Stepmom Is ‘Okay’ with Stepchildren Cutting Ties After Years of Hostility



NEED TO KNOW

  • A woman says her stepchildren grew hostile after their mother spread negative claims about her during a custody dispute
  • As adults, the stepkids told her they don’t consider her family and want no relationship with her
  • Her in-laws accused her of being cold for accepting the rejection instead of fighting for their love

A woman turns to the Reddit community for support following years of tension with her stepchildren, who recently told her they want no relationship with her.

She explains that she met her husband two years after his divorce. “He was on decent terms with his ex-wife and they shared custody of their two children civilly,” she writes in her post, adding that she even got along with his ex in the beginning.

When she first met the children, things were positive. “We got along really well,” she recalls, noting that they even took a family photo together on their eventual wedding day.

Stock photo of a woman isolated from her adult children.

JGI/Jamie Grill/Getty


But after the wedding, things shifted. “My husband’s ex was different. I still can’t describe it perfectly but it was like she spoke with a small amount of hostility that wasn’t there before,” she explains.

Her husband’s ex eventually remarried and divorced again, but the real problems began when the poster became pregnant with twins. “She told my husband she was keeping the kids and he would never see them again,” she says, describing how they had to involve the police when his ex refused to return the children.

This custody battle dragged on for months, with the woman giving birth in the middle of it all. When they finally went before a judge, she says, “he ordered my husband get primary custody and his ex would only be allowed supervised visits.” At the time, her stepchildren were 10 and 7 years old.

It was around then that her relationship with them drastically changed. “They had heard nothing but awful things about me when their mom withheld them from us and they believed her,” she writes. “I was told every day they hated me.”

The children made their feelings clear in hurtful ways. “They told me I was never going to be their real family and they didn’t have to be nice to me or listen to me,” she says, recalling how they also threw things at her, screamed and cursed.

She and her husband put them in therapy and tried to set boundaries. “My husband told them disrespect would not be tolerated,” she notes. But even after years of effort, things didn’t improve much.

“They were still cold and distant,” she admits. “They even tore up photos of us from before and cut me out of family photos they had.” Despite this, she says she tried to keep showing them kindness.

“I was just there to be loving and a safe space for them,” she explains. “I never pushed or tried to punish them after a point. But I did keep loving them and was always open to them coming to me if they needed me.”

Over time, she accepted that things weren’t going to change. “I saw the writing on the wall,” she admits, saying she even got her own children into therapy to help them process the difficult home environment.

Still, her husband held out hope. “He believed they would see the truth eventually and soften toward me again because I was good to them and not being pushed on them,” she writes. But she says her perspective was different.

Stock photo of a husband comforting his wife.

Hispanolistic/Getty


This year, her stepdaughter turned 18 and moved in with her mom. “She graduated at the end of May and refused to invite me,” the woman says, though her husband and his parents were welcomed.

The woman encouraged her husband to go anyway. “I told him to go and show her he still loved her,” she recalls, saying he and the grandparents attended without her or her young children.

A few weeks later, her stepson, now 21, and his partner welcomed a baby. It was then, she says, that both stepchildren made their position crystal clear.

“They wanted nothing to do with me,” she writes. “I was not going to meet my stepson’s child or any future kids. I was not family.”

Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE’s free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

She had prepared herself for this moment. “I saw it coming and prepared for it so I could handle it,” she admits, saying she knew long ago this was likely the outcome. But her husband’s parents were disturbed by her calm reaction. “They said if I truly cared I would be a mess and I would be begging my stepkids to love me and stop this,” she recalls.

She tried to explain that her acceptance wasn’t apathy, but preparation. “My husband told them I had time to prepare,” she says. Still, they weren’t convinced. “They said if I loved the kids I never would have prepared myself because I would have hoped it into reality.”

Stock photo of an upset woman.

Getty


Now, she is left wondering whether her acceptance makes her wrong. “AITA for being okay with my stepkids refusing to include me or have a relationship with me?” she asks the Reddit community.

Commenters were quick to reassure her that she isn’t at fault. One response reads, “NTA. You can’t control other people, only your reactions to them. They are adults, so them cutting you out of your life is awful, but not under your control.”

Another person encouraged her to keep protecting her peace. “I would suggest that you simply stop engaging and let your husband handle his parents,” they write. “If that means you going LC/NC with them then so be it. It’s their choice to damage their relationship with the mother of their other grandchildren.”

For this woman, the path forward seems to be one of acceptance. While her stepchildren have made their feelings clear, she has chosen not to break under the weight of their rejection.

“I was just there to be loving and a safe space for them,” she says again, holding firm to the knowledge that she gave what she could.

Credit to Nypost AND Peoples

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Adblock Detected

  • Please deactivate your VPN or ad-blocking software to continue