stepfamily woes

My eldest is 10. He’s the one that seems to be suffering most through the transition into a new stepfamily. I really feel now that this has actually been an ongoing thing since my separation from my ex. Yesterday, a counsellor told me that his current behaviour (inability to make a decision on anything, having meltdowns, losing his temper and so much more…) is related to his self esteem and lack of self confidence. Ok then.

Here’s the problem, given his behaviour, it’s very hard to be encouraging. I want to help him feel better about himself (along with myself!), but how do I do it without reinforcing his current behaviour? He’s so beligerent!!!

Thanks for any suggestions you can offer 🙂

It’s sadly a vicious circle, isn’t it? He behaves badly, you lose it with him, he behaves even worse and so on. The way off the roundabout is to try and put yourself in his shoes. Ask yourself these simple questions; what is this behaviour ABOUT? Why is he doing this? What does it mean?

You have the most important clue already and realise it is significant; it all began when you and his father split up. And it’s got worse while you have established a new partnership.

When partners split up, you quite naturally and reasonably see it as your business. You may blame your ex, he may blame you, both of you may point the finger at a person or a circumstance outside. Whatever, you probably realise your break up is the adult solution to an adult problem. That’s how you see it.

Not your children. Kids think they are the centre of the universe. When something goes wrong, they often conclude it was their fault. They think “If I’d been better, if I hadn’t been so bad, Mum and Dad would still be a family”. They feel guilt – and from that, they feel often overwhelmingly anger as well as loss and pain. And they can’t stroll up to you and say “I say, Ma and Pa, I’m feeling pretty lousy, you know.” What they do is Act It Out.

All bad behaviour – ALL – is a way of showing bad feelings that can’t be put into words. When he dithers, kicks off into tantrums, sulks or cries, he’s actually saying one thing and one thing only; “My parents split up and I feel so, so very sad about that!”. It’s a cry – no, a scream – for help. And what happens? He gets told off! I know it’s hard on you, and I know his behaviour may be very hard to manage. But when you start seeing it as a cry not an attack, maybe you can see a way though it.

When parents split up and then remake a family, what often happens is that you concentrate on your own immediate feelings and doings, and maybe your kids get put on the back burner for a time. They soon learn that the only way to get attention is to have a meltdown. A quiet tug on your coattails will likely be brushed away. So to get attention, even if it’s negative, he has to misbehave. They way to turn that around is to make a real effort to hug and kiss and affirm him and his behaviour whenever he plays good. AND to hug and kiss and tell him you understand what he’s trying to express when he acts up.

Kiss him, tell him you think he’s fab, tell him it wasn’t his fault. You can say you don’t always like his behaviour, but always, always tell him you love HIM. He has good reason and every right to be expressing pain and loss. That doesn’t mean you were wrong to make your choices. It just means you do have to recognise how he may be seeing it and acknowledge this, for him to come through this. Do read my book ‘Stepfamilies – surviving and thriving in a new family’ (on the books page!) because it covers all these issues and could help. Good luck!!

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Can a person love two people at the same time?

I don’t know if you can help or if you’ll reply but I felt I had to write something to someone.

Basically I’m married, have been for 15 years, when I was 22. It’s been very rocky and we’ve had our problems. The thing is though I don’t think I’ve ever been true to myself, just gone along with things, just to keep the peace and keep my husband happy.

But now I’m in my late thirties, something’s happened and it all must sound pretty sordid but I know where my heart lies. I’ve always been fond of my husband’s brother in law, we’ve always just clicked, ever since I met him 14 years ago. The thing is about two years ago, when I was at a really low point in my marriage, but a high point within myself, he started to make it known how he felt and after about 6 months of flirtation together with resistance, we began to have an affair, I’m ashamed to say. I say ashamed but deep down he’s lifted me up and made my life a thousand times better than it was. I’m so in love with him and it’s mutual, completely and he’s prepared to begin a new life with me etc and it would be the most fantastic life but obviously the complications are huge as he has four children, I have two. I’m terrified of hurting everyone and ruining their lives.

I know it’s utterly wrong and we’re betraying my husband and his sister. It’s hideous when I think of us all together as we all get on brilliantly, the children all adore each other. But we’ve got this massive secret. He’s unhappy with his wife and I feel taken for granted and my life is passing me by.

My mother passed away three weeks ago and she had a difficult marriage to be honest and sacrificed her life. It’s made be think life is so short, and life just carries on when you’re gone and It all seems so odd really. I just want to be the happiest I can be and I know with him I would be.

