ESP 3.6: Un-Brainwashing Your Alienated Child

Summary

This is a quick primer on a complex topic. I’m thinking about doing a full webinar about healing a brainwashed child – if you’re interested in hearing about that, or have anything to contribute to the discussion, please shoot me a message at info@essentialstepmom.com

OR, just book a 20-minute phone chat, I’d love to talk to you! Use this link:

tracypoizner.bookafy.com

Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/essentialstepmom/message

ESP 3.5: Your Mother’s Day Readiness Checklist

Summary

Brace for it – the whole world is getting ready to poke you in a very sensitive spot. Here’s how to prepare. Don’t forget, Stepmom Day is Sunday May 17th – put it in big letters on the family calendar and let them know what kind of activity to surprise you with! 

Visit me at essentialstepmom.com and get in touch via my private email address, info@essentialstepmom.com 

Did you know you can book a free 20-minute strategy session with me any time? Click this link and then find a date and time when you can lock yourself in your car with your phone and we’ll have a chat!

Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/essentialstepmom/message

ESP 3.4: True Confessions: I’ve lost it on someone else’s kids – more than once.

Summary

What can I say? This is embarrassing but it’s good for me to talk about it, and it’s good for you to hear it because maybe by laughing *at* me (even if I feel like you’re laughing *with* me), you can avoid repeating my mistakes!

Join my Facebook community, which I police like a pit-bull to keep safe and 100% positive, by sending a join request to The Spectacular Stepmom.

Personal support is available – visit essentialstepmom.com for details.

Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/essentialstepmom/message

ESP 3.3 Five Fast Ways To Shake Off Negative Emotions

Summary

Listen to Jack Kornfield’s beautiful guided meditation on Broken Record Podcast. There is lots of support available also on his website jackkornfield.com. You can learn more about my coaching process and how to discover and deliver your special gifts by contacting me at info@essentialstepmom.com or booking a free discovery call at tracypoizner.bookafy.com

Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/essentialstepmom/message

ESP 3.2 Join me for a little “self-care”!

Summary

Come with me for a little walk. We’ll talk about getting what you need during these extra difficult days.

Visit my website at http://www.essentialstepmom.com

If you’d like to hear my webinar where I shared suggestions from homeopaths around the world for treating symptoms of this virus, just send me an email at info@essentialstepmom.com

I”m always up for a chat if you just need to hear a friendly voice. Book a free call at tracypoizner.bookafy.com

Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/essentialstepmom/message

ESP 3.1 Mothers In A Dangerous Time

Summary

Season 3: The Season of Coronavirus! You thought being a stepmom was the hardest thing you’d ever done? LOL – welcome to the new hardest thing ever! I’ll share some advice about getting through this pandemic with your head on straight.

Kim John Payne’s Simplicity Parenting website is simplicityparenting.com

Learn more about Juice Plus by following this link: http://suejohnson.canada.juiceplus.com

Want my Gratitude Journal template?  Grab it here.

Connect with me any time at my personal, private email address: info@esentialstepmom.com

Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/essentialstepmom/message

3 Ways To Help Your Spouse Follow Through With His Kids

There’s a refrain I hear pretty often in comments from stepmoms in my Facebook group, The Spectacular Stepmom. Their partner has agreed to do something, usually around discipline, rules, schedules or schoolwork, but somehow he never follows through and nothing changes.

When this happens, it’s easy to get emotional because it feels like you’re being ignored or like your opinions and needs don’t matter.

Here are some fresh ways to look at this situation and some strategies for what to do next.

1. Let’s get something straight; we all agree to do things that we don’t follow through on.

That’s what New Years resolutions are all about! We set ourselves a task to make some kind of change, but who ever follows through the way they intended?

The harder the thing is, the more likely it is that you won’t follow through, at least not for long or not the way you hoped you would.

So, just like when you promise yourself you’ll get to the gym 5 days a week or cut down on coffee, this could really be a failure of willpower rather than a failure of goodwill.

TIP: If you think this is what’s happening, don’t nag (because…you’re not his mother!) but do ask what you can do to help. Support him as he works to make a change he really wants to make but has trouble with for any number of reasons.

You can help by checking out books, videos, podcasts or other resources on parenting techniques. It totally takes a village to raise a child – even for a dad. 

