By
Clark Rich and Leah Dee Burbidge
Fourteen years in the family blender has brought us a nearly
non-stop series of insights, challenges, shocks, joy and the satisfaction of
creating something beautiful nearly from scratch. Six of our most valuable, but
frequently unspoken, learnings are listed below.
Keep in mind that a lot of the challenges of blended family
life will sound familiar. But they play out with different dynamics because
blended families and individuals have perspective, experience and insight that
gives them a fragile mix of volatility, skepticism and wisdom. Respecting these
dynamics dramatically increases the probability of success. Ignoring them
nearly always spirals the family into soul crushing train wrecks.
Nobody Talks About It. Our dating and marriage
experience revealed shockingly little available blended family ‘How To’
guidance. Pop culture, literature, movies and media produced a wasteland of
mostly useless stereotypes. Family and friends seemed uncomfortable discussing
the reality we faced. The elephant was in the room, but the conversation always
tended to migrate toward the reasons people find themselves suddenly single.
Divorce, death and abandonment are uncomfortable topics. We found taking the
lead in turning the conversation toward positive aspects allowed more
constructive interactions.
First Steps Determine Results. Success in the
family blender is most often determined by how a couple structures their
personal relationship and their interaction with the children from the
beginning. Casual, careless, loosely committed and primarily physically driven
relationships almost never have sufficient strength to withstand the blender.
Children won’t buy-in if they think it’s going to lead to another let-down.
Blended family life requires an undeniably higher standard and level of
commitment. Children get this, parent must also.
Blended Families Done Right Save Souls. We
have devoted an entire chapter in our book to the statistical benefits for
children by being part of a two-parent family (blended or otherwise). There is
no question that such children have dramatically better chances of building a healthy
foundation enabling them to be successful in life. Lower rates of poverty, drug
abuse, problems with the law or in school, unemployment, depression and general
acting out behaviors are well researched. That is not to say there aren’t
successful single parents, but it pays to play the odds where you can.
Start Where Your Child Is. Parents cannot
start with a child where they are supposed to be or where you think they are
but ARE NOT. This dooms your efforts to unrealistic expectations, falling short
and builds a culture of regular failure and disappointment. Parents must ‘listen
to understand’ and patiently respect what they learn. You will come to
appreciate where they believe they are in life and in the family. Once you know
where they are then every step is automatically a success because it is a
re-enforcing step forward.
The Bio-Compass. There is an especially deep
and natural relationship that exists between the bio-parent and their child. This
is okay. The non-bio parent will, over time, be allowed to earn their way into
that space. However, there will be moments when only the bio-parent can address
the child’s needs, trauma or struggle. The non-bio parent must patiently step back,
but remain in the picture and supportive, and allow their spouse to take the
lead. This is why prideful or selfish attitudes struggle with blended
parenthood. It absolutely demands selflessness. Respecting this relationship
always wins in the long term.
You Are Not Alone. Because it is not a social
topic of conversation does not mean it isn’t common. Research illustrates that
a sizable majority of Americans are touched by blended family life in one way
or another. They understand you are not broken. This is especially true of
single parents. Rest assured there is an individual out there with a healthy,
kind outlook who can understand your complex family situation and love you and
your children unconditionally. Both single and blended parents can experience
happier more fulfilling lives.
It Is Worth It. Blended family life can be
rewarding, exciting and fulfilling. Seeing these tender souls, who were once so
wounded, blossom with love and kindness in their own increasingly productive
lives is worth every struggle, every late night, every heartfelt conversation,
every tear and every prayer. Most of all know that you are good enough to be
successful.
About
the Authors: Clark and Leah Burbidge are 14 years into their blended family
experience and loving life more than ever with ten children, eight spouses,
eight grandchildren and counting. Their practical ‘autobiographical/how to’ guide
is contained in a new Gold Medal award winning book, Living
in the Family Blender: 10 Principles of a Successful Blended Family, July 2019 – Deep River Books.
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