A single-parent family is fully operational, fully functioning, and mature, with habits and characteristics of its own. Now, imagine two fully mature families merging under one roof. Conflicts are bound to arise.
Imagine two stepsisters sharing a bathroom for the first time—one tidy, one sloppy. Or imagine new stepparents removing furniture from their stepchildren’s home—furniture the children love—and replacing it with furniture of their own. Or, imagine married parents quarreling over child discipline or disagreeing about how to manage former spouses.
What is so sad and so frustrating is that most all stepfamily difficulties are largely preventable. Had couples given serious attention to behaviors and household issues before they married, their chances of avoiding future problems would have been greatly enhanced.
Trying to deal with differences in family traditions, habits, and cultural differences after the fact—after conflict has arisen, after emotions are running high, after lines have been drawn—is about the worst time to try to work out cooperative solutions.
Without a process called synchronization, huge storms loom on the horizon. Here’s how to synchronize two merging families:
Step1—Decide. The couple will need to make decisions about how their household will operate and agree on specific routine tasks and procedures.
Before combining households, each parent should try to picture the two families living together, imagining how the blending family will function and how things should work in general. Through negotiation they will then come to agreement on compatible lifestyles.
A few of the things the couple might discuss are bedtimes for the children, types of meals, when meals are to be served, kitchen clean-up, when and where the kids will do homework, when they will watch television, the children’s jobs on weekdays and weekends, etc.
Step 2—Implement. The parents should then begin to carry out these decisions in their own separate households. This should be done prior to the joining of the two families.
The kids will note that their parent is making changes. But if any snags occur, they will complain to their own parent, who will then take responsibility.
Imagine the dad telling his children that the reason they have to do the dishes right after dinner is because that’s what their stepmother will want them to do. Talk about setting up the future stepmother for failure!
Tradition, order, and routine are very important for children, and they usually view any change with suspicion and some degree of opposition. So each parent will want to represent the change as coming from the parent only, never the future stepparent.
Couples should not marry until their families are fairly well synchronized. Refusal of a partner to implement what has been agreed upon will likely suggest future difficulties for that stepfamily.
Resources: The Environments in Single Parent Dating and Single Parent Savvy Partnering Series: Book 3: Merging, by Dr. Donald R. Partridge. To purchase more comprehensive materials please go to
www.ifre.org/ifre/buy_online.