I don’t know what advice I’m looking for, but I hope you won’t judge me and talk about marriage vows etc as I’m well aware of what I’ve done. But I can’t help how I feel for this man. Can a person love two people at the same time?

When parents die we often make massive changes in our lives or look at our situation and think “Is this all there is to it?” You no longer have the person who you might have feared would tell you off about your behaviour. You are now truly a grown up with only yourself to answer to. And if you look at how your mother probably gave up her own choices and needs for her own family, it’s not surprising you now wonder if you’re going the same way and if it’s worth it.

So –okay. What to do? I’m never in favour of sacrifice. You demonstrate the result of it – your mother’s decision to stay in an unhappy marriage for your sake didn’t necessarily benefit you. You knew she wasn’t happy – did that make you feel “Well, that’s fine because we were alright” or does it leave you with guilt? Do you honestly think your husband and more importantly your children are blissfully unaware of your feelings, your dissatisfaction and your affair? Oh sure – you may have got away with the actual details. But I have to tell you, if I had a penny for every child I’ve heard from who KNEW Santa doesn’t really exist and Mum is copping off with someone other than Dad but kept the secret because it seemed expected, I’d be very, very rich.

Can you love two people at the same time? Hell – two, ten, twenty. You love your kids as well as their father, don’t you? Love is infinite. Attention, however, is limited and for every moment you sneak off to be with your lover, your children go without, and you deny yourself and your husband the chance to sort it out. Being in love doesn’t excuse bad behaviour, either. You can’t help what you feel but you can help what you do about it.

My advice would be to give your marriage one last chance but do so with commitment and energy. Make an appointment with Relate, tell him you’re going and you’d like him there too and even if he says no, go. Use the sessions you’ll be offered to sort out what is really best. Either to remake this relationship or to end it, with finality and dignity and in the understanding you may no longer be partners but you’ll always be co-parents.

If you do decide to part, do so and THEN look to linking up with your lover, who meantime should have done the same. But don’t make one conditional on the other and be prepared for him to change his mind. The vows made in the heat of illicit passion may cool when faced with the actuality of a real relationship. Which is why the make or break option should be something you consider carefully. Leave if and because the relationship is something you can’t tolerate, not because the grass seems greener elsewhere. Choose that option and you may be in for a shock. I do wish you all the best!

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I just want him to get off my back!

Dear Suzie, Im getting really annoyed with my boyfriend keep going on at me about getting a job. As far as I see it, it has nothing to do with him especially as i am not even borrowing money off of him. I keep telling him this but he insists it has got something to do with him and keeps having a go. It’s not even like I am living with him and have to share the bills. What can I do? He’s drivin me insane. I have been with him 3 yrs so breaking up is not an option, I just want him to get off my back! Please try to reply as I dont think I can take much more. Thanks

Why isn’t breaking up an option? You may not want it to happen but has it occurred to you he may be considering it? And frankly, if the two of you have such fundamental differences maybe you would be better off with someone who has a life view that matches yours more.

Does it have something to do with him? I would think it does. If you share a life, you share. And in this, you disagree.

Of course, it obviously depends on your reasons for not having a job. Because you have health reasons for not working? Then he’s manifestly being unfair. Because you’re studying for qualifications that will give you a career in the future? Then you clearly have different ideas of what’s important. Because you can’t find work in our area? He has – maybe he feels you aren’t trying, and whether that is true or not is up to you to work out. Because you can’t be arsed? Well
..

Even if he doesn’t lend you money your lack of earned cash and lack of a job certainly impinges on him. If he’s earning he may have more cash to spend and unless he pays for you, he has to cut back on what you do together so you can afford it too. If he has a job, he has things to do, things to think about, things that are important that you may not share or sympathise with. Your daily timetables may be different, with him having to be in bed early in order to be alert for work next day when you don’t. He may have issues about what his friends and colleagues feel about his partner who doesn’t work
oh, there are many, many issues that I can see could concern him. And of course, it makes the prospect of developing the relationship to the point where you may consider living together difficult.

If you want him to get off you back maybe it’s time to sit down and have a proper, clear and honest discussion about what both of you feel about this, what you want out of life and what you want out of this relationship. Maybe you could do with some help or support to relook at your life. Maybe you and he see things so differently that breaking up could be the only option.

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Jealous and frustrated!

