Sunday, December 19, 2010

Holidays or Hellidays? How Stepmothers and Stepkids Alike Can Enjoy (Psychologytoday.com)

It's holiday time--or helliday time, depending on your situation. For the millions of stepfamilies and reClick Here!">marriages with children and adult children in the US, the holidays may mean lots of extra pressure and stress.


At this time of year especially, when college students are likely returning to the nest for a week or two, those whose parents are divorced may be feeling conflicted about how much time to spend with mom, and how much time to spend with dad. If only dad is repartnered, kids of any age may feel they have to spend more time with mom, less with dad and stepmom--"because mom's alone and dad's not." Many are the stories of kids who boycott one parent holiday after holiday, out of a misplaced sense of "loyalty" to mom.


Meanwhile, the therapists who work with them know that the holidays tend to bring out the guilt and sadness in divorced dads, who may feel more acutely the imperfection of relations with their kids at holiday time owing to all the tinsel-time hype. Stepmoms, for their part--even those whose stepkids are young adults or adults--may feel especially compelled to engineer a "real family" type feeling over the holidays. And often they're dealing with stepkids who resent them and their efforts, blame them for their parents' divorce, or have otherwise yet to come to terms with the order of things (step "family" adjustment, researchers tell us, can take as long as 12 years).

Related Links Live Chat for Women with StepchildrenThe Real Reason Children (and Adults) Hate their StepmothersThe Real Reason Kids (and Adults) Hate Stepmom, Part 2Stepfamily Holidays: Serving Up "Togetherness," Passing on the DramaTeens Can Drive You Nuts--Especially When They're Not Yours! Find a Therapist

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As of 2011, stepfamilies will outnumber first families in the U.S. Research on stepfamily dynamics tell us that children, young adults, and even adults have a harder time getting a stepmother than they do a stepfather. The research also reveals that stepmothers have the roughest adjustment process of any stepfamily member; numerous studies have found that they report higher levels of anxiety, depletion, burnout and exhaustion than do mothers.


Holidays bring out some of our most primitive longings, and a sense of "nostalgia" for things we probably never had in the first place--a "perfect" family, an "ideal," Ozzy-and-Harriet-type Click Here!">marriage. The flipside of these longings is often resentment and acting out that things are not what they "should be." Helliday eggnog, anyone?


By bucking expectations that your stepfamily is "supposed" to look, act, and feel "just like a first family"--many of which are not so perfect either, as their members will quickly point out--you can give yourself a happier holiday. Here are two pieces of simple advice, one for stepkids and the other for stepmothers, to take the pressure down a notch:


•If you're tempted to call your father's wife a "stepmonster" or to badmouth her as the holidays approach, take a step back and ask yourself, Why? Even as an adult, you may be in a loyalty bind, sensing on some level that if you are kind or even civil to your stepmother, you are betraying your mother in some way. Your misplaced sense of "loyalty" can impede your relationship with your father and his wife or partner, making you feel like a perpetual outsider. This loyalty bind also prevents your relationship with your mother from developing healthily.You deserve better!


•If you're a stepmother feeling apprehensive about time with your husband's children or adult children, make a resolution to seek a qualified couple's therapist in the new year to get these issues on the table and dealt with in a constructive way. Meanwhile, relax your expectation that you "should" be able to win his kids over and make them love you, or "should" love them just like they're your own. In stepfamily situations, polite and respectful is often hard enough and good enough! Realistic expectations can help you have a holiday rather than a hellliday.


further reading:


All studies cited in Stepmonster: A New Look at Why Real Stepmothers Think, Feel, and Act the Way We Do by Wednesday Martin, Ph.D.



5 Tips For Capturing Incredible Candid Photos on Christmas! (lilsugar)

Don't miss the Christmas morning magic! San Francisco shutterbug Lauri Levenfeld teaches moms how to capture interesting images of their tots and holidays are the perfect time to put her tips to use. "The images you capture are bound to create lasting and special memories, even if you have to find a little humor in some of the recordings," she said. "The best way to capture all the wonderful aspects of your family's celebration is to treat your recordings as an overall story of the day," Levenfeld added. Check out her five fabulous tips!

