(So, I guess I'm saying thank you for listening to me work through this, and be bitchy. I do with local friends, too, but y'all are immediate gripe-dump.)
What Cass said. It's super important for you to play it cