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As much as we’d like to disagree, we all have feelings of jealousy
from time to time. Stepmoms often struggle with strong feelings of
jealousy as they try to come to terms with all the people and
relationships in their lives. It can be a terrifying experience.
Jealousy is a natural emotion, yet it’s hard to understand,
interpret and prevent in the unnatural situations created by
stepfamilies. But there is a way to overcome it.
When you remarry and inherit someone else’s children, and even if
you think you’re ready, you suddenly experience feelings you can’t
begin to understand. There is no preparation in your past for
dealing with your husband’s first wife and their children. It’s
a situation that is never planned or courted -- one day, it
just *is* and there is no instruction manual. Base emotions kick
in with a vengeance, and jealousy is a strong one.
Those feelings of jealousy are powerful. They will quickly overtake
anything positive and do all kinds of harm to the stepmom and
her family if they aren’t dealt with swiftly and completely. For
a plan of attack against this most destructive of enemies, try these steps:
- First, don’t be so hard on yourself for feeling the way you do.
You can’t overcome the feelings of jealousy if you continue to
deny them because it’s not what you want to feel. The feelings
are natural, and you can deal with them when you acknowledge them.
If you’re sometimes jealous of the time your husband spends with
his kids, that’s understandable. You’ve had no honeymoon period
for your new marriage. You’re forced to share what you worked so
hard for -- instantly. It hurts a little now and then.
Maybe you’re jealous of the financial security your husband’s
ex-wife has at his expense. That, too, is understandable. He’s
still giving to her and that hurts, even if it’s for his
children. It doesn’t matter -- the feelings are the same.
You can’t change these feelings until you give yourself time to
understand them. Accept them and then choose to change them.
- Accept the facts. Jealousy is an irrational emotion. It rules
out of fear and insecurity and goes straight to your heart. It
has no logic, but the pure, cold facts can deter it. It may
sound like some sort of "tough love" speech, but to combat the
feelings of jealousy means to simply fight them with logic.
Jealousy makes you want to change whatever is hurting you. Some
things you can’t change. Accept those facts. Accept that your
husband will always be spending time with his kids. Accept that
he must fulfill his obligation to his ex-wife because the courts
say so. You didn’t create those situations and you can’t change
them. Don’t waste your time and energy on how things you can’t
control "should be" or what’s "not fair" if there is nothing you
can do about it.
Then soon, if your jealousy has no foundation to build on -- if
you dismiss its arguments -- it will fade and you can move on to
better things.
- Replace the jealousy. While you’ve got the jealousy on the run,
replace it with something else. There is only so much room in
your heart for conflicting emotions -- sooner or later, one or
the other will win out. You can be filled with jealousy and
insecurity or acceptance and security. It’s your choice.
When you stop focusing your mind on your husband’s ex-wife’s
life and start focusing on how to best run your own, your heart
will follow. When you stop worrying about the time your husband
spends *apart* from you and start focusing on making the best
of the time that he’s *with* you, you’ll be filled with hope
and potential, not jealousy and regret. Choose to fill your
heart and mind with work that builds the relationships between
you and your husband and you and your stepchildren.
Jealousy keeps you down and in the past, always focusing on
what you don’t have. Look instead to the future that you can
build and focus your energies on what you do have.
This marriage is a second chance to do so many things right. You can’t
do that if you’re looking back. Unload the baggage of jealousy and
look ahead to grow. It’s the better choice.
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