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    step parents

    Explore " step parents" with insightful episodes like "Co-parenting in transition", "I’m Just Money To Her - Part 2", "Agency Of Chaos", "Ep 664: Chad Zumock opens up about his crazy life" and "Your Problems Look Like A Date Night To Me" from podcasts like ""Imperfect Parenting", "The Skinny Of It", "The Skinny Of It", "Opie Radio" and "The Skinny Of It"" and more!

    Episodes (32)

    Co-parenting in transition

    Co-parenting in transition

    Co-parenting is always a balancing act and a transition that is rarely easy or fun.

    Brave people doing their best (though it may not always feel that way.. and sometimes could be MUCH better) to move through.. often somewhat blindly.

    Kids often get caught in middle.

    Yet, what can we do to make it .. just a little better and easier?

    Listen up.. and let’s reflect, together.

    Support the show

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    I’m Just Money To Her - Part 2

    I’m Just Money To Her - Part 2

    This week Keeley has a 2 part-er that speaks to intent. Have you ever felt like something isn't right and you know something is coming on down the pipe line. Today's podcast episode is all about intuition and what information your child knows.

    If this sounds like something you’ve experienced email us at keeleyace@gmail.com. This is a safe space to share your personal stories that may be read on the podcast. Remember we are in this pit-of-dispair together, let me help you ARMOR up! 

    No Chick Flick Moments

    Agency Of Chaos

    Agency Of Chaos

    This week is a good one Y'all. I highly recommend listening to the best family wrap-up ever! This week Keely will finish the saga which is: your first kid getting their very first car and how that kid decides how to deal with it. Such an amazing conclusion.

    If this sounds like something you’ve experienced email us at keeleyace@gmail.com. This is a safe space to share your personal stories that may be read on the podcast. Remember we are in this pit-of-dispair together, let me help you ARMOR up! 


    No Chick Flick Moments

    Ep 664: Chad Zumock opens up about his crazy life

    Ep 664: Chad Zumock opens up about his crazy life

    This episode is sponsored by BlueChew. Want to have better sex? Visit https://go.bluechew.com/opie to receive your first month FREE -- pay only $5 shipping.

    Comedian Chad Zumock opens up about his crazy life like never be for.  His mentally ill mom, his abusive step father, the death of his 9 year old brother, his problems with the law, aliens, Trump, the pyramids and did we land on the moon?  This was a great conversation! 

    VIDEO OF Da Beer Show E8 with Opie and Matt - Banana Bread Beer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nqT_3tWC2L0

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    Your Problems Look Like A Date Night To Me

    Your Problems Look Like A Date Night To Me

    Hello my devoted listeners. This week is my 31st episode! I hope everyone has enjoyed the ride with me so far. I hope you can share my podcast with all of those that need a good pick me up. This week we are talking mothers and mother*&^%$#!.... sometimes I just can't relate. I am so excited for you to listen and share this week's episode.

    If this sounds like something you’ve experienced email us at keeleyace@gmail.com. This is a safe space to share your personal stories that may be read on the podcast. Remember we are in this pit-of-dispair together, let me help you ARMOR up! 

    No Chick Flick Moments

    Mother Of Manipulating Your Time

    Mother Of Manipulating Your Time

    Happy Mother's Day! Around here Keeley is a Mother, Step-mother, and one of the most dedicated of hostess. So, to all you mother's out there get ready for the wild ride that is Mother's Day in a blended family. Sometimes, the other side gets a bit crazy.

    If this sounds like something you’ve experienced email us at keeleyace@gmail.com. This is a safe space to share your personal stories that may be read on the podcast. Remember we are in this pit-of-dispair together, let me help you ARMOR up! 

    No Chick Flick Moments

    Parenting Is A Marathon Thru Jurassic Park

    Parenting Is A Marathon Thru Jurassic Park

    This week is a good continuation from last week. It's a part 2. Sometimes we have to talk about the tough subjects. It's not something we want to hear as a society, but if as parents we can save a life or educate those around us. This could help the current crisis we are all in.

    Keegan will celebrate some fun April holidays ad talk about some dark topics that you should miss. Educated our children and ourselves in this time of massive gun violence is a must. This episode is dedicated to all of those effected by this horrible epidemic. Let's not arm ourselves with guns, but with knowledge and little peace for our fellow persons.

    If this sounds like something you’ve experienced email us at keeleyace@gmail.com. This is a safe space to share your personal stories that may be read on the podcast. Remember we are in this pit-of-dispair together, let me help you ARMOR up! 

