CJane
Senior Member
the kids get emotional attached to people they think are going to become a part of thier family, realistic or not. I do think people who are cautious about introducing thier kids to thier love interests are smart to err on the side of caution.
Ok, first of all, I didn't say one shouldn't be cautious. In fact, I thought I was clear that one SHOULD engage in discretion and caution.
I was simply (or so I thought) pointing out that we let ALL KINDS of people into our children's lives every day - that they may or may not become "emotionally attached to" (my son is utterly in love with his T-ball coach and "misses him like crazy" since the season ended). But we seem to treat the "significant other" like something that must be hidden from the children - or that the children must be hidden from for an arbitrary amount of time to be sure they're going to "stick around".
Maybe, instead of introducing a boyfriend or girlfriend as someone "who might become part of the family" from the get go (because we've already decided we can "see a future with them") children would suffer less emotionally if people were introduced to them as "Friends", and they were allowed to watch a relationship develop and grow and work out or not as is the natural course of things. Maybe not.
I never said "very quickly". In fact, I wasn't attempting to describe a time frame that I think is odd. It's the idea that you'd say "You cannot meet my children until I'm certain you'll be hanging around forever and ever" that's weird to me.I don't think that's very weird. I dated my ex for 2-3 months before I ever met the kids or went into her house. I'm not eager to have anyone I date meet my daughter very quickly, either.
Why all that pressure on everything?
But then again... I've been with my BF for 4 years and while he's at my house almost every Tuesday night for "Family Dinner Night", and we spend time together on the weekends whether I have the girls or not, we still only see each other probably 3 times a week at the most. And rarely spend more than one night each week actually sleeping over at the other person's house.
He spends a LOT more time with my son... and has been heavily involved in HIS life since he was 8 months old.
That's what I don't get. Why would it be considered "bad" for a child to be "exposed" to a relationship where Mom or Dad sometimes goes out with someone for dinner or a movie? Presumably, the CHILD will eventually be dating, right? Do we really want them to think that every person they introduce to the family should be "significant", and they shouldn't "expose" the not as significant ones?However, prudence would suggest that your children would not be exposed to relationships until they have some level of significance.
I'm certainly not suggesting bed-hopping, or dragging hordes of people through the house, or taking kids on dates with you. Of course not. But introducing someone to your kids? "Exposing" the kids to the idea that Mom or Dad is interested in someone that may or may not be a permanent addition to their lives? That's "imprudent"?
Not in my world. Teachers, maybe. Not coaches, or scout leaders or bus drivers or librarians or club leaders or parent volunteers at school. And "we" all leave our kids unattended with them on a pretty regular basis.The biggest one is that most of the people your kids spend time with (teachers, bus drivers, scoutmasters, etc) have been pre-screened at some level.
This is partially true. But there's a huge difference between what I said which is "Introduce the person" and "bringing someone into your home".There's also the matter of being at a public place. Most interactions occur in public-where the risk is lower than bringing someone into your home (or letting your kids go into someone else's home).
Which argues for finding out that the child feels that way about the person BEFORE "you" have decided that you want to be with them forever and ever, yes? Isn't there MORE pressure if kiddo can't stand "future step dad" than if kiddo can't stand "the guy mom sometimes goes out to dinner with"?Another very large difference is the whole concept that this new romantic interest could "take the place" of mom or dad at some point. That by itself creates huge stresses and argues for being very careful. If your child has a mean teacher, they can deal with that. If you're dating someone that they see as a potential step-mom or step-dad and the person is mean or rude or arrogant, it sends a very negative message.
And my kids have never suffered from the delusion that anyone is going to "take the place" of Mom or Dad. Much to their step-mom's dismay. They're VERY clear on where people in their lives stand... and they know that StepMom and my BF (NOT future stepdad as even after 4 years there are no plans to "take the next step" and cohab or marry) are secondary players in the "family dynamic".
But then, maybe I'm just crazy.