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You knew what you were getting into

Totalybogus's picture

Squillion's recent post made me remember this from another board. This is fantastic. I think many of us could have authored this....

Did You Know?

Author Unknown

I phone my mother to fill her in on my married life and she says, "You knew what you were getting into". And I think, how can she know?

My mother has been married once, to a man who has only been married once. They are still married. I have uncles who have divorced and had multiple wives, cousins who have somehow coped with stepparents and half or step siblings. But we never talk about that. So I wonder how this wise woman can know what it's like to be in my place, dealing with frustrating feelings, fleeting emotions, paranoia and stress?

Seven common words. Seven words used by everyone, everyday. To one demographic this particular arrangement shoots straight to our core.

Second wives. Stepmothers.

I have not been either for very long, but I've been on the message boards and in the forums. There are many species of us, but still there are some basic commonalities between us. For my kind, we are second wives to first husbands, no children of our own and the rhythm of our routines is ruptured ever other week (and sometimes in-between) by forces we cannot (even legally, sometimes) control. Perhaps the best advice I can offer to these women is Give Up. Give up the notion that you did, in fact, know what you were getting into when you married this man. Give up and it'll be easier to deal with.

Of course, there are the rare cases where stepmotherhood is everything a woman thought it would be. You marry a man, he has a tyke running around who adores you, and you live as a happy family, ever after. Then there are the rest of us.

The ones who married men who see their kids maybe 60 days a year. The ones with kids who are 8 or 12 or 16 years old. The ones with ex-wives who somehow manage to creep their way back into their lives in increasing amounts as the years go by. The ones who are devastated by this. The ones who try in vain to maintain relationships with their children when inside they too have given up, claimed defeat, lost.

Did we know what we were getting ourselves into? Could we have? Were we supposed to know what toll the ex-wife, the children, the situation in general or the situations that were to come, would have on us?

I'm not pretending that if I had my own biological family that we wouldn't have our share of problems. I'm sure there'd be disagreements over grades, clothes, homework. But these are not our families. Publicly, on paper, in society's rhetoric we are a family. But in our hearts, our souls, we know . These kids may outright hate us, disrespect us or they may simply come to accept our presence in their lives. Yet we continue to toil for their benefit, providing them the comforts of our home, presents on birthdays and holidays, transportation to the mall, movie tickets, college funds, health insurance. We don't expect any thanks, and usually, none are even offered. We have no real say in how they behave in our own home, much less how they are raised or how they are disciplined.

Sometimes we thought we knew what we were getting into. Sometimes the early days are bittersweet memories, when our husband's child(ren) displayed delight at us being there for dinner, or to go to the movies, or to hang out. They liked us as friends, but as soon as the proposal was made, they withdrew. Or maybe the kids always resented us being there, threw peas in our hair, screamed at us in an adolescent rage before slamming the door and they became more scathing, more manipulative as they grew up. We might have even gone to message boards and forums and culled what we thought was brilliant and enlightened advice to wield only to have it backfire.

What we knew was that we were marrying very special men. We were marrying our loves, our soul mates, partners who brought out the best in us. Yes, we knew they had children. Yes, we knew they had former wives. As for me, no matter what the wisest, most experienced stepmother on the Internet says, I did not marry the children . I did not marry the former wife. I know. I was there at the wedding ceremony. We were pronounced 'man and wife'. Not 'man, his kids, and you', not 'man, his kids, their mother and I'm sorry-you are??" What we knew was that we were taking steps to move our own lives forward, to go forth as a unit forging a life of our own to live together happily ever after. What we knew was life is often unfair and is fond of curve balls but we should be open to all possibilities.

What we really didn't know was how our perspective would change. We didn't predict that we would get tired of the ex-wife interfering in our lives (yes, we know she's our stepchildren's mother and that she must have some contact with our husband regarding them), we didn't realize our husbands would be doormats for children who found the power of guilt, and we certainly didn't know that our lives, futures, desires would be put on the back burner until these same children got what they wanted or grew up and out of the house. And when we did realize what we had indeed gotten into....

We tried to play peacekeeper. We tried to stay out of it. We tried to do what we thought best for our men. We tried to do what we thought was best for the children. We offered our opinions, we offered our sacrifices. We tried disengaging, we tried to give room, we tried to be patient. We gathered strength to be more supportive, more caring, more understanding. We melted, bent and conformed to the needs of our husbands, their children, their ex-wives. We waited years to begin new families that only stirred up more turmoil. We grew restless, and--sometimes--resentful.