    No Chick Flick Moments

    Armor Up... For School

    Armor Up... For School

    This week Keegan will celebrate some fun April holidays ad talk about some dark topics that you should miss. Educated our children and ourselves in this time of massive gun violence is a must. This episode is dedicated to all of those effected by this horrible epidemic. Let's not arm ourselves with guns, but with knowledge and little peace for our fellow persons.

    If this sounds like something you’ve experienced email us at keeleyace@gmail.com. This is a safe space to share your personal stories that may be read on the podcast. Remember we are in this pit-of-dispair together, let me help you ARMOR up! 

    No Chick Flick Moments

    All Things Parenting: Step Parenting - 3 Keys to Setting Your New Family Up for Success w/Mike and Kim Andersen

    All Things Parenting: Step Parenting - 3 Keys to Setting Your New Family Up for Success w/Mike and Kim Andersen

    If you found divorce and coparenting with your ex challenging, today’s guests share the added complexities in merging two families where the children can fall into mine, yours and ultimately ours. After 2 decades of coaching Step Parents, today’s guests share the secret (and vital necessity) to becoming effective parenting partners. They talk about the “culture clash” of parenting as we all have such different perspectives, values and approaches to parenting our children. In order to keep the peace (and love) in your blended family home, you must develop clarity by listing and defining the Core Values you want to live your life by and parent by. Their approach is brilliant and worthy of every parent practicing to be successful in raising your children. Mike & Kim Anderson have been serving couples living in stepfamilies for over 20 years. They help couples move from a place of confusion and conflict to a life of confidence and connection. They offer a weekly podcast packed with practical tools and strategies — and they personally coach couples in the areas of marriage and parenting in blended families. Contact Mike & Kim

    Contact Journey Beyond Divorce

    Leprechauns Be Hustlin’

    Leprechauns Be Hustlin’

    This week Keeley has some great stories and advice. Don't forget to celebrate all your ladies in your life for International Woman's month. Enjoy your celebrations this upcoming Saint Patrick's day.

    If this sounds like something you’ve experienced email us at keeleyace@gmail.com. This is a safe space to share your personal stories that may be read on the podcast. Remember we are in this pit-of-dispair together, let me help you ARMOR up! 


    No Chick Flick Moments

    Raw, real, unplanned, and totally in the moment.

    Raw, real, unplanned, and totally in the moment.

    **TRIGGER WARNING** (This episode contains sensitive and emotional subject matter)
    While I do share some real life struggles our family is currently navigating, I hope that overall you enjoy the realness of this episode. Life is not always sugar coated. It hardly ever is actually. Having to filter our fears and downplay our struggles does far more harm than good. We can still be incredibly grateful for our life, our families, our careers, while we express that things may be just friggin tough right now! Sometimes the world is a heavy place and we shouldn't have to carry that weight alone, or even more so we shouldn't feel like we are the only ones who've ever had to carry it. 

    I had something COMPLETELY different planed for this episode, but I couldn't fake it. I didn't want to actually. Thank you for letting me get some things off my chest and for not judging. Above all else, I hope that someone listening to this knows they aren't alone. I may not have all the answers (I hardly ever do actually), but I am always willing to listen if anyone just needs to talk.

    ** If you are someone you know may be struggling with suicidal thoughts, you can call or text 988 anytime day or night for help**

    33. Relationships with In-Laws, the good the bad and the holidays!

    33. Relationships with In-Laws, the good the bad and the holidays!

    Today we chat about our in-laws and how we not only handle that relationship personally but also how we make it an enjoyable experience for our partner as well. We chat about some conflicts and how we approach those as a team and how adding Adalynn has caused more changes. We even dip into holidays and how to do what is best for your family. 


    Make sure to leave a rating and review, and tag @jessicahaizman on social when you share the podcast!

