give them a call at once, and access their website to see what’s on offer. I do promise you they can help as much as I would if we could be in touch. Good luck!

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running to America

Dear Suzie,
I’m 17 and going through a lot of problems at the moment with family and everything. I really want to move to the USA but don’t know where to start. I’ve only got 4 thousand pounds in the bank. I really have’nt got a clue where to start looking for advise on this matter,any advise would be greatly appreciated thanks,

I wonder why you want to move to the states? You don’t mention friends or family over there so it sounds as if you’re running away from sad and hurtful events in your life and your family, and hope the fairy tale world of Hollywood or tv may give you the answer. Well, much as I would love it to do so, it won’t, I’m sorry to say! Turn up like an Ellis Island refugee in 21st century New York, with a mere £4000 and you’ll be in deep trouble very soon. And of course there is no way you’d be allowed to emigrate in this situation.

Okay – so what can you do? For a beginning, you need some help on sorting out those family problems. It would help if you could ask someone for some support in this – a guidance counsellor at your place of education or work, or through your GP or via Relate; Relate offer counselling to adults and teens for relationship and family issues. Look in the local phone book for your nearest centre or go to www.relate.org.uk . They also do phone counselling – call 08451 30 40 16 for an appointment.

I’m not clear whether you’re still in full-time education or at work or cut loose or what. If you do want to go to the states, you need qualifications; so what about getting them? If you’re not in education, get back in. You’re entitled to full time ed until you’re 18 so demand it, one way or other – if you don’t feel supported by any adult who can fight for your rights in this, ask your local Citizens Advice Bureau to suggest someone – address in the local phone book or at their website www.adviceguide.org.uk

Running away never helps because what you’re running from often stays on your shoulder and comes along with you. Set your mind to facing up to those problems or making a planned exit from them with support and the qualifications that will set you up to rise above them. Good luck!!

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my daughter so misses her father

Dear Suzie,
I wonder if you can give me some advice, I seperated from my husband back in 2001 and we got divorced in 2002, I am with another partner since 2002, and he’s great. I have a daughter who is nearly 13. My ex husband lived close by when we first split up, he then met a new partner who had a 7 year old daughter, they moved about 30 miles away from us back in 2003, and he didn’t tell my daughter where he was gone, I only found out through his mum, who I am still close to, since then they have had two children, boys, my daugter has met one of them, and back in November 2003 my ex turned up one day saying he wanted to see my daughter, he did, promised her the earth, and then he hasn’t been in contact with her since then. She keeps going through periods where she is distraught by this, I just don’t know what to do or where to go. She is really down about not knowing where he is and why he isn’t in touch with her, I am worried about her, she keeps sayiing that she feels like one part of her is gone, so she keeps pushing me away, because she doesn’t trust anyone. What can I do to help Susie? I am at my wits end, she says she’ll never be able to get on with her life. I just wondered if you can give me some advice, she says other people she knows who’s families have split up still see their dad.
Thanks

Poor young lady – and poor you! I so wish that her father could read this and realise the pain his absence is causing, and buckle down and be a Dad. The problem is that men in his situation so often simply don’t realise how important they are to their kids. They think it doesn’t matter if they go away. I addition, many do find leaving their children painful for themselves. But instead of facing up to this pain, they run away from it. When they see the kid, they feel so awful they decide if they saw the child less, the pain would be less – so they up and vanish.

I’ve talked to Dads who were positively amazed that the child missed them as much as they did, and even more amazed to be told that it would hurt less if they saw the child more. It sounds as if your ex saw his daughter and promised her more contact, because that was what he wanted to happen. But leaving her felt so awful he decided he’s feel better if he avoided it all together. What I bet he didn’t even think about was what she felt, or what sense she would make of it all.

What I suggest is this. For a start, have an honest talk with your daughter about why her Dad left and why he now stays away. She needs to hear it’s not her fault – that it’s not because he doesn’t think well of her or love her, or that she isn’t worthy of his love. All the emotions you so clearly describe are very common in children in her position – it may help to get hold of a copy of my book so you can show her, and get some ideas from there on what to discuss, and to do. the book – Stepfamilies – Surviving And Thriving In A New Family – is published by Simon and Schuster and available through amazon via the link on the books page on this site.

Then I suggest the two of you co-operate on writing a letter to her Dad. Don’t use this as an excuse to blame him; acknowledge and accept he too has feelings and they may be why he is being so elusive. But explain how much it hurts her and how much she would like to see him. Send it through his Mum – telling her what it says so she knows it’s an appeal, not an attack.