I’ve been going out with my boyfriend for just over a year, but recently I haven’t been happy with the relationship. He never talks about anything personal, like whats going on in his life or any problems he has, I don’t know how to get him to open up. I’d really like to know how he feels about our relationship. I did try talking to him, he said he wanted the relationship to continue and he’s been making an effort to see me more. But recently he cancelled on me to go climbing with a girl who’s just a ‘good friend’ of his. Which seems a backward step. I’m not worried he’ll actually cheat, but I am worried he’s interested in this girl, especially if he feels he can talk to her? So the two problem seem interlinked. Should I try talking to him (and how!?) or should I just cut and run? I like him but I don’t want to feel so jealous and frustrated!

It would be a pity to cut and run before or without trying to sort this out. I have to say, however, that it’s absolutely impossible for anyone to change another person’s behaviour or beliefs. Oh sure, you can lock the door or chain him to the radiator but in essence, the only person who can make changes is the person themselves.

That’s not bad news though; it means you have to look at tactics, and also what is really going on. What you can most certainly do is make some changes yourself and in yourself, and by doing so affect what he does.

Okay – so at present you seem to be saying that he doesn’t go in for the touchy feely emotional stuff and you don’t feel you know how he feels, although he has said he wants to go on seeing you.

For a start, no-one ever felt comfortable in opening up when asked questions. Especially to men, it feels like being badgered and interrogated, and asked to make yourself vulnerable. What works best is for you to take a lead, and to ‘model’ what you want back. That is, for you to talk and be open about your own feelings and needs. You say you talked ‘to’ him but be honest – were you talking ‘at’ him or ‘with’ him?

And look at what you do together. You say he cancelled to go climbing with a friend. Maybe he feels more comfortable with her because she doesn’t make demands. Maybe it’s simply that they share a hobby. Could you join in and ask to be introduced to their world? If you feel jealous and frustrated it’s more than possible that you’re making yourself so, not that he’s doing it too you.

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condom query

Dear Suzie,
I’m not sure if this is your area of expertise, but I need some advice on the correct way to put a condom on a man. My boyfriend and I agree that his foreskin needs to be pulled back first before putting the condom on. But he always pulls the skin forwards again after the condom is on because he says it gives the skin freedom to move over the head during sex (like having sex without a condom). But when he tries it his way, the condom sometimes comes loose during thrusting and we have to stop and fix it. Although we’re careful, I do get worried about the safety aspect of this. We’ve tried it with the skin back a few times and he said that when we started thrusting it felt like his foreskin was being pulled back too far, so we had to stop. Do other couples keep it skinned back or are we doing something wrong here? Thanks in advance.

Yes, you need to keep the foreskin pulled back, both when you put on the condom and whilst having sex with it on. If you let the foreskin slide forward during sex the condom will slip off and you will risk pregnancy.

The correct way to put on a condom is to wait until he is fully erect, but before you have had any contact between his penis and your vagina. Pull the foreskin back, pinch the end of the condom to leave a small airspace at the tip, and unroll it right down to the root of his penis, so it nestles against his body. Keep it fully on him – if necessary keep it anchored by holding it on. When he has come, he should carefully pull out of you holding the condom in place. Slip it off and tie a knot in the end or wrap it in tissue and then throw it away – don’t flush it down the loo. Make sure he doesn’t put his penis near your vagina again without washing or wiping himself thoroughly and doesn’t enter you again without putting on a fresh condom.

I think the problem here is that he is confusing the sensations he is used to when masturbating with the sensations you’d get when having intercourse. Guys who are uncut often do learn to please themselves by manipulating the foreskin over the glans. It feels better sometimes than using the hand directly on the glans – his hand can feel too rough. Or, because he’s feeling sensation in both his own hand and the glans, it’s clear to him he’s stimulating himself. It can feel better, and is more lubricated, to make sure the foreskin is the part that does the rubbing. But when you have intercourse, the foreskin will skin back and the sensation then comes from rubbing against the silky soft, grainy inside of the vagina. If he could let himself get used to having his foreskin skinned back, he’d find the sensation is actually far better than pulling the foreskin over the glans.

It might help to show him how it could feel by masturbating him with the foreskin pulled back and with plenty of cream slathered over your hand. But if you’re going to put on a condom and have intercourse after, make sure you use lubricating gel or cream from the chemist, or bought via website such as durex.com. Using anything other than lubrication designed for condoms is asking for trouble since the oil in most creams will rot them in seconds. And I mean seconds!

Sex takes practise to get right and to feel really good. My advice? Plenty of practise! Oh it’s a hard job but somebody’s got to do it



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all in the family?

Dear Suzie, I’m 21 yr old male and I’m in a relationship with my mums sister, we want to come out because were sick of sneaking about and want to be together but don’t know how to tell the family and are scared of there reaction.