    Check out more resources at www.jessicahaizman.com

    179: LIVE at LOTM Part 3: Kelly Fincher, Hannah Fincher, & Tay Harvey

    179: LIVE at LOTM Part 3: Kelly Fincher, Hannah Fincher, & Tay Harvey
    We are sad that this week ends the conversations we got while at the Ladies of the Mill Summit (https://www.ladiesofthemill.com/). While a great show, we now must wait almost a whole year before it happens again! But we are going to end the whole collection with two great conversations. First up is super step-mom Kelly Fincher who married into a lab, gave up nursing, and helped raise Hannah Fincher to grow up in the industry and make it a career. It’s important to note (and say thanks) that when the pandemic hit, Kelly decided to go back to nursing and help the ones that needed it the most. We apologize to Hannah for the mess up during recording. Then we are joined once again by Tay Harvey, the fearless leader of Anaxdent USA (https://anaxdentusa.com/). We talk to Tay back on episode 151, but she sits down with Elvis during the summit and they talk about almost everything from why she came to the summit to adding outside sales to her team to why a vision board isn’t for everyone. All that, more, and a bunch of laughs along the way. Portatour - sales-route planner (https://www.portatour.com/en) Creative Marketing in a Creative Industry: Tay Harvey and anaxdent North America (https://www.voicesfromthebench.com/151) Ladies Of The Mill: Jill Swafford and Christina Heaslip (https://www.voicesfromthebench.com/167) Gro3X (https://www.gro3x.com/) is a dental supply, service, and marketing company. It is to help dental labs, and especially small labs to lower their cost for supplies, provide business opportunities, and generate growth. They carry amazing zirconia burs and their “rainbow burs” for PMMA and TriLor are top-notch. They also carry zirconia from Aidite, a wide range of Harvest Dental products, and different 3D print resins. What’s really cool about Gro3X (https://www.gro3x.com/) is, that you can join their Gro3X Family program (https://www.gro3x.com/collections/family/products/gro3x-family) for only 99 cents. This will then give you an additional 10% discount on all of their supplies and even their CAD/CAM design and fabrication services. Get a 3-months trial membership with Gro3X Family now for only $0.99 and receive 3 Shade Peg Shots - free of charge (https://www.gro3x.com/products/shade-peg-refills?variant=39371434524715). Just go to www.gro3x.com and add Gro3X Family to your cart, then add 3- Shade Peg Shots of 3cc each to your cart and go to check out, enter discount code VFTB for Voices From The Bench and check out. Whip Mix (https://whipmix.com/) is pleased to add VeriCast OS (https://whipmix.com/products/vericast-generative-resin/), a burnout pattern print resin, to Whip Mix’s growing Veri Brand Resin offering. VeriCast OS works with LCD and DLP printers in both 385 and 405 nanometer wavelengths. It prints accurate and detailed crowns, bridges, substructures, and RPD frameworks, is durable, and leaves no ash or residue. Since it burns out cleanly, VeriCast OS is ideal for investment casting and ceramic pressing. For optimal results, we recommend Whip Mix ResinVest (https://whipmix.com/products/resinvest-investment/), which is a phosphate investment made specifically for burning out printed or milled resin patterns. Visit whipmix.com to learn more about VeriCast OS or any of Whip Mix’s other 3D Print Resins. Special Guests: Hannah Fincher, Kelly Fincher, and Tay Harvey.

    My Blended Family Experience

    My Blended Family Experience

    Family's family, complications aside. Join us for a discussion today on Imam Wisam's blended family experiences, being both a child of separation and having gone through his own separation and remarrying and becoming a stepfather himself. But how was all this impacted by our narrow cultural definitions of love? How did stigma in our communities and ignorance affect his experience? How do we approach this discussion being empathetic to the truly varied experiences people go through in our community?

    Join Imam Wisam Sharieff and co-host Jawaad Khan as they discuss his experience being part of blended families. Listen in for the difficulties of fatherhood, marriage, and more. Hear them discuss the greater issues around this topic that don't often get discussed. Finally, we hope to continue with a series of episodes on this topic later on InshaAllah.

    //

    To support this show, please rate, review, and subscribe on iTunes, and to support us with a monthly donation, become a patron at http://Patreon.com/WisamSharieff

    There, we share exclusive content and ask for feedback to learn what you'd like to hear next from us.

    This show is brought to you by Advocating Quranic Lifestyle (AQL, Inc.), and our supporters on Patreon.

    The Smart Stepdad: Are You Ready to Remarry? - Ron Deal

    The Smart Stepdad: Are You Ready to Remarry? - Ron Deal


    FamilyLife Today® Radio Transcript

    References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.

     

    Are You Ready to Remarry?

     

    Guest:                         Ron Deal


    From the series:         The Smart Stepdad (day 1 of 3) 


    Bob: 
    Ron Deal says he has talked with a lot of people who have been through a difficult first marriage that came to an end, and have been in too big a hurry to find someone else and marry again.

     

    Ron:  “You know, we met on eHarmony, and we‟ve met face-to-face once.  We live on opposite sides of the universe, but that‟s not going to be a problem for us.  We‟re in love!  eHarmony says we‟re a match.”