To add insult to injury there are those, even among us, who maintain we knew what we were getting into. That we should never have gotten married if we weren't going to unconditionally love and accept all the strings that came attached. We should be downright grateful that we have stepchildren. That it can never be the stepchild's responsibility--no matter how old they may be--for how they treat us or their fathers, that they are innocent and only act out through some fault of our own. That if you give them and their mothers respect, they will reciprocate. They say we gave up our rights to want lives, families of our own when we chose the men.

Did we really know all this beforehand?

Did we know we would lose ourselves to the undertow? Could we have been better prepared? If it were our own children it would be easier...we could lay down the ground rules, we could do our best, without invoking the rage and wrath of the other mother, or the father, or the children who--intentionally or not-- pit each party against the others. Was there a way to know what we would be sacrificing of ourselves, that we totally ignored? Even a convict with a lifetime sentence has the opportunity for parole, why don't we?

No, I did not know what I was getting into. I do not enjoy it. I do not look forward to what it brings. Nor do I want the negativity in my life. And unless you live it, you can't begin to fathom what it is like.

If you're really interested in helping and you obviously know what it is that I've gotten into, then tell me how to get out of it, over it, around it--but please, do not presume to tell me I knew what I was getting into.

Comments

Sia's picture

that............. the statement that people make "you knew what you were getting into", is a complete & utter insult to ALL stepparents and should never cross the lips of any SM to another!

NotTheRealMom's picture

I second you completely!

Kb3Hooah's picture

I'm saving this. This is very inspirational and a reminder that we don't stand alone in this. Very nice.

_________________________________________________________________________
“Sometimes it's the smallest decisions that can change your life forever.”

starfish's picture

possibly this awesome post can humble those oh so prfect sms with their perfect skids, sos, lives, mils & bms..... "possibly" being the operative word

startingover2010's picture

sums up the feelings i have everytime someone says to me 'u made your bed now lie in it". or the famous "you knew what you were getting into".

we dont know because we have a g-rated movie in our heads. then the reality hits and we are stuck.

SerendipitySM's picture

This is the absolute best post I have ever read on ST - I am sitting here at my desk almost in tears.....

Inside every cynical person, there is a disappointed idealist. - George Carlin

Sia's picture

I was wondering if you were here and gonna read this!!!! HUGS

SerendipitySM's picture

Sia, I'm always here....even if I don't say much...I am always here. Smile

Inside every cynical person, there is a disappointed idealist. - George Carlin

Amazed's picture

author unknown is purely perfectly right.

Work out your own salvation. Do not depend on others. ~Buddha

Sia's picture

agree......funny how a lot of these "new" members all have each other on their "buddy" lists..........does make one wonder doesnt it??????

Squillion's picture

Just you Smile

But thanks on the ideal sitch... I guess this gives me plenty of time to brush up my PAS skills for if/when BD ever decides to sucker a new wife into marrying him and step-mommying our bio-dragon

(Do I fit in now? LOL)

BMJen's picture

Crayon you really make me laugh sometimes honey.

Stick's picture

The odd man out. I get both sides. I have always seen both sides. I don't understand why they are mutually exclusive. Just because I personally knew what I was getting into... I know that a lot of you don't. So the phrase can apply and cannot.

To me, arguing this point is like saying "You should have known better" to the wife of a recovered drug addict that has fallen off the wagon.

Sure, when she married him, she knew that he used to use drugs and was recovered. Did she ever in her wildest dreams think he'd use again? Probably not or she wouldn't have married him. But did she know the POTENTIAL was there? If she's being honest with herself... I think she should have.

Does it make either side right? NO. IT'S A NON-POINT. If someone says it to you... it fits, or it doesn't. Or it fits, and then you thought, "Yes... but..."

I've said it before and I'll say it again.... SH*T happens. Life happens. What we do with the aftermath (from acceptance to disengagement to outright leaving) and our happiness derived therefrom IS UNDER OUR OWN CONTROL. And that's what people really mean when they say to us... You Should Have Known Better. They are saying... You're in it... you knew some of the circumstance... Deal or get out.

I'm the odd man out!!

*** A rainbow just threw up on me... and now I'm sh*tting glitter! ***

RustyHalo's picture

Apples and Oranges, Stick.