All photos courtesy of: Zoom Photography

 

View the original article here

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Last-Minute Holiday Cards and Gifts (About)

Apple

I have some friends who sent out their holiday cards weeks ago. (Yes, before December even hit.) Then there are other friends who like to send their cards two weeks before Christmas so that they get there in plenty of time.

I am neither a member of the super-early group nor of the timely group. I am one of those souls you see frantically searching for last-minute ">gifts on Christmas Eve, hopefully not at the drug store. I am one of those who send out their holiday cards in time for New Year's -- maybe.

But as we get ready for our annual cookie-decorating party ('cause kids and cookies and icing just go together and create magical-looking edible art), I am giving myself a bit of a break this year. Holiday cards will be late, but time together with family and friends will be first.

I know there are a lot of much-more-organized folks than me who will say you can do both. I'm gonna keep trying to emulate them (I may get there one year!), but in the meantime, I'm gonna kick myself a bit less for not measuring up to the expectations that are so often self-imposed during the holiday season.

If you are like me, then give yourself a break too. Aside from the fact that being hard on yourself is counterproductive (and you still have a lot to do!), know that it's okay not to be perfect every time.

And don't panic. There are options.

If you are late with holiday cards and you have a Mac, you can still send out beautiful personalized letterpress cards with Apple's iLife '11. If you don't have that software, you can still use iPhoto to create gorgeous photo ">gifts such as calendars and photo books. Order by the 18th (for standard shipping) or the 19th (for express shipping) and these ">gifts will still arrive by Christmas.

Another option: You can make terrific cards and ">gifts using sites such as Shutterfly or Snapily, or you can make your own.

Related Articles: Great Holiday ">Gifts and Stocking Stuffers for EveryoneHow to Plan a Kids' Christmas PartyFamily Holidays Survival Guide

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View the original article here

Monday, December 13, 2010

What should parents be positioned children before marriage?

We live in an age when love, sex and intimacy seem to be many people's epitome of happiness. Yes, we seek other ways to find happiness and fulfillment, but the rate of divorce and the percentage of single parent families compared with two-parent families tells me that parenting is either of less importance to parents than Click Here!">marriage or that they are uninformed about the effects of divorce on their children. Parents who leave an unhappy Click Here!">marriage for the sake of their children are not in possession of all the facts or are misguided in their belief that divorce is in the best interest of the children. The best wisdom out there says that children of divorce suffer more than children of unhappy Click Here!">marriages.


Here are 7 reasons why parents should put parenting before Click Here!">marriage.


1. Children need two parents more than they need a perfect home


The influence of both a male and female parent on a child's development cannot be understated. A good mother, on balance brings a nurturing, protecting and comforting aspect to a child's life, while a good father brings his child stability, security and strength. Mothers tend to be more emotional, fathers more rational. Mothers tend to be more understanding, fathers more decisive. A good mother may offer her child a shoulder to cry on while a good father may show his child how to get up and move on.


Of course, a good parent possesses all these qualities and shares the responsibility for providing their child with all their needs. But it is in the nature of a male parent to provide a child with answers and solutions and direction while it is more inherent in a female parent to be protective of a child's emotional well-being and to be a good listener without feeling the need to give her child a logical solution to their problem.


Having both a male and female parent present in the home teaches a child how to explore and develop both the masculine and feminine aspects of their own character. In balanced adults there is a healthy presence of both male and female characteristics. In women, the balance will tend to be more feminine and in men, more masculine. If a child is to have the best chance to develop emotional stability then two parents are needed on a daily basis. Even the slightest change in the balance will have an adverse effect on a child's emotional and intellectual development.


2. A child has a right to be brought up by two parents


Click Here!">Marriage is a choice that two people make for themselves. It is rarely a selfless or altruistic act. People marry because they find someone who brings them happiness and fulfilment in life. Of course, there is also the promise to live to make the other person happy. Even though the phrase "for better or for worse" is still often said in the Click Here!">marriage vows, more and more this promise is being broken as married couples find it's a promise they are unable or unwilling to keep.


However, when a child is born into the Click Here!">marriage, it has rights which far outweigh the needs of the parents. Even though a couple desire to be fulfilled in their personal relationship with each other, a child has the right to be brought up by two loving, caring, selfless parents: parents who put their child's interests before their own.


Parents rarely make a commitment to their children when they are born, but children ought to expect that their parents will do whatever it takes to give them a stable, loving home in which to grow and develop. In a good parent, the rights and needs of their child will always come before their own, whatever the cost to themselves.


3. To be a parent is a moral obligation - not a choice


There is never a time as long as a parent and a child are living when they will not be connected. Even if estranged, a parent will always be the parent to their child. There is no divorcing a child. There is no saying to a child 'I'm sorry, I don't love you anymore, this simply isn't going to work'. But when two parents say that to each other, they are in some measure saying it to their child. Parents may put a spin on divorce by saying to the child 'it's better for you in the long run' but the truth is - it isn't. A child's perspective will be 'you don't love me enough to stay together and make your Click Here!">marriage work' - even if only subconsciously. While some may say 'I'm glad my parents split up - I couldn't stand the shouting', what would they have said if their parents had found a way to make the Click Here!">marriage work in order to keep the family home together? Or are they even aware of the effects that growing up in a broken home has had on them?


The love between a husband and wife can wane or even be extinguished, but the love of a good parent is unconditional and unmovable. A Click Here!">marriage can breakdown and be dissolved, but the love that a good parent has for their child can never be diminished and their commitment to their child can never be undermined or broken. The commitment that a parent has to their child is not one based on choice, it's one based on moral obligation. It would be even better if it were based on unconditional love. What lengths would a good parent go to to provide their child with the very best upbringing they could if they truly loved them more than themselves?


4. A child deserves and expects it


During their formative years, children depend upon both parents to show that they are committed to them. They need to see that they are loved and to know that their home is stable and secure. They need to know that no matter what storms the family has to face together, the foundations of the family home cannot be shaken. Children need the certainty that the love their parents have for them comes above their own personal happiness - that it indeed comes before their love for each other. When a parent puts a child's interests second to their own it will make their child feel unloved and second-rate. The child will begin to doubt their own worth and their value to the parent. After all, what kind of love puts someone else second?


If a child doesn't deserve a parent's unconditional and undying love then who does? Children are vulnerable and need protecting. Parents have a responsibility to give their child the best parenting they possibly can whatever the cost to themselves. A child has no reserves on which to draw to cover the emotional shortfall which results from growing up in a broken home. Parents, on the other hand should be prepared to go into emotional debt if they have to in order to make sure their child does not grow up emotionally poor or crippled.


5. Spouses can expect too much from each other, but children never expect too much from their parents.


Click Here!">Marriages are not perfect, neither are parent-child relationships. But a child deserves understanding, provision, support, affection, and security moreso than a spouse. After all, when two people get married, they make an agreement to love each other and provide for each other's needs. When a child is born, no such agreement takes place. A child simply grows up expecting all that's coming to them. When one person in a Click Here!">marriage fails to uphold their part of the agreement, the other has every right to withdraw their own part of the agreement. So often, when the love that one has for the other depends on what they 'get' out of the relationship, if they ain't 'getting' then the love dies. But this only works one way with a child-parent relationship.


When a child fails to be a perfect child, a parent cannot abandon them or withdraw their love from them. The child still has the right to expect to be loved unconditionally. Children owe nothing to their parents, but parents owe everything to their children. If a child fails to love a parent as they would like to be loved, the parent must go on loving their child nonetheless. The child has no debt of love to pay to the parent. But if a parent loves their child unconditionally, that child will grow up to love their parent too. If a parent fails to love their child more than themselves, the child will withdraw from the parent to a greater or lesser degree.


Even though good parents will fail their child in some measure, a child's expectations of the parents are always right - even if unrealistic. Good parents will always understand that they are not married to their child - they are inextricably connected and committed to their child and that a child has a birthright to expect unreserved love and commitment from their parents regardless of how much a child returns their parents' affections or lives up to their expectations.


6. A broken home results in a broken child


Somewhere along the way, when a child is brought up by one parent or by two parents who live apart, something in the child is lost or broken. Having two parents who could not find it in themselves to stay together to give them a stable home will have a detrimental effect on a child. It may not emerge till later in life, but a person from a broken home may find it difficult to make strong emotional connections with others. Statistics show that people from single-parent homes are less successful in life - even years afterwards - than those from two-parent families.