     

    Wait a minute, wait a minute.  Slow down.  That hurried, desperate need to be together with somebody is telling you something about yourself.  You need to come to terms with that, and get objective about it so that it‟s not driving you into a decision that wouldn‟t be a wise one.

     

    Bob:  This is FamilyLife Today for W ednesday, June 1st.  Our host is the President of FamilyLife, Dennis Rainey, and I‟m Bob Lepine.  Marrying a second time, becoming a stepdad, is a huge challenge.  Today, Ron Deal helps you think through whether you‟re up to the challenge, or whether you need to press pause for a little bit.

     

    And welcome to FamilyLife Today.  Thanks for joining us.


     

    I‟m wondering why Ron Deal put Doc Martins on the front of his book?  A pair of loafers, but I think they‟re Doc Martins.  Isn‟t that yellow stitching around the top characteristic of the Doc Martins?

     

    Dennis:  Ron?

     

    Ron:  I don‟t have a clue!

     

    (laughter)

     

    Dennis:  You‟ve got to be careful around Bob.  I‟m telling you, he‟s tough on you.

     

    Bob:  Did you pick the shoes for the cover of the book?

     

    Ron:  I did not pick the shoes.  I influenced.  I know which ones I did not p ick.


    Dennis: 
    Every author knows about that!  All the covers you reject.

     

    Bob:  Is the idea here that if you‟re going to be a smart stepdad, you‟ve got some big

    shoes to step into?  Is that the idea here?

     

    Ron:  That, yes.  And, in a way, you‟re also stepping into someone else‟s shoes, but that person‟s already in their shoes.  It gets a little confusing.

     

    Dennis:  You challenge a step-dad with “Steps to Help You Succeed.”  You really have

    a heart for stepdads.

     

    By the way, welcome to the broadcast.

     

    Ron:  Thank you.  It‟s great to be back.

     

    Dennis:  Sorry we critiqued your cover right off the start.

     

    Ron:  That‟s alright.

     

    Bob:  It wasn‟t a critique.  I was just curious.

     

    Dennis:  You were critiquing it, Bob.

     

    Bob:  The shoes do look a little scuffed up, too, I think.

     

    Dennis:  Ron Deal is the founder of Successful Stepparents.  He is an author and a speaker.  He and his wife Nan and their sons live in Amarillo, Texas.  He has written the book The Smart Stepdad.  I didn‟t realize this, Bob, but 16.5 million men are stepdads today.


     

    Bob:  That‟s a big chunk of the population.

     

    Dennis:  Sixteen percent of all men will bear this title.

     

    So you‟re talking to millions of men who step into these shoes.  They‟re going to find this much more difficult to do this thing of being a stepfather than they ever imagined.

     

    Ron:  Many of them have the biggest hearts in the world.  They come in and they want to be the hero, you know?  They want to do a good job.  God bless them for having the heart for that.


     

    Sometimes what they experience when they get there is like the first day on a new job, and people didn‟t know you were showing up.  They really would rather have the other guy there instead of you.  His name is still on the door, and you‟re moving into his office. You‟re really unclear what performing well on the job would look like.


    How do I hit the bull‟s-eye in my new job?  It‟s really unclear.  Some people are telling you it looks like this, and other people are telling you it looks like this, and you‟re thinking, “W ho‟s on my team and who‟s not on my team?”  All of that confusion hits stepdads pretty quickly.


     

    Bob:  And you add to that, maybe in your last job things didn‟t go so well and there were challenges, and there‟s still some anger and bitterness from the previous place you used to work, that left you feeling a little insecure about your role in the first place.

     

    Now, here you are stepping into the new assignment.  You‟ve got to acknowledge when you step into a role as either a stepmom or a stepdad that ther e‟s some stuff in this pot of stew that you‟ve been cooking up here that is going to have be dealt with.

     

    Ron:  Yes, and an application of what you just said about the former job:  many stepdads are biological dads.  They have their own children and they m ay live with them or they may not.  They may be with them on a part-time basis.


     

    So, really, you kind of have two jobs.  One of those jobs is very clear.  It‟s very clear what it is to be the dad.  But it‟s just not so clear what it is to be the stepdad.  That‟s what we want to do with this book is offer them direction.

     

    Dennis:  As human beings, we tend to be idealistic.  W e enter into this new relationship

    – there‟s a honeymoon.  Maybe we did go through something where we experienced divorce in the past and we‟ve got that set of bags that we bring into the marriage relationship like we‟re talking about here, but don‟t you find that as couples form

    blended families, that they have some unreal expectations about how it‟s going to work?