I am telling you right now that if I could have "seen" into my future - I would have ran that day. But because I'm not psychic - I am living not the "ideal" life I thought I was going to. It's a wonderful life most of the time, but it's not the life I predicted for me and FH.
Yes, LIFE happens and that's why we're all on here. It happens to all of us and we deal with it in many different ways. I may react to something badly and someone else may not react at all. Our OWN childhoods can sometimes predict how we will react in any given situation.
I COULD not have predicted this. Did I think times may be hard? Yes. Did I think there may be issues between me and BM in regards to the children? Yes. And many other scenarios - a resounding yes. THAT IS LIFE. It's the things that we think we can control. It's all the things that we have had control over all our lives.
When your life suddenly seems out of your control - and the circumstances causing it are beyond your control or anybody's control? I did not predict THAT!

Stick, we, all of us, look at life differently. I wish I had your "glass is always full" outlook. Believe me, I used to have that before I became a step mom. I'm glad all you guys are on here and give your opinions. I don't want a website where everybody thinks exactly the same way.
How boring would life be if we COULD predict the future?

**my stepdaughters did not grow in my tummy, they grew in my heart**

Stick's picture

I still think the drug analogy stands... because it's hard work and effort. Treatment, yes...

But the majority of blended families need a little more "treatment". I don't think that anyone thinks our situations are easier than nuclear families. The very concept of being a step-family means we have extra work and effort already put into our gigs.

*** A rainbow just threw up on me... and now I'm sh*tting glitter! ***

RustyHalo's picture

After arguing with my FH this morning.

I wish he had said to me (or me to him for that matter!):
I'm glad we can agree to disagree.

Wouldn't life be grand?

**my stepdaughters did not grow in my tummy, they grew in my heart**

Stick's picture

If someone were to say to me... "You should have known this...".... I don't know how mad I'd get automatically. I think it would depend on my mood and that time of month!!

I DID know that my DH had a needy young child that definitely had some issues. You could tell at 8 that she was "different". I DID know that my DH has a - what I thought - "Psycho" selfish ex-wife.

Now I'm looking at the fact that BM could in reality have a true personality disorder. And it's more than me just calling her a stupid bitch. It could be a real thing. A real thing that won't get better with time and could get worse. And the potential for SD to get some of it, some of those traits is there. I've been warned that I could be the brunt of some anger to come!!

Did I know that? No. But I did know some things that could lead to the latter.... Yes! So I have to deal with it as best I can.

*** A rainbow just threw up on me... and now I'm sh*tting glitter! ***

Sia's picture

how could you possibly have been able to predict all the crap you are going through?

Stick's picture

But the reality is.... ANYTHING CAN HAPPEN AT ANY TIME TO ANY ONE OF US.

So to get angry when someone doesn't understand, when I fully knew that I was taking on a man with a child with issues and an ex-wife who had already shown herself somewhat to be a selfish victim.... It's just not in me.

I didn't predict it. And I certainly did not choose it. But it happened.

So?

Do I rail against the injustice of it all? Do I grow more and more resentful of Dh, SD and BM and all of their issues? Or do I just look at it like another hill that I have to climb toward my own happiness?

I know it sounds completely rainbows and butterflies... but if you knew what kind of mental anguish and physical pain that got thrust upon me starting at the age of 17 and continuing to this day for no reason other than my body has a messed up immune system... I guess all I can say is that that attitude of acceptance and "what's next and how do we make it better" is all that has gotten me to 45 years old.

Don't get me wrong... I do, in my own head, sometimes late at night, let myself "rail". But it's not often and it's not long. Because it's counterproductive.

This shit will kill you if you let it.

*** A rainbow just threw up on me... and now I'm sh*tting glitter! ***

Sia's picture

I get it.... I guess I just NEVER saw it that way, ever.

If you have read, which presumably you have, any of my blogs about my SD and her BM, you will see that I totally am all about helping SD get a leg up in life and for that matter BM...... I've raged against my inner demons of "this isn't fair" mentality and really have learned to just accept crap as it comes. I learned that a LOOOOOONG time ago, sounds like we have something in common..........

However, the premise that we all should have "known what we were getting into" is a bit like saying that you should always know how many fish are in the pond before you cast your line..... I had all rainbows and shit when I met/married DH. I had NO way of ever knowing BM would turn out to be mentally ill.....hell, she didn't even know. I was so young that I had absolutely ZERO foresight into how extremely difficult and challenging to my being it would be.
I have come out on the other side, and I do love my SD, and I dont HATE BM.....BUT that was a recent revelation and one I am happy to be at peace with.......

