Quote:
Originally Posted by ChipperMonkey
I honestly think you're right. Kids shouldn't run the roost so to speak. However, in practice, single parents give you the "my kids always come first line". Ok, so I know I take things too literally at times. So if someone tells me the kids ALWAYS come first, then I take this as spoken, the kids ALWAYS come first. Maybe this is extreme, but anything else is pure guessing, i.e. where does the line exactly lie as to when my needs will come first? Do their wants override my needs as a human?
I honestly believe that the strength of the family lies in the strength of the relationship between the parents or parental figures. It is indeed possible to have a good step family relationship but the truth is that if the non-step parent figure doesn't set firm boundaries and lay down the law in terms of the kids showing respect to the new partner, the kids are never going to get along with the new girlfriend, boyfriend, partner, etc. The actual parent holds the power, but anymore its difficult to find someone who doesn't have the "kids first, always, no matter what" attitude.
Anymore I feel that my views are in the minority. Its not worth it to even try to have a relationship with a guy who has a child and I avoid it from the get-go.
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I think it depends how one raises the kid. Some people use their kids as a substitute for romantic partner ( I don't mean sexually) .
Then surely kids feel jealous and betrayed if their parents start dating.
I and my ex husband have very close relationship with our daughter but we never treated her as a substitute so she had no need to be jealous.
My grandma used to say "the trick is in boundaries".
I also think sometimes people drag their kids into relationship way too fast and kind of ambush the kids, no wonder kids are flustered
. If you do date a man with kids be weary of ones that want to drag kids into this way too early, like want to introduce you to their kids right away and must have kids approval and want you to spend time with their kids way too early. That's a red flag and typically indicates poor boundaries and inability to have their own lives apart from the kids or want to make sure kids like you.
It's unhealthy.
But it's doable and it could work.
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