2. It might be about something you really notice but that he barely sees, like mess or chaos. 

Personal share: I love to live in a clean environment, but I’m not much help to myself much in that regard. I’m really happy when my husband cleans the kitchen because he does a way better job than I do. I have a crazy habit of leaving a few things in the sink when I’m done cleaning. I do it all the time, it’s like I don’t even see them! I also leave the cupboard doors open a lot despite my best intentions to not do that. I’m not being lazy or passive-aggressive, I just don’t notice it – it’s that simple.

Your spouse might have a blind spot for something that really irritates you.

TIP: Ask if he prefers that you bring it to his attention (without nagging) or just ignore it. Many stepmoms find that it just takes a few weeks of allowing things to truly pile up for their partner to start noticing sooner and either doing his part or getting his kids to do theirs.

N.B. If what your husband fails to notice is a child’s inconsiderate behaviour directed at you, I believe you should always point that out, although not in front of the child. I don’t think anyone should ignore being badly treated. Besides, it’s his job to teach his kids appropriate social skills, and hopefully he doesn’t really want to raise brats.

3. He might have agreed with you about whatever it was in order to avoid an argument, although he doesn’t really share your ideas about parenting.

Truth is, he gets to raise his kids the way he wants. He doesn’t have to agree with you although it would be great if you could have a better conversation about that so you know where you both stand.  

The definition of integrity is *acting in alignment with your values*. If you aren’t clear about what your values are, or if you easily give up on your values whenever they require some effort or sacrifice, you’re not showing the best of yourself to your kids – the very people who deserve to see it the most! It’s really important to do what you say you’re going to do. 

TIP: Let go of what you don’t agree about so he doesn’t feel that you’re judging him. While it’s his right to do things his way,  it’s very important not to send a mixed message to his kids. Announcing consequences that never happen is just as bad as promising something good and not delivering on it. Being reliable is the cornerstone of good parenting. 

At the end of the day, the most important thing you can do to help your partner follow through is making sure you schedule regular time to be alone together – time to nurture each other in your relationship, time to celebrate what’s working well in your family which will always be a work in progress. 

If it helps at all, know that the special challenges of step-parenting are helping you to hone your skill at being happy *no matter* the external circumstances. Imagine how powerful you’ll be when you can feel perfectly happy standing in your messy kitchen or knee-deep in laundry. You’ll be able to conquer anything!

Want more solid advice about getting good follow-through about discipline and more? Subscribe to the Essential Stepmom podcast, wherever you listen.

Check out my ‘Discipine For Stepmoms’ Mini-Course!

ESP 2.21: Five Kinds of Stepmom Who DON’T Need to “NACHO”!

Summary

Lori Wilkins Sims is my guest today. She’s the originator of the Nacho Kids method. I challenged her to come up with some situations where it’s not necessary to disengage from some aspects of raising your stepkids, and we had a lively conversation – some of it serious and some tongue in cheek. I challenged her to talk about the kinds of situations that would make a stepmom not need to follow her “nacho kids” advice!

Learn about the Nacho Kids Academy at bit.ly/essentialnacho . If you register from that link, you’ll be supporting this podcast at the same time!

Visit my website at essentialstepmom.com and join my Facebook group at The Spectacular Stepmom.

PLUS: if you’re playing the game of “Babysitter-Hero” set to EXPERT level and there’s no end in sight, please help yourself to my e-book 50 Great Boredom Busters. It’s free during Corona season!

Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/essentialstepmom/message

ESP 2.20 More with Tamasin Thomas on stopping those Matrimonial Money Fights!

Summary

Part 2 of a 3-part series with Tamasin Thomas, therapist and financial expert. 

Grab her free e-book, 3 Steps to Resolving Financial Conflict from her website at tamasinthomas.com

My book of Boredom Busters is also available at no cost during this challenging time – find it at essentialstepmom.com

With all the “social distancing”, I’m extra glad to hear from you. Reach out for a messenger chat or a free phone call with this link:

tracypoizner.bookafy.com

Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/essentialstepmom/message

You Can Stop Trying To Love Your Stepkids As Your Own

Let me be clear: I love my step kids very much. They add so much joy and light to my life I can’t imagine where I would be without them.

However, I don’t love them as though they were my kids and I were their mother. I’m NOT their mother. Not only that, but I have a daughter who would be right pissed (and with good reason) if I loved my husband’s kids just the same as I love her. I love them a lot, but it’s not the same and none of us expect it to be.

My advice on this topic is not the advice you typically read on social media, where women take swipes at each other for not being able to generate what they think are the perfect kind of warm fuzzies for their partner’s kids.