     

    Ron:  Absolutely!  Absolutely.  The expectations are built on the fantasy.  Really, we need the fantasy.  W e need the dream.  There are a lot of risks in life that we wouldn‟t take if we didn‟t have a dream wrapped around it.  I think that‟s often true about remarriage, about becoming a stepparent.


     

    The dream isn‟t necessarily bad or wrong.  I want stepdads and stepparents to hold

    onto that dream.  But, at the same time, it needs to be tempered with reality; it needs to be tempered with truth about ...

    Your Stepfamily, Standing Strong (Part 1) - Ron Deal

    Your Stepfamily, Standing Strong (Part 1) - Ron Deal

    FamilyLife Today® Radio Transcript  

    References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.

     

    The Myth of the Ideal Stepfamily

     

    Guest:                         Ron Deal                   

    From the series:       Your Stepfamily:  Standing Strong

     

    Bob:   Regardless of the circumstances, you may find yourself in a Brady Bunch of your own today, one that looks different than the TV family looked.  Here is Ron Deal.

     

    Ron:   "Blended family" is the most popular term, but the point we like to make about that is that most stepfamilies don't blend.  If they do, somebody usually gets creamed in the process.  It's really a misnomer to use the term "blended family".  To me, it doesn't matter so much what families call themselves.  What they need to do is recognize that they have a different kind of family.  Learning how it operates, and how it works, and how they can make their family successful—that's what's really important.

    Bob:  This is FamilyLife Today for Monday, April 23rd.  Our host is the President of FamilyLife®, Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine.   If your special family is facing some special challenges, we’ve got some help for you today. Stay tuned.

     

    And welcome to FamilyLife Today.  Thanks for joining us on the Monday edition.  A few years ago, I took my three boys—Mary Ann and I—took the boys.  We went to LEGOLAND®.  Now, you haven't been to LEGOLAND—

    Dennis:  No, but I remember when you went.  You were really impressed.

    Bob:  We were excited to go to LEGOLAND because our boys really are into—they love Legos®.  Well, the most exciting ride at LEGOLAND, which, by the way, when we were there, it was all geared for kids 12 and under.  

    Dennis:  People are wondering where LEGOLAND is, Bob.

    Bob:  Oh, LEGOLAND is in—it’s just north of San Diego.  It's geared for kids who are 12 and under.  There aren't a whole lot of scary thrill rides.  There is one rollercoaster, and it's moderately exciting as rollercoasters go.  My son, John, wasn't sure he wanted to ride on the rollercoaster.  We coaxed him and said, "Come on!  You'll have fun.  You'll like it.  It's not that scary."  

    We all got on the rollercoaster.  We got all done; and Jimmy, who is a little older than John, said, "That was cool!  Let's do it again."  John said, "I am not doing that again."  He didn't ride the rollercoaster the rest of the day.

    Now, I tell that story because, for a lot of couples, Dennis, who have gone on a marriage rollercoaster and have wound up apart—there's been a divorce—they look at the marital rollercoaster a second time; and they go, "That's scary.  Can we really make this thing work better the second time than we did the first time?"  A lot of them aren't sure they want to head on that ride again.  Then, those who get on it wonder, "How are we going to fix the problems when they come up this time?"

    Dennis:  That's right.  Not everybody, Bob, who ends up on that stepfamily rollercoaster ends up there because of divorce.  Some end up there because of the death of a spouse.  They now find themselves strapped into a seat with all the turns, and ups, and downs, and they're wondering, "How do you build a successful stepfamily?"  

    I want you to know, as a listener, we listen to you, too.  We listen to you on the internet, when you go to FamilyLife.com, and you tell us what you'd like to hear us talk about, here on the broadcast.  We also listen to you when you call into our 800 number.  We take notes.  One of the areas you've been asking us to do some work in is in the area of stepfamilies.

    I want you to know that we have searched across the country; and in our own backyard in Jonesboro, Arkansas—which, yes, it is in the United States—but in Jonesboro, Arkansas, we uncovered a great resource that we want to share with you over the next few days, here on the broadcast.  His name is Ron Deal.  Ron, I want to welcome you to LEGOLAND and the rollercoaster ride of stepfamilies.  Welcome to FamilyLife Today.

    Ron:  Thank you.  It is a great honor to be here.

    Dennis:  He is on the Advisory Council of the Stepfamily Association of America, and he does seminars all across the country called "Building a Successful Stepfamily".  I've got to tell this story on Ron, as I introduce him.  I am in the Dallas-Fort Worth airport.  Ron comes up to me, and introduces himself, and gives me his card.  I ask him to send me some of his stuff because he told me he was working in the area of blended families or stepfamilies.  