And go on loving and boosting your daughter to so she knows her feelings are understandable but her fears about why he left are groundless. Good luck!!

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first date

Dear Suzie, one of my guy mates asked me out but my friends will probably say that i shouldn’t go out with him even though he is the first guy to ask me out what should i do??????????????????????????????????
please help me!!!

Why should they say you shouldn’t go out with him? Jealousy? Has he a bad reputation? Or is the form in your group to only date people who aren’t mates? It can upset everyone when two friends date, and then split up. If you think this may be a risk, maybe you should just stay friends. But if you think you can get closer and still stay good mates, or just go out and have some fun 121, without it going any further…go for it!

But go carefully. Your first date is really imprtant to you and i’d hate to think of it all ending in tears. Tell your Mum what’s happening in your life – how exciting it is and how scary. i’m sure she’ll remember her own first date and be there for you, whatever happens. Good luck!

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retail therapy

Dear Suzie,
i am 22 years old but i sometimes i feel i am alot older because ive always been the “sensible” type, i also feel unhappy about my appearance as i am too plain. i have been told by ppl that i am pretty but i find it hard to believe as i dont feel pretty at all. id really like to change the way i dress, so that i can feel more confidant but im hopeless at clothes shopping and tend to hide my small figure in clothes that are too big. i dont want to attract any attention from the opposite sex, id just like to feel confidant. ive tried to shop for more trendier clothes but the prices put me off as im mostly dependant on my student loan.
can u suggest ways i might be able to look good without breaking the bank?

Take a friend with you when you next go shopping! Charity shops are the places to find what you want for less pennies, and I’m sure given encouragement and reassurance you could make yourself look fab. But what you need is a good friend to have a laugh with, to boost your ego, to persuade you to take a risk on something they know looks good even if you don’t.

Look around you and see if there’s someone with confidence, someone who’s kind who you could frankly ask to give you a hand. It doesn’t have to be someone you see at present as a great mate; just someone who would respond to the appeal you’ve made me and help out. Then – have fun!

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your kind of counselling

Dear Suzie,

I love your Stepfamilies programme and the way you deal with the people involved which feels much more like coaching than counselling. Myself and my partner have had several courses of counselling over the 12 years we have been together, the most recent one being over the last 6 months but I feel that although we get to understand our feelings and discuss them things never go any further. I love the way you get couples and families to do activities and tasks together and would like to have this type of counselling with my partner but can’t find anyone in our area that does this type of things only the traditional type of counselling. How can I find someone who will work with us like you do?

Thank you for your kind words! The families you saw me with on the whole most certainly did make extraordinary progress, and continue to do so, I’m glad to say. How did we do it?

As far as I was trained, counselling has three stages, and every single one is vital. The first stage is exploring, where you ‘tell the story’ and tease out what has happened. If you don’t explore the way all of you see what is going on and what led to it, you can’t get any where.

Then, you understand. You need to have insight, to see links, to fully appreciate what is going on and why. If you can’t see the links and the meanings, you can’t go any further. I used my experience and expertise and training to open up the stories i heard from the families.

And then you make decisions, make changes – you act. You look at what has happend and how it adds up, and decide what you’d like to do in future.

Explore, Understand And Act – each stage relies on the previous, and proceeds from it. if you don’t explore, you can’t understand or act. If you don’t understand, you can’t act. And if you don’t act, neither of the other two stages have much point.

Some clients get stuck. They don’t want to scratch under the surface and tell the whole story. Or they don’t want to see the links and understand what is really going on. Or they may be happy to endlessly circle the drain but not move forward in action.

It sounds as if, so far, you may have done one and two but certainly not proceeded to three. What you need to consider is whether it’s the responsibility of the counsellor you had – and it could be; some are excellent at delving but less good at asking you, firmly, to move on. Or it could be that one of you is holding back.

I was trained by Relate so most Relate counsellors would have the benefit of knowing the strategies and ideas I used. Although I have to admit much of what I did in the programmes was adapted to the special circumstances of dealing with families in front of the camera and on a deadline. You could get my book Stepfamilies – Thriving and Surviving In a New Famly (go to the books page and follow the link) as i do outline all the strategies i used in the series and a few more in there. Find a counsellor you like and trust, and discuss it with them!

