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pbaribeault -> RE: Worried (7/2/2008 3:57:00 PM)
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Blending a family is incredibly hard work, and there are no right answers. I would have hoped that at least the practical decisions of which children would live in which houses most of the time would have been settled before the marriage. He has to be involved with his ex wife, the mother of his children, that are now somewhat your friend's children too. There is a difference between saying there is "too much involvement" which is a statement of fact, as if there were some kind of 'right' level of involvement. Rather your friend might consider owning her own feelings and saying that her new husband's ex wife is more involved than she is able to be comfortable with right now. Then she doesn't have to 'prove' there is anything 'wrong' with what is going on. She just has to ask her husband what he is willing to do to help her be more comfortable -- or if he is just OK with allowing her to feel consistently bothered and insecure. He also has to act a father to the children that he has been fathering, whether they are biologically his or not. That's not something you just switch off when you break up with their mother. If she (your friend) hopes he will bond deeply and well with his new step-kids (hers) then she must try to appreciate the true fatherhood he feels towards his step-kids through his ex-wife. It's not just something that can (or should) be switched off. I'm not sure that they need to live with him (and her) but if they can cope, and if it seems best, she might consider asking him to address her real, actual concerns, rather than just living in her feelings and expressing them. She doesn't have to "act offended" with his ex-wife... if only she can just say, "When <this> happened, I felt <whatever>. Do you think we could do anything about that?" (She can say something similar to the woman directly in the moment if she is able to, but I'm assuming she'll mostly be speaking to her husband, later.) In the situation she should behave with impeccable manners, calmness, courtesy and genuine grace. She can be manners made of stone, no matter what happens. Then she will never have reason to be ashamed, or to wonder if she contributed to the problem. Offenses occur, but Christians are reborn with a Spirit of forgiveness rooted deep inside of them. Whatever is happening can be chalked up to, "Well, I'm glad I'm not that kind of person. I'm the kind of person that can get past petty bitterness." All this assuming the guy is a fairly average Christian good-guy... But "geting mad" at her and "telling her" who will be moving in... I wonder if this isn't a bigger problem with control issues at the heart.
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