While parents may argue that they split up for the child's sake, in actuality, it's rare that divorce ever benefits a child. Growing up in a home even where parents are disconnected or in constant disagreement gives a child more stability and normality than growing up where they have to deal with the loss of the two-parent home. A child growing up in a broken home grows up grieving for the intact home where two parents are available on a daily basis to provide them with the moral, emotional and intellectual support essential to their development and nourishment. The best parenting cannot be done over the telephone or on weekends. The best parenting is done on a daily basis and in partnership with the other parent. No matter how parents try to justify divorce, it will nearly always result in a broken child.


7. Putting parenting first may save a Click Here!">marriage


Children should never be used as an excuse not to leave a Click Here!">marriage, but they can be the reason why a parent would stay in a Click Here!">marriage. The difference is that if a parent knows that to provide their child with a stable, loving and peaceful home in which to grow up will give them the best possible start in life, it may give them the resolve they need to work harder at their Click Here!">marriage than if they had not been a parent. Whereas, not leaving a Click Here!">marriage for the sake of a child is a mindset which can result in a parent putting too much responsibility on their child to bring them personal happiness.


If parents can proactively take steps to make a Click Here!">marriage workable so that their child has the home they deserve, they may find that their Click Here!">marriage becomes less of a disappointment. Focusing on the needs of their child and resolving to work at their relationship for the sake of their child doesn't necessarily mean that the Click Here!">marriage is false or a sham. It merely shifts the priorities of the Click Here!">marriage. Nor does it mean that the child carries the burden of keeping the Click Here!">marriage together. It merely requires a level of giving to the child that supercedes the parents' desire to take from each other. Providing a child with a good home is one of the best reasons two people can stay together.


Who said that romance or sex or a great social life are the only reasons to be married? Surely, providing a child with a loving home is as good, if not, a better reason for working at a Click Here!">marriage than all the others put together? The result of working at the Click Here!">marriage wouldn't be to prevent the pain of separation for the parents, it would be the enduring and immeasurable investment that they make in the well-being and personal development of their child. If parents can keep their child the focus of their ambitions and desires, they can find ways they otherwise wouldn't have done to make their Click Here!">marriage workable and as enjoyable as possible and thus provide their child with the parents and the home they deserve.


http://stayforyourchildren.com


Stephen Rees


Having worked at a difficult marriage for 20 years in order to bring up my two children my desire is to encourage and help other parents in a similar situation to do the same. My core belief on parenting is that a good parent can find ways of making a marriage work - even if not fulfilling - in order to provide their children with a stable, happy home in which to grow up.


The modern belief that leaving a bad marriage for the sake of the children has no evidential basis. In fact, studies on both sides of the Atlantic have shown that children who come from homes where both parents are present even if the marriage isn't a good one, develop better emotionally and intellectually than those who come from broken homes. Parents who are considering divorce should take notice of this evidence if they truly want the best for their children.


My book "How To Be A Good Parent In A Bad Marriage" provides encouragement and support for parents who find themselves struggling to cope with the stresses and traumas of being a parent in an unhappy marriage, and shows how you can find happiness and fulfillment in life while being a great parent to your children.


http://stayforyourchildren.com

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Are fair and equitable child support laws for both the parents?

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I know that this article as well as this subject is going to touch the chord of so many people both positive and negative, both mothers and fathers. I recently posed a question to both men and women and to my astonishment; both favored and concurred with it. So, what is it? Child support! Did you know that child support is determined on the income of the noncustodial parent? Yes, I'm sure most of you know that. However, do most of you agree that child support laws are antiquated and biased and needs to be changed?

If support payment is based on a noncustodial parent income, then what happens to the excess of the money that is received by the custodial parent once the child's needs are taken care of? Most noncustodial parents want accountability for the payments received. I concur. During the divorce process, both parties are required to present a financial affidavit outlining all their expenses, assets and their income. Why then shouldn't custodial parents outline the monthly expenses of the child or children and present that to establish support payment? If it takes only $500 for a child's monthly expenses and the custodial parent receives $1200, then the remaining $700 is custodial support. Doesn't seem fair does it? The question that was presented to both men and women was should custodial parents be accountable for the child support payment they receive?