I am sorry to hear of your dilemma. I’m sure you would like to be open about your relationship but I’m sad to tell you I have some bad news for you. Put your family’s reaction side for a moment – it’s the Old Bill you have to worry about. You’re in a relationship with your aunt, and that I’m afraid is one of the relationships specifically forbidden in UK law. You can have a relationship with a cousin, ie your aunt’s daughter, but not with her.

Certain sexual pairings are outlawed for very good reasons. Most people assume it’s about genetic pass-on, a way of making sure inherited conditions aren’t given an extra chance of emerging. I think it’s true that we made these laws way-back-when as a means of ensuring a wider gene pool, but I feel the real and far more important reason is emotional. Cross-generational and family pairings increase the risk of those relationships having an element of abuse within them.

I’m not sure if your aunt is any older than you but if she is, she has the advantage of age and experience and that is not always a good thing in partnerships. Keeping it in the family can be static and inward-looking, while having to go outside your family for a partner can ensure a better possibility of each partner bringing the same level of power and choice to the table. You may insist you and your aunt are equal in your relationship and that this is a fully consensual bond. But the reason society frowns upon it is that this is not always so. Your family are likely to be shocked and disapproving and with reason since what you are doing is illegal as well as taboo.

I am certainly not judging or disapproving of you – you are not a bad person for having found yourself attracted to your mother’s sister. But what you are doing has to stop or you may find yourself serious trouble. You may no be able to choose who you find attractive but you can certainly choose what to do about it. I think you should both choose to lay this to rest and find other partners.

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stepfamily christmas

Last year we had our first Christmas together as a new family – me, my new partner, his son and my son and daughter. It was a disaster as they fought over what to do and disagreed on everything from when to open presents to what to eat. What should have been a really happy weekend was miserable – they all seemed to be in a permanent moody. I feel like running away to Antarctica this year. How can I make it the happy time it’s supposed to be?

Begin by accepting it may not be supposed to be a happy time. You saw this as the first Christmas as a new family – I bet all they could think of was the last Christmas they had had as their first family. They fought because all of them were trying to keep hold of how it was, before everything went wrong and Mum and Dad split up.

This time, talk about how they might really be feeling and allow them to mourn the past before they can move on and accept the future. They cling to their own family traditions of when you open presents and what you have for breakfast, lunch, tea and supper as a desperate attempt to bring back the past. Recognise and acknowledge this by talking it over with them and saying you can understand how it feels. Tell them you know it makes them sad. Then suggest you can all keep hold of the best of both families and make this a shared new one. Ask them to nominate traditions they particularly like – stockings in bed or round the breakfast table, presents all in one orgy of opening, or spread throughout the day. Discuss what might belong to the past but not be quite as helpful and see if you can all agree on a weekend in which everyone gets something of what they like.

Simply by acknowledging they have sad feelings about the day and have a right to these can make a tremendous difference. Oh – and by the way. you may be reassured and get plenty of ideas to help by seeing my series Stepfamilies that will be coming out on BBC1 in January. and get a copy of the book (it’s on the books page) – it will help!

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dating dilemma

I am a 38 year old black male and I seem to find problems dating, because I do not fit into any racial or social stereotype. I must admit I am very academic, a free-lance writer, political extremely well-read and travelled (that petrifies most of my contemporaries) but however a sexual masochist, I could only relate to s/m aficionados and dominatrix. It is probably due years of being raised in the vortex of certain patriarchal traditions (Anglo-American Puritanism and West African conservatism) and deeply sucked into the vast abyss and some of the darkest recesses of its intellectual vacuous ness i.e. bio-psycho-social and sexual repression. Yes you’ve probably got the gist now. I was systematically sexually repressed at home and abused at a catholic boarding school from the age of 14 until 16. I need help in a lot of ways. Two years of psychotherapy here in St Albans and two years at the world famous Tavistock clinic in London has not helped much. I could go on and on


I do sympathise and I do wish you well but after 4 years of psychotherapy I’m absolutely certain there is little I can do in one brief letter! And in fact, no-one can actually wave a magic wand and do anything for you, not matter what length of time they have or how world famous they may be. What counsellors and psychotherapist aim to do is threefold – to help you explore yourself and your situation; to help you understand; and then to support you in taking your own action. You seem to have done plenty of exploring and have a degree of understanding, but it’s up to you what action you want to take about it.

The issue is that our upbringing has tremendous influence – it sets the blueprint for ourselves and provides a road map of our life. But once you begin to see the strings pulling you this way and that, you have the choice to let this go on happening, or not. You don’t need to fit into a racial or social stereotype to be able to date, unless you continue to insist on needing a niche to feel happy or in being with people who demand the same.

It sometimes strikes me that for somewhat inward looking, analytical people psychotherapy is both a gift from heaven and a total trap. Maybe what could help is something a bit more focused and snappy – a six or ten session short contract with a counsellor to do a SWOT analysis – strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, . I do suggest you start looking for the upside in what you are seeing as problems. If your contemporaries find an academic, well-read and travelled free-lance writer petrifying then maybe you’re with the wrong contemporaries, or need to find people grown up enough to be on your wave length. You’re black, bright, cultured and have slightly outrĂ© sexual tastes. Good grief – sounds like a cv that could take you far!

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Hereditary Frigidity?

My 24-year old daughter recently told me she has a very loving relationship with her live-in boyfriend of three years but does not feel like sex at all and has never had an orgasm. She said they have discussed it, but it didn’t lead anywhere. I even suggested she tried masturbation, but she screwed up her nose and said she doesn’t feel like it. I told her I never wanted sex until I met my present partner 8 years ago at the age of 46, when I enjoyed it – and felt like it – more than ever. This faded after 4/5 years, so I am back to square one. He is a sexually-active 64 year old and wishes I was more keen. My daughter is a warm and loving person who is not afraid to show her affection, with no major hang-ups, but with no libido. Are we both frigid?? Is it hereditary? I believe my mother is the same.

Freud said that when two people made love, there were always four other people – our parents – in the room, at least in spirit. And often, we imagine that they are disgusted and disapproving, which puts a damper on passion to say the least. Sexual attitudes are hereditary in as much as we learn to be frightened of the power of sexual desire, to see sex as dangerous and ourselves as dirty if we enjoy it, from our family.

Whether you realise it or not, there seems to be a script in your family history that says sex isn’t something a proper woman should enjoy and lose herself in. However much your conscious minds might like to enjoy sex, this holds both of you back. Self consciousness and inhibitions can fade with age and self confidence, or when an assured partner can set a more positive tone. But as you’ve found, fears can reassert themselves unless you really deal with them.

Both of you might benefit from talking with a sexual counsellor or therapist – from Relate or one attached to your own doctor’s surgery. A therapist would help you explore what holds you back and why, and aid you and your partner in making some changes. But I gently suggest that although open and free discussion between mother and daughter is wonderful and to be encouraged, there are limits. Pass this suggestion on to your daughter and show her that you value the idea by doing it yourself. But leave each other to get on with it, with your own partners. Parents and children can often get into less than helpful competition when it comes to sex.

I don’t think it’s a total coincidence, for instance, that you found passion when your daughter was 16 and lost it when she found her own boyfriend, or that her sexual development has been difficult during these years. Love and support her by all means but leave her and her boyfriend in that bedroom alone together!

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Mechanical Sunday Mornings

I’m 53, living with my partner for 10 years and am very happy. However I am not really interested in sex, but he is. We have rather mechanical sex on a Sunday morning, but I am aware that he has to do all the work. I have never had a vaginal orgasm with him, although there was no problem with previous lovers. I think he is quite small, but of course we can’t discuss this, and anyway what could we do about it? I never actually feel sexy, but enjoy a clitoral orgasm. We started off with a passionate sex life where I made as many moves as he.

You started off with a passionate sex life together. What’s changed isn’t your age but the fact that you soon learnt that lovemaking between you didn’t hit the spot. You don’t expect it to result in an orgasm, so hardly surprisingly you don’t approach it with enthusiasm. I don’t think size is the issue – size really doesn’t matter. What matters is that a couple communicate and communication seems to be what is missing here.

Instead of waiting for mechanical Sunday morning, take the initiative again and do it with the intention of breaking this pattern of silence and grief. Obviously, if you tell him his technique leaves a lot to be desired he’s going to be hurt. But you can show him how to please you with movement and suggestion. He’ll be encouraged to continue when you respond with interest.

It might help you to know that all female orgasms are clitoral. You can stimulate the clitoris directly, with caresses or by squeezing or brushing this area between your body and his. Or, you can make sure the area is stimulated by movements of his penis in your vagina. If he’s large, this can be quite easy. If he isn’t, you might need to explore and experiment to find what suits you both. Some lovemaking positions are better than others.

If you want to make sure the clitoris is strongly stimulated, try taking the upper position. You can then direct and time thrusts to make sure they stimulate you. Or, have him on top but shift position so he rides far higher on your body. This means his penis doesn’t penetrate as far, but does press against the clitoris. Approach this with the attitude that you are entitled to enjoy sex and that you can change the situation and you will.

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