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The Remarriage Cycle: Divorced, Multi-Nuclear and Recoupled Families

29 April 2024   18:30 Diperbarui: 29 April 2024   18:31 168
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Money is a major area of conflict in remarried fami- lies. Remarriage often leads to reopening of financial battles from the divorce and to children receiving less support from their biological fathers. Traditional gender roles run completely counter to contemporary economics and to the fact that both parents usually enter remarriage with significant financial obliga- tions to the first family. Failure to pay or collect ali- mony or child support wreaks havoc in post-divorce families. A husband who is the sole wage earner in a remarried family often has to decide which set of children has top priority-his own or the stepchil- dren he lives with. These priorities are also influ- enced by his relationship with his ex-wife; if it is bad, his visits and child support payments tend to lag or even cease. A new wife may complain about the money her husband gives to his children, particularly if she does not receive the child support owed for her own children. Overall children in first families tend to receive more from their parents than chil- dren whose parents remarry. In affluent families, problems also surface around wills and how much financial assistance should be given to which adult children. Where money is concerned, blood may suddenly seem thicker than relationship.

Gays and lesbians in stepfamilies

A significant number of post-divorce families consist of a gay or lesbian couple with the children of one or both of them from a previous heterosexual marriage. These systems have all of the problems of hetero- sexual remarried systems in addition to the burdens of secrecy and isolation caused by the social stigma they have most likely experienced (Laird & Green, 1996). In extreme cases, the adults may feel that they have to try to remain closeted, even to their children, for fear of repercussions in custody or employment. There is almost always anxiety about the conse- quences of coming out to family (La Sala, 2010), the children's teachers and friends, co-workers, neigh- bors, and acquaintances. Therapists can be most helpful if, in addition to the usual therapy for remar- ried systems, they acknowledge the societal stigma that LGBT families experience and help the couple sift through their various networks to dismantle the secrecy and isolation wherever possible. Connection to supportive friends, community groups, and access to supportive literature can be extremely important.

The most complex remarried families, where both spouses bring children from previous relation- ships, tend to have the greatest difficulty establish- ing stability. All things being equal, it appears easiest if the previous spouse died, next easiest when the spouse is divorced, and hardest when the spouse has never been married, perhaps because some experi- ence with marriage appears helpful in a second mar- riage. Integration is more likely when children are not left behind by either parent, or when the new couple have a child together (although having a child to save the marriage is, of course, never a good idea). The longer the new family has together as a unit, the more likely they are to have a sense of family inte- gration. Developing a sense of belonging takes most family members 3 to 5 years, longer if there are ado- lescents. Remarried family integration appears more likely when extended family approves of or accepts the remarriage, next best when they disapprove or are negative, perhaps providing a "good enemy," and hardest when they are cutoff or indifferent.

Emotional issues: Anger, grief, pseudo-mutuality, loyalty conflicts, conflict and cutoff

Predictable feelings that come up in the process of remarriage are likely to include intense conflict, guilt, ambivalence, and anger about the previous spouse and children, denial of such feelings, and the wish to resolve the ambiguity. Remarried families are formed against a background of loss, hurt, and a sense of failure. Their "battle fatigue" often leads to a desire not to "rock the boat" this time, which leads partners to suppress doubt, conflict, and differ- ences that need to be dealt with, resulting in "pseudo- mutuality" that pretends total mutuality, covering over disagreements, and making current relation- ships all the more fragile in the long run.

Cutoffs are more common with the paternal extended family, and connections are more often strong with maternal relatives, but extended family relationships are often difficult. While children are quite prepared to have multiple sets of grandparents, uncles, and aunts, the middle generation can get caught up in conflicts, and managing relationships with such a large network of kin is complicated. Remarriage of either spouse tends to decrease contact between fathers and their non-custodial children. Divorced fathers tend to have more contact with their children if they have not remarried and even more if the mother has not remarried either. Once both parents have remar- ried, children are much less likely to have weekly con- tact with their non-custodial fathers. Remarriage of a former spouse tends to reactivate feelings of depres- sion, helplessness, anger, and anxiety, particularly for women. Men tend to be less upset by the remarriage of an ex-wife, possibly because it may release them from financial responsibility and because they are usually less central to the emotional system.

One of the hardest requirements for parents is to let their children express the full range of nega- tive and positive feelings toward all of their parents, stepparents, and half- and stepsiblings. Often par- ents want the child's whole allegiance. Children feel caught, afraid that if they do not love a new steppar- ent, they will hurt and anger one parent, but if they do love the stepparent, they are disloyal and will hurt or lose the love of the other. Another loyalty con- flict is the expectation for the new spouse to love the other's children as much as his or her own, which would be highly unlikely.

Remarriage at Various Phases of the Family Life Cycle

In general, the wider the discrepancy in family life cycle experience between the new spouses, the greater the difficulty of the transition and the longer it will take to integrate a workable new family. especially if the partners come from very different cultural backgrounds, which always increases the bridge-building necessary for a couple. A father of late adolescent and/or young adult children with a new, young wife who was never previously married should expect a rather strenuous and lengthy period of adjustment, during which he will have to juggle his emotional and financial responsibilities toward the new marriage and toward his (probably upset) children. His wife, looking forward to the roman- tic aspects of a first marriage, is likely to encounter instead the many stresses of dealing with adolescents who probably resent her, whether the children live with the couple or not.

If either spouse tries to pull the other into a life-style or attitude that denies or restricts the other spouse's family life cycle tasks or relationships with children from previous relationships, difficulties are likely to expand into serious problems. If the husband expects his new wife to undertake immediately a major role in his children's lives or to be the one who always backs down gracefully when her interests and prefer- ences clash with those of the children, serious trouble is predictable in the new marriage, as the formation of the new couple bond is continuously given second priority.

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