Child support laws have changed in many states to include the income of both parents, however, it needs to be changed nationwide for child support to be based on the expenses of each child. Most noncustodial parents would then stop evading child support and those that are reluctant to pay child support will pay child support because it will be based on the expenses and needs of the child. In order to make child support fair to both parents, this small change can be easily implemented when establishing the child support order.

Christy is pregnant by her ex-boyfriend and she came to my office for advice on how to proceed with her relationship with the father of her child. She was initially quite angry and disappointed but elated that she was having a baby. She did not want the father involved with the unborn baby and wanted to do it all by herself. I thought how selfish, but I explained to her that her baby would benefit by having both parents involved in his/her life. In another session, we discuss how much child support she should receive. I asked her to write down all the expenses she would incur from having the baby as well as the budget monthly for caring for the baby. She brought the expenses during a follow-up session and I suggested that is the amount you ask for child support and present the father with the budget. When she came back, her relationship with the father had taken a positive turn. Christy informed me that he was relieved that she was fair and equitable in deciding on the financial responsibility of raising their child.

However, the face of child support is changing. Statistic shows that 85% of custodial parents are mothers and 15% are fathers. The fasting growing segment/population of parents are fathers. More and more fathers are fighting for custody and in today's changing world; more fathers are getting custody of their children.

This is the perfect place to introduce Denise. Denise contacted me last year when her husband, of whom she was separated from, kept her two children when they visited him for the summer. She wanted to know her rights and the rights of her husband. What I told her shocked her. No parent actually has custody of their children unless it is outlined and determined in a divorce decree or in other documentation signed by both parents. I suggested to Denise that when the children come back for the Christmas holiday she could keep the children with her. However, I also suggested that she should have a candid conversation with her children to see where they prefer to live, with mommy or daddy.

At Christmas her two children came to visit, however, Denise did not take my advice. The children went back after the holiday to their father. During her divorce hearing in the following spring, and when the issue of custody was presented, the judge asked, "if you wanted the children with you, why didn't you keep them when they came to visit?" He continued to say, "if you didn't think the father was doing a good job with the children, why did you allow them to stay with him for so long." Denise called me after the hearing and informed me that the father was awarded custody and she should have listened to me.

Denise is not the only mother I know that doesn't have custody of their children and is the noncustodial parent. I have several mothers that I consult that are noncustodial parents. What happens when mothers are noncustodial parents? Do they have to pay the percentage outlined in child support laws? The answer is yes. What I've seen when mothers are noncustodial parents are fathers are more lenient to mothers paying child support and seldom demand that they pay the amount outlined in child support laws. This is the case for Denise. She only pays a small amount per month to the father for the care of her two children.

After seeing a trend in the way fathers who are custodial parents allow the mothers who are noncustodial parents to pay a smaller amount from the norm, it got me to thinking, why are so many mothers, who are custodial parents demanding noncustodial parents to pay a percentage of their income when in most cases that amount greatly exceed the need of the child or children.

I'm hoping that the laws will change in the future to allow custodial parents to outline the monthly expenses of their child or children when faced with child support. More noncustodial parents will stop evading paying child support and more will spend quality time with their children. Since 1975, over $100 billion is owed in unpaid child support. Of the amount owed, 70% of the noncustodial parents make less than $10,000 annually. The figure continues to grow because of the economy and the high number unemployment rate because of the amount of people being laid off. However, if both parents are working together for the same goals, and those goals are to love, provide, protect, be their physically, emotionally, and spiritually for our children, we are providing the best for our children.

When noncustodial parents pay child support, they are more likely to be involved and spend quality time with their children. Statistic shows that when both mother and father are actively involved in their children' lives, the children do better in school, more likely to go to college, less likely to be involved in drugs, less likely to get pregnant, and less likely to be involved in gangs and violence. It starts with noncustodial parents being treated fairly when it comes to child support. After all it is "child support" not "custodial parent" support. Let's work together to change the laws as it pertains to the monthly amount noncustodial parents pay for child support. You can start by contacting and writing your Senator or State Representative asking them to change the laws and make child support based on the monthly financial needs and expenses of the child or children. We can make a difference and we can strengthen families.

A child needs both parents involved in their life. When one parent abuses or misuses the other parent, a great amount of strain is placed on the relationship. The parent who is absent from the home, the noncustodial parent, will feel resentment and most likely stay away, even at the sacrifice of not seeing his/her child or children. I hear it time and time again from noncustodial parent and in most of my sessions with custodial parents; I communicate the frustrations and desires of noncustodial parents. Some times my message is positively received and other times the emotions of the custodial parents and noncustodial parents perpetuate a great division between both parents. I strongly believe that if most custodial parents appreciated and respected noncustodial parents many dilemmas between the two parents could be greatly avoided. Also, by no means am I taking away the responsibilities of noncustodial parents, what I see daily are the opportunities being taken away from noncustodial parents.

When one parent is no longer living in the same household with the other parent and children, a child support battle ensues. It can be made easier with less emotion and with both parents satisfied with the process if the actual expenses of the child or children are taken into consideration. All noncustodial parents will know exactly where the money is being spent and that child support payments are being accounted for. Parenthood is an opportunity and responsibility. So many times one parent takes that away from the other parent. We as parents can make a difference in the lives of our children by providing the best for them. The best for them is both parents actively participating and involved in our children lives and both parents wanting and providing the best for our children. What a wonderful world this would be.

Here are some suggestions to move more towards an amicable relationship with the other parent.

o Decide that your child's or children' best interest is the most important aspect of the relationship with both parents.

o Write a budget for each child. Make a list of all the expenses that is involved with the monthly care and needs of each child.

o Start appreciating the other parent and realize that they make a world of difference in the lives of their children.

o Get past the emotional upsets that caused the relationship to go awry. Parenting without the emotional upsets toward the other parent will open up a new relationship between both parents that will ultimately benefit your children.

o Contact your child support office and let them know that the budgeted amount calculated in as mentioned above in the second point is what you want to receive monthly for child support.

o Contact your Senator or State Representative and let them know that child support law need to be based on the expenses of each child and abolish the percentage of income of the noncustodial parent based laws.

o Watch and see the noncustodial parent playing a more important and bigger role in their child's or children' lives.

o Watch and see the difference in your child or children.

o Better yet, watch and see how your life will ultimately change because of letting go of all the hurt, pain, anger, disappointment, frustrations and whatever other emotional baggage that festered inside of you. Your family will completely change for the better.

I hope that these suggestions are received and are acted upon and that overnight your life, your children' lives and the noncustodial life will change for the better. However, we are all human and it make take some longer than others. The most important aspect of change is wanting to change and wanting what's best for not only ourselves, but for those we love. Start with one suggestion and keep adding each day, each week and whenever you're able to move on.

Take my advice because I have played the role of both custodial and noncustodial parent and I feel and have lived the experiences of both. Trust me, my advice will make a world of difference for your children.








Dawnette Lounds-Culp
Publisher/Author
The Face of Child Support
http://www.angeleyespublishingco.com


Wednesday, December 8, 2010

More Good Special-Needs Blog Reading

I asked for parent-bloggers to tell us about what they write and why, and we're now up to 43 contributions. In the week since my last list, six more bloggers have told their stories. Add these looks at special-needs parenting life to your blog-reading routine:


Do you write a blog about your experience parenting a child with special needs? Add it to the list!


Photo by Terri Mauro


Daily News | Site of the Day


View the original article here

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Escalator Awareness Week Brings Up Old Fears

It's Elevator and Escalator Safety Awareness Week, according to a post on About.com Pediatrics, and while elevators don't cause much distress in my family, pretty much every week is Escalator Safety Awareness Week for my daughter, or maybe Escalator Terror Awareness Week would be more like it. She doesn't like those moving stairways, and judging from the steadily increasing number of comments on my "Fear of Escalators" post from a couple of years back, she's not alone.


If your child is also freaked out by having to step on moving steps, I've gathered some expert opinions on why escalators can be scary, and some helpful tips for helping your child adjust (or not, if you're into choosing your battles):


How have you handled escalator dread? Share your tips and add to this resource.


Photo: Ralph Orlowski/Getty Images


Daily News | Site of the Day


View the original article here