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he loves his kids, i feel left out

Dear Suzie,

We have been married for 19 months. My husband has 2 children, 11 and 8, who stay with us every second weekend and half of school holidays. My husband is an excellent father and his children are secure in his love. However, when they are around I feel like a child with no choices and there is inevitably conflict. He expects me to love his children but has no expectations of them – they don’t even greet me when they arrive at our house and don’t thank me for presents we have jointly given them. I have told him that this is hurtful but he brushed it aside. He invariably takes their side in any argument about them. If I complain about an aspect of their behaviour (ie their refusal to put dishes in the sink/sweet papers in the bin), he blames me for not having trained them! I am just the stepmother with the least influence of all their parents and stepparents.

He has told them more than once not to listen to me and I have less respect or ‘authority’ than would be given to a babysitter left in charge of them. I have to clean up after them and provide materially for them but have no say in how the house is run when they are around. I feel left out and hate the weekends when they are with us. We have a good relationship most of the time – all our conflict centres around his children. I think his parenting style is permissive and he thinks I am severe and authoritarian.

I hate his kids because he loves them more than me and the bond between them is obvious. Is it unreasonable of me to expect him to make me look good in their eyes and to be the bridge between me and his children? He refuses to acknowledge that he has ever done anything wrong in the stepfamily relationship. There is a chance the children would choose to live with us in the future – I don’t think I could cope with being bottom of the heap all the time. I am desperate for help/intervention but my husband is not.

You sound upset and angry, and no wonder. But before you can expect the kids to change and amend their behaviour, you have to get your husband to see how his beliefs and behaviour are harming all of you. And before you can do that, you need to turn an eye on yourself – your behaviour and beliefs. I think you are well along the way to understanding so let me just nudge you and give you my insights and interpretations.

You’ve already recognised, I think, the power of our own background and childhood in setting a script for us to follow in managing our own relationships and family. You say when the kids come to stay, you fell like a child with no choices. Is that what you felt, as a child; powerless? And do you feel in competition with his children – not as an adult, but as another child? Does that have any echoes in your own past – was it competitive in your family? Were you the youngest and do you feel left out again? Or were you expected to look after others, letting your own needs go wanting? It’s relevant because sometimes what we do in families – especially stepfamilies – is replay a script from the past. And the issue about that is that the arguments we often have with people in the present are actually about arguments with other people, from the past. This can be futile, to say the least, because you’ll never settle a row if the person you’re really rowing with isn’t there!

And what about your husband and his behaviour. As you will have seen in the series, I have absolutely no truck with stepparents being stuck with all the responsibility but none of the power! Maybe your partner is right not to expect his kids to love you – but it goes both ways; you can’t be expected to love them, either. Affection and even love can grow in time. In the meanwhile, you should give each other equal measure of regard. And ALL of you can be expected to treat each other with respect, courtesy and mutual support. If you are to share a house, you share the keeping of it. they should do chores commensurate with the time they spend in it – tidying their own rooms, laying tables, clearing dishes, and most certainly cleaning up any mess they make.

You may need to discuss what style you adopt in managing their upbringing. Clearly, all the evidence suggests that severe, authoritarian parenting doesn’t do kids much good. But neither does lackadaisical, laissez faire parenting. And parents who are desperately trying to make up for having left their kids often slide far too much to the lax, thinking they are making up for the loss their kids have incurred. The fact is that kids need boundaries. And he needs to hear your distress and respect it as well as he does theirs.

I suggest you make and appointment with a counsellor, to thrash out these issues in a safe and secure and guided atmosphere. Find one through Relate who offer counselling for relationship and family issues. Look in the local phone book for your nearest centre or go to www.relate.org.uk . They also do phone counselling – call 08451 30 40 16 for an appointment. Or the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy can suggest a counsellor in your area. You can ring them on 0870 443 5219 or write to BACP, BACP House, 35-37 Albert Street, Rugby, Warwickshire CV21 2SG or go to www.bacp.co.uk Or try perhaps the first and best place for help with any parenting or family dilemma, Parentline Plus. Their Helpline is on 0808 800 2222 and it’s free, confidential and open 24 hours a day every day of the year. You can write to them at Unit 520, Highgate Studios, 53-79 Highgate Road, Kentish Town, London NW5 1TL or go to their website at www.parentlineplus.org.uk to read or download a range of helpful materials, or contact them by email. They offer a range of support from one to one phone counselling to phone conference calls with other parents and face to face courses.