I just don't possible see how anyone can say they could have ever known what they were getting into.

Stick's picture

When someone says "You should have known" more often than not , that's their "rote" answer.

It's not a stepmom thing really. It's a "personality" thing.

For example... a girl dates a guy for 5 years and they live together for 3 and they get married.

And then he changes a little.

She complains to her friends and family that he's changed.

More often than not, they will say "You knew what you were getting into when you married him!!" Sh*t - writing this makes me realize that I've said it!!

My brother in law and sister in law sniper fight sometimes. Over the most ridiculous things. And sometimes she'll look at me, when she's angry and all I can say is "You married him"!! She knew what he was like. He didn't change!! So if she didn't like it then, she shouldn't have married him.

I think the realization is that people on the outside don't see the changes that could be happening on the inside so there's no sympathy.

There's greater sympathy for changes that are out of our control. When a spouse gets mental illness. When someone gets a disease. People then don't use the whole "You know what you were getting into" because the forces are out of our control.

I think when they say that to us, it's because they feel we have some control in our situations. Would you agree?

*** A rainbow just threw up on me... and now I'm sh*tting glitter! ***

reeny511's picture

But I have to say I knew "what I was getting into". I'm just glad I'm not the only one out there that has these feelings/issues. That I love my DH but cant stand him when he talks to BM; that BM is a crazy bitch, that SD10 is a spoiled brat; that I have no one near me that can ever possibly relate even just a little bit. I stopped telling friends/family all the crazy shit that happens in our household because what's the point? They look at me with that look that says "you knew what you were getting into!"

RustyHalo's picture

But my little brother is my boss and I can just beat the crap out of him.

**my stepdaughters did not grow in my tummy, they grew in my heart**

NotMadeOfMoney's picture

It's been copied, pasted and saved. Thanks so much! Smile

~Lizzy (NotMadeOfMoney)
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"Who needs therapy when you have wine." ~Anonymous

justwantpeace2's picture

I have to say that I am one of those who really had no idea what I was in for! I was definitely brainless when I made my decision to be a sm. How could I have known what it would be like when I knew no one else who had been in those shoes. I have to say also that I love this part that you wrote, bogus, "We were pronounced 'man and wife'. Not 'man, his kids, and you', not 'man, his kids, their mother and I'm sorry-you are??" I don't think that people get that part when it comes to the sm/dh situation. They just assume that because they were there BEFORE the sm was in the picture than the marriage consists of anyone who is a part of the skids lives is also a part of the marriage! That's what it seems like to me. So, not only are we having to deal with everyday things that normal couples deal with, we have to deal with skids attitudes, some of us deal with the bms, and then add the in-laws on top and you have a recipe for failure! So, how does any of the step families survive? BECAUSE of the SMS/SDS who,in my books, truly are the superheroes! We have our weaknesses (kryptonite aka bms) which we usually manage to avoid!

Most Evil's picture

The part about pronounced husband and wife etc. I find it so hypocritical that the stepmom 'married the children too' yet are 'not the parent'. Unless the parent opts out and there is no one parenting, as is so common!

All the responsibility, none of the authority!! How many of us would accept that in our job description?!!

Great article, going into my collection. Thanks!!
_________________________________________________________
Age cannot wither her, nor custom stale
Her infinite variety.

William Shakespeare, "Antony and Cleopatra", Act 2 scene 2

SWADE's picture

iN 1980S i STARTED A GROUP Second Wives Of America Demanding Equality. We testified at puplic hearings, in front of the legislature, marched from court house to capital, supported our husbands when visitation was denied, objectecd when the 2nd wife income was used to in crease child support althogh we did believe that child support should be paid. I wish we had this resourse then so we could contact our congressmen and senatators and convince them that joint custody and strong visitation enforcement is needed. There is a term aliation of affection where you try to turn someones feelings away. My husbands ex always told his son he did not love him. We went threw the works. It makes some of your stories like ours so we can really relate.We tried for custody but our own attorney screwed up on us. LEt me know if you all want to get together and rattle a few cages!!

StepMadre's picture

I love this and am saving it. You know what would be cool? (I think) A collection of short essays like this on step-parenting from all of us. From all perspectives and including step-dads, SMs who are also BMs, and SMs who don't have Bio-kids. I think it would be a best-seller.

"The truth shall set you free." ~John 8:32

SWADE's picture

I think your Idea would be great.