    I said, "Man!  There is a tremendous need there.  Send it on."  He sent it.  We've been in dialog, over the past few years, talking about this material and how we can bring it to our listeners.  I'm excited to feature Ron this week and talk about how we can equip stepfamilies, not only in helping them make their marriage go the distance, but also be successful as parents.

    Now, when we come to the subject of stepfamilies, Ron, I think maybe the majority of us, who are married, underestimate the number of people who presently are in stepfamily relationships.  How prevalent is it?

    Ron:  The numbers are really pretty staggering, especially to people that are unfamiliar with how many stepfamilies are out there.  Currently, every day in America, there are 1,300 new stepfamilies.  By the way, these statistics that I'm about to give you are anywhere from five to ten years old.  We don't have any real recent statistics.  So, we've got to keep that in mind.  In other words, there are probably more than even what we're saying now.  

    One out of three Americans right now, in the United States, is either a stepparent, a stepchild, a step-sibling, or somehow related to a stepfamily—one out of three.  With the life projections as they seem to be, it looks like one out of two of us will have a step-relationship at some point in our lifetime.

    Dennis:  You know, we've done a good bit of research at our FamilyLife Marriage Conferences.  Bob, you know, you speak at the conferences.  Up to 30 percent of those who attend our conferences are in stepfamilies.  I think we assume that stepfamilies have the same life expectancy as a regular family.  That's not so; is it, Ron?

    Ron:  No, it's not.  In fact, the divorce rate for remarriage is 60 percent.  There are some numbers that indicate that it's more than that.  By the way, I need to kind of qualify that statistic.  We don't have a statistic that tells us what the divorce rate is for stepfamily couples.  We only have a rate for remarriage.  Now, some remarriages don't involve children.  Obviously, the bulk of remarriages do involve children and qual...

    Your Stepfamily, Standing Strong (Part 2) - Ron Deal

    Your Stepfamily, Standing Strong (Part 2) - Ron Deal

    FamilyLife Today® Radio Transcript  

    References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.

     

    Finding Realistic Expectations

    Guest:                         Ron Deal

    From the series:       Your Stepfamily:  Standing Strong (Day 2 of 5) 

     

    Bob:  One of the big issues for children in a stepfamily is trying to figure out where their loyalties lie.  Here’s Ron Deal.

    Ron:   The child, after remarriage, now says, "Okay, wait a minute. This guy, I guess, is now my dad; or he's my stepdad or something."  They almost feel some obligation to have a relationship with him; but, at the same time—in the back of his mind—his biological dad is in another home, saying, "Now, don't enjoy him too much." This 11-year-old is getting the idea that, “I can't be loyal to my stepdad because it would be disloyal to my biological dad.”

    Bob:  This is FamilyLife Today for Tuesday, April 24th.  Our host is the President of FamilyLife®, Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine.  There are a lot of tangled relationships that happen when families get blended.  It can be tough to try to untangle some of those.  We’ll talk more about that today.  Stay tuned.

    And welcome to FamilyLife Today.  Thanks for joining us on the Tuesday edition.  We're going to do a little cooking today on the broadcast.  We've got a recipe we're going to bring out and just see what we can whip up, here in Mr. Rainey's kitchen.  (Laughter)  How's that?  Mr. Rainey's kitchen!

    Dennis:  We're going to talk about stepfamilies.

    Bob:  You're going to give that guy—what's his name on the Food Network™?—give him a run for his money.

    Dennis:  I have some recipes, Bob.  You underestimate me.

    Bob:  No, I have tasted your cooking.  It's very good.

    Dennis:  I like to cook.  Unfortunately, I like to eat, too.

    Bob:   That's right. (Laughter)

    Dennis:  We're not going to talk about cooking on the broadcast—except, in just a moment, we are going to give you a recipe for how to cook a stepfamily; alright?  We have with us the master chef, Ron Deal.  Ron, welcome to FamilyLife Today.

    Ron:   Thank you.  It's great to be back.

    Dennis:  Ron does seminars, all across the country, called "Building a Successful Stepfamily".  You've, I guess, talked to thousands of folks in churches, and small groups, and retreats, all across the country, over the past ten years?

    Ron:   Yes.

    Dennis:  Ron and his wife live in Jonesboro, Arkansas, with their three sons.  He's a minister.  He's a counselor—I think, has got a lot to say that's very, very helpful.  He has a recipe.  It's “How to Cook a Stepfamily”.  Now, did you come up with this recipe yourself, Ron?

