While you, as parents, are likely to approach remarriage and a new family with great joy and expectation, your kids may not be nearly as excited about having a new parent. Kids may likely feel uncertain about the upcoming changes, and how that will affect their relationship with you. Your children will also be worried about living with their new step-parent whom they might not know well.
As a parent, we are always excited to give our love and care to a child, but the child might not reciprocate the same feelings. Here are some common mistakes you can make as a stepparent:
- Trying to get involved and becoming too comfortable with the child very early.
- Trying to please the child by making them experience things that are not related to your everyday life. E.g. Taking them for a picnic or a movie or just trying to please them.
- Expecting you and your new partner to have a similar parenting style without communicating first; not communicating with your new partner about each other's parenting styles.
- Over expectation from a child when it comes to respecting and accepting you.
- Sometimes the biological parent might push the child too much to form a relationship with the new parent.
Transitions are hard and can be too much to process for a child, especially when it comes to their families. The above-stated mistakes can impact your child in these ways:
- They might feel uncomfortable, get annoyed and develop resentful feelings towards the new parent.
- The child's expectation increases and they feel disappointed, eventually. It can become difficult for them to adjust to your daily life.
- The child might feel confused regarding the rules and regulations of the family and might not feel safe and secure.
- The child might feel burdened, and it decreases the chances of getting closer to the parent.
- The child might not feel heard, valued, loved, and emotionally connected.
What Can Be Done?