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Ex-etiquette: Blending families

Jann Blackstone, Tribune News Service on

Published in Lifestyles

Q. My co-parent left and remarried soon after. His wife has three children. We have two. When it is time to pick up our children, he comes to the door with his whole new family. It throws us off. The kids are really turned off by all the expected togetherness. It hasn’t even been two years since we split. What’s good ex-etiquette?

A. Blending families takes time, and one of the biggest mistakes adults make is assuming children should be emotionally ready before they actually are.

Your ex may be excited about his new marriage and eager to create a sense of family unity. That’s understandable. In his mind, showing up together may feel welcoming, inclusive and positive. He may think he’s demonstrating that everyone gets along and that the children are now part of a larger family unit.

But children don’t always experience it that way.

To your children, it may feel overwhelming, performative or even emotionally disloyal to immediately embrace this “new family” dynamic, especially when the divorce is still relatively fresh. Two years may feel like a long time to adults rebuilding their lives, but to children, particularly older children, it can still feel very recent.

Children need time to grieve the loss of their original family before they are expected to comfortably participate in a new one.

That’s where good ex-etiquette comes in.

Parents and bonus parents often become enthusiastic about creating togetherness because they want everyone to feel connected. Unfortunately, when togetherness is pushed too quickly, children may resist even harder. What adults view as bonding, children may experience as pressure.

And pressure rarely creates authentic relationships.

 

Your kids should not be forced to instantly blend emotionally with their father’s new wife and bonus children simply because the adults are ready. Relationships develop through comfort, familiarity, shared experiences and trust. That process cannot be rushed.

That doesn’t mean your ex is wrong for including his wife and her children in his life. They are now part of his household. But it may help him recognize that transitions are easier for children when they happen gradually and respectfully.

For example, he might consider picking the kids up alone so they still have moments where they feel individually connected to their father before stepping into the larger family environment. Small gestures like that reassure children that they haven’t been emotionally replaced.

It’s also important not to put your children in the middle by criticizing the new family in front of them. Children should never feel they must reject one household to remain loyal to the other. You can validate their discomfort without fueling division.

You might simply say, “I understand this feels like a lot sometimes. Relationships take time, and it’s OK to adjust slowly.”

That gives them permission to have feelings without encouraging rejection.

Good ex-etiquette means recognizing that blending a family is not an event. It’s a process. Adults may choose a relationship quickly, but children build trust and attachment at their own pace. The healthiest blended families are usually the ones that leave room for those feelings instead of trying to force instant closeness. That’s good ex-etiquette.


©2026 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

 

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