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Choices in Relationships. Chapter Sixteen: Remarriage and Stepfamilies. Remarriage. Remarriage for the Divorced Ninety percent of remarriages consist of persons who are divorced rather than widowed. Preparation for Remarriage
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Choices in Relationships Chapter Sixteen: Remarriage and Stepfamilies
Remarriage • Remarriage for the Divorced • Ninety percent of remarriages consist of persons who are divorced rather than widowed. • Preparation for Remarriage • It is not uncommon for persons who are divorced to live together with a new partner before remarriage.
Remarriage • Stages of Remarriage • Boundary Maintenance • Emotional Remarriage • Psychic Remarriage • Community Remarriage • Parental Remarriage • Economic and Legal Remarriage
Remarriage • Remarriage for the Widowed • Remarriage for the widowed is usually very different from remarriage for the divorced. • Stability of Remarriages • National data reflects that remarriages are more likely than first marriages to end in divorce in the early years of remarriage.
Should a Woman Marry a Divorced Man with Children? • Acknowledge that a second marriage is vulnerable. • Question whether living together is beneficial to future marital success. • Delay marriage to a person who has been married before. • Consider a fresh start in a new home.
Stepfamilies • Definition and Types of Stepfamilies • Although a stepfamily can be created when a never-married or a widowed parent with children marries a person with or without children, most stepfamilies today are composed of spouses who were once divorced. • There are several types of stepfamilies.
Stepfamilies • Unique Aspects of Stepfamilies • The children in a stepfamily are biologically related to only one parent. • Only one biological parent in a stepfamily lives with the children. • Everyone in a stepfamily has experienced the loss of a love partner. • Stepfamily members also are connected psychologically to others outside their unit.
Stepfamilies • Stages in Becoming a Stepfamily Stage 1: Fantasy Stage 2: Reality Stage 3: Being Assertive Stage 4: Strengthening Pair Ties Stage 5: Recurring Change
Strengths of Stepfamilies • Exposure to a Variety of Behavior Patterns • Happier Parents • Opportunity for New Relationship with Stepsiblings • More Objective Stepparents
Women in Stepfamilies • Accepting Partner’s Children • It’s really difficult to love someone else’s children. • Partner’s Children Accepting Stepmother • A stepchild may feel the need to keep an emotional distance in the relationship with the stepmother so as not to incur the anger of the biological mother.
Women in Stepfamilies • Resenting Alimony and Child Support • It is not unusual for a wife to become upset when her husband mails one-quarter or one-third of his income to a woman with whom he used to live. • Her New Partner and How Her Children Accept Him • For many remarried wives, two main concerns are how her new husband accepts her children and how her children accept him.
Women in Stepfamilies • Having Another Child • Couples with a mutual birth may tolerate more marital stress before considering divorce than couples with no mutual children. • In spite of the decreased satisfaction with one’s stepchildren, having a child in a second marriage is associated with increasing the stability of the relationship and reducing the probability of divorce.
Men in Stepfamilies • Man with Children Married to a Woman without Children • Men with biological children enter stepfamilies with an appreciation for the role of parent, some skills (one would hope) in reference to the role, and a bond with a child or children who usually live in another house. • Man with Children Married to a Woman with Children • The more engaged the stepfather in disciplining his stepchildren, the greater the level of reported satisfaction.
Men in Stepfamilies • Man without Children Married to a Woman with Children • Two primary factors that contribute to a positive stepfather-stepchild relationship: • Active involvement in teaching the stepchild something mutually valued. • An intense love relationship between the stepfather and the biological mother of the stepchild.
Children in Stepfamilies • Divided Loyalties, Discipline, Stepsiblings • Other problems experienced by children in stepfamilies often revolve around feeling abandoned, having divided loyalties, discipline, and stepsiblings. • Moving between Households • Though sometimes this is a structured transition, it may also be a mechanism used by the child to manipulate the parents.
Children in Stepfamilies • Ambiguity of the Extended Family • A final issue for children in stepfamilies is their ambiguous place in the extended family system of the new stepparent.
Developmental Tasks for Stepfamilies • Acknowledge Losses and Changes • Nurture the New Marriage Relationship • Integrate the Stepfather into the Child’s Life • Allow Time for Relationship between Partner and Children to Develop
Developmental Tasks for Stepfamilies • Have Realistic Expectations • Accept Your Stepchildren • Establish Your Own Family Rituals • Decide about Money
Developmental Tasks for Stepfamilies • Give Parental Authority to Your Spouse • Support Child’s Relationship with Absent Parent • Cooperate with the Child’s Biological Parents and