And do have a look at my book on stepfamilies – Stepfamilies; Surviving And Thriving In A New Family (it’s on the Books page of this site). You’ll find all these issues in there, which shows how common they are! Good luck!

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women are supposed to be nurturers

Dear Suzie,

I am in a relationship with a wonderful man whom Ive known for about 10 years. I was very good friends with his wife and got to know him through her. We were all incredibly close – in fact, he called me on the day of their son’s birth as soon as he had called his own family. She was the sister I never had and vice versa.

I knew she had not really bonded with their son from the beginning but he kind of made up for that. She and I continued with our busy social life while he cared for the boy. I went abroad to work in 2000 in which time I kept in touch with them both. On my return, she told me she was very unhappy in her marriage and informed him of this when I was actually present. I had however known that she was seeing someone else behind his back but of course didnt tell him as she was “my” friend. She and I eventually drifted apart after she began lying to me as well, but he and I continued to keep in touch and after a few months got together.

Needless to say, there was a lot of animosity between me and her and still is. She began spreading rumours that we had had an affair. He and I now live together and his son sees him 4 times a month (a court decision). The boy is now 6 and has turned into a withdrawn, quiet, lonely little boy. He knows that we all love him as we tell him all the time. However, we feel she doesn’t care about him too much as she never plays with him and he is left to fend for himself. He has no idea how to interact with others. We know she wasnt the best mother but it looks bad on me sometimes as strangers will think he is mine. Sometimes, I wish she could just die and go away and then we could look after him properly. We have no children of our own as she made him have a vasectomy straight after the boy was born. (He is having it reversed in April).

I have just watched the programme on TV and totally identify with the stepfather.. I lose patience with the boy very quickly, especially when he is moaning and mardy. My partner is not the most forthright of people and I feel alarmed sometimes that I am considering having children with him when I find fault with how he parents his son. He panders to him all the time and fusses over him if he so much as has a headache. Sometimes I think I love the boy but then other times I don’t feel anything except impatience. Then I feel dreadfully guilty as women are supposed to be nurturers and mother-figures. I don’t know what to do Suzie. I feel like a coiled spring when he comes to visit. Help.

You sound sad and lonely, and the boy at the heart of tihs sounds it too. Iwould love to help, but you’re the one who is actually going to t ake the steps to change this. Let’s see if we can unravel what seems to be happening.

Some parents find it hard to bond with their own children – especially if there is conflict at the time of the birth – and many stepparents find it hard to bond with their partner’s children. One of the pressures that doesn’t help is the expectation and image that as a women you ‘ought to be’ loving and caring; that as a natural parent you ‘should’ be loving.

The truth is that love and family relationships are complex and often fraught and conflicted. Your ex friend might have all sorts of reasons for finding it hard to bond with her son; issues to do with her own childhood, and loss and betrayal during that. Or issues to do with her relationship with her husband and with you. You have plenty of reasons not to find a relationship with the child easy; he’s living proof your new partner loved someone before you, that you had an affair, that you and he may not be able to have children of your own. Animals in the wild do not adopt each other’s young; we are no different in finding the relationship a hard one.

But we aren’t animals – we think. Part of that is a problem. You are using your superior intelligence to justify your instinctive feelings about this child by blaming him; he’s mardy, he’s withdrawn. So he deserves what has happed to him or your anger towards him?

No – the truth is that it’s hardly surprising he’s quiet, sad, demanding. His other finds it hard to love him, or at any rate to enjoy him. His father had an affair with his mother’s best friend, no longer lives with him and lives with someone who sees him as a threat. Of course your partner ‘panders’ to him – he feels guilty about what has happened and is trying to make it up. Not that he does – he would do far better to tackle the whole issue honestly and properly. Not to further reject or demonise the boy, but for all of you to face up to the situation and seek some sort of agreement.

Do all of you a favour by seeking some support and guidance via Relate who offer counselling for relationship and family issues. Look in the local phone book for your nearest centre or go to www.relate.org.uk . They also do phone counselling – call 08451 30 40 16 for an appointment. Or go to the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy who can suggest a counsellor in your area. You can ring them on 0870 443 5219 or write to BACP, BACP House, 35-37 Albert Street, Rugby, Warwickshire CV21 2SG or go to www.bacp.co.uk Your feelings are understandable and not your fault at all. What you do about them IS your responsibility. Good luck!

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