    Ron:   Actually, I did.  You know, I was thinking, one day, about the blended family and that metaphor.  We said on yesterday’s program that most stepfamilies don't blend, and somebody usually gets creamed if they do.  I started thinking, “Well, if they don't blend, how do you cook a stepfamily?”  I mean, the notion of a blender is—you put a bunch of ingredients in something and, all of a sudden, they become one fluid mixture.  

    That's just not quite what stepfamilies end up to become.  So, “How do you do this?”  Well, I thought about the food processor.  That just chops somebody up, and somebody gets chopped up in the process.  For example, a parent who says to their child, "Okay, you need to call your stepfather, 'Daddy'.  We're not calling him 'Frank'.  We're not calling him 'Stepdad'.   You need to call him, 'Daddy.'"  In effect, Mom has just chopped up real dad.  He lives somewhere else, but he no longer exists.  We've chopped him up; now, “This is now your new real dad.”  

    That kind of pressure—that kind of message—really backfires within stepfamilies.  It doesn't work.  Food processor doesn't help.

    I began to think some about the microwave. These are families who want to be a nuke-lear family.  (Laughter)

    Dennis:  Did you catch that, Bob?

    Ron:  It took you a minute; didn't it?

    Dennis:  Oh, no, I read it first.  I'd already caught it!

    Bob:  Yes.

    Ron:   They're working really hard to not be any different than anybody else.  They refused—I had a guy call in to a radio program I was on one time and argue with me.  "We're not a stepfamily.  We're not a stepfamily.  We're just like everybody else."  

    Well, it's not a bad thing to be a stepfamily.  It's just a different kind of family; but, yes, you are one.  As long as you refuse to acknowledge that, you're not going to be able to find any creative solutions.

    Dennis:  I would think this would be more prevalent because of the fast-paced culture we live in and people going, “You know, we've made a new family.  We've got to make this happen quickly."

    Ron:  Yes, and microwave it.  “Let's just make it happen instantly.”

    Dennis:  Yes, push the button.

    Ron:   It doesn't work.  That's the same thing with a pressure cooker.  You know, “We're just going to add a lot of pressure.  We're going to force each other to love one another. If the kids don't do it, we're going to be really upset with them because they've been unwilling to do that.”  All of those things backfire.

    The one other approach that really doesn't work is called the tossed salad.  That's where we just kind of throw one another up in the air.  I think about the family—for example—that when one of their children, who has part-time residence in another home; but then, there are some children that remain in the home over the weekend.  “While you're gone, your possessions are ours.”

    You know, let's stop and think about that for a minute.  If my possessions, when I'm at dad's house—all of a sudden—anybody can play with my stuff, and mess up my room, and get into my drawers, or play with my toys—then, I don't have a place, really, in that home.  The tossed salad is, “We'll just toss you up in the air.  Wherever you come down, you're supposed to be okay with that.”

    It's really disrespectful for parents to do that.  You need to set up a rule that says, "Can we use your stuff?  Can Johnny ride your bike while you're over at your dad's house?"  "Oh, sure, that's fine."  Okay, well, now we've at least been respectful to this child and given him a place, even when he's not there.

    So how do you cook a stepfamily if all of those don't wo...

    Your Stepfamily, Standing Strong (Part 3) - Ron Deal

    Your Stepfamily, Standing Strong (Part 3) - Ron Deal

    FamilyLife Today® Radio Transcript  

    References to conferences, resources, or other special promotions may be obsolete.

     

    Co-Parenting:  Visitation

     

    Guest:                         Ron Deal                   

    From the series:       Your Stepfamily: Standing Strong 

     

    Bob:  One of the unique dynamics facing a stepfamily today is the ongoing conflict that can exist between former spouses and the impact that conflict can have on children.  Here is Ron Deal.

     

    Ron:   I think parents really underestimate the ability of their children to handle the truth; but we do need to be respectful as we present that truth.  The fine line is, “Will you turn to criticism when it becomes a personal attack?”  That’s when it really begins to weigh heavy on the kids.  You know, when I attack your father, living in another home—parents need to understand that kid carries that pain because, “I’m half of Dad.”

     

    Bob:  This is FamilyLife Today for Thursday, April 26th.  Our host is the President of FamilyLife®, Dennis Rainey, and I'm Bob Lepine.  What can a husband and wife do to help children in a stepfamily navigate turbulent emotional waters?   Stay tuned.

     

    And welcome to FamilyLife Today.  Thanks for joining us on the Thursday edition.  I have never forgotten a friend of mine.  I will call her "Beth".   She had been married, had a son—the marriage had not lasted.  She had been a single parent for a number of years.  Then, she met a guy.  This guy was—well, he was wonderful.  I was a little suspicious, frankly, of just how wonderful he was.  I thought, "She's been pretty lonely for a long time."  Not only that, but she wanted to have another baby; and she wasn't getting younger.

     

    Well, the two of them got married.  I'll never forget—it didn't take long for her to arrive at work one day, and Beth said to me—she didn't look good.  I said, "Are you okay?"  She said, "Well, we had a pretty serious disagreement this morning."  I said, "What was it about?"  

     

    She went on to explain that her new husband had tried to tell her son a few things that he needed to do and had started shouting at him.  She said, "I got in the middle, between the two of them.  I said, ‘You're not going to talk to my son this way.’"  The whole thing just kind of crumbled into everybody going in their own direction, and nobody feeling good about the situation.  I thought, "This couple needs someone who can sit down with them and say, 'You have got to start learning some new skills if you're going to make this thing work.'"

     

    Dennis:  At our FamilyLife marriage conference, we focus in on giving people biblical skills in knowing how to build a marriage and a family.  One of the fastest-growing segments that are attending our FamilyLife marriage conference are those who are stepfamilies—those who find themselves in remarriage situations.  I'll tell you—they're eager, Bob, for those skill sets because they've been in the real-life settings where they're afraid that they may again experience the heartache of divorce.  Not all, but many who are in stepfamilies, come about it through that route—some through the death of a spouse.

     

    All this week—we've uncovered a resource that we wanted to bring to our listeners.  We’re really thrilled to do so because of the specialized needs of stepfamilies.  Today, we want to focus on the subject that you brought up, Bob—the subject of step-parenting and how that works its way out in this new family formation.  

     

    Ron Deal joins us for a fourth day.  Ron, it's been a treat to have you on the broadcast this week and glad to have you on FamilyLife Today.

     

    Ron:  Thank you.

     

    Dennis:  Ron is a minister, a counselor, and a speaker on the subject of stepfamilies, all across the country—has a seminar that he does.  Ron, one of the areas that you find the most relevant, as you teach on this subject, is this one right here.  In fact, you break down parenting into three areas:  parenting, step-parenting, and co-parenting.  Now, you've got to help me, what's a co-parent?

     

    Ron:  It's complicated; isn't it?

     

    Dennis:  It is. 

     

    Ron:  Co-parents are ex-spouses or the biological parents of the children.  In other words, if there has been a divorce situation, the children are moving back and forth between two homes.  You are no longer married to your former spouse.  If you were never married, you're not in that situation with them; but you do have an ongoing parenting relationship with them.  

     

    The way we like to say it is there's no such thing as ex-parents.  There are only ex-spouses.  So, you're forever tied through the children.  You have to work together; otherwise, the children can divide and conquer as they move back and forth between homes—just like they could within your home.

     

    Bob:  Yes, and I don't know in what order we want to go through parenting—step-parenting or co-parenting—but as you've addressed the co-parenting issue right here—we get letters all the time, Dennis, from people who say, "Here is my situation.  I've come to Christ.  We're trying to raise our children in a godly, Christian environment.  We've got rules and things that our kids can't do; and then, they go visit Mom or Dad on the weekend."

     

    Dennis:  “He's living with a girlfriend”—

     

    Bob:  “They're watching R-rated movies”— 

     

    Dennis:  —“drinking, doing drugs”—

     

    Bob:  —“language”—

     

    Ron:  It's one of the most frustrating issues that I find, whether we're talking about people that are still in single-parent years or whether they're in stepfamilies.  The other household has a tremendous influence on the kids; and they ask the question, "What can we do about it?"  

     

    Here is my answer—first, and foremost, please accept and acknowledge that you do not control what goes on in that other home.  The reason I say that is because, under the guise of being concerned, there's a lot of ex-spouses that are still trying to control their ex-.  They're still trying to tell them what to do, and they've been divorced for years.  You've got to understand that divorce means you lose your right to influence the other person.  That's one of the unfortunate results of divorce.

     

    Dennis:  Yes; but I can hear a single-parent mom or a woman who is in a stepfamily, right now, going, "But you do not know what my son is walking off into with his stepdad.  You're not telling me to just let him go off into that situation.  God's given me responsibility to protect him from evil."

     

    Ron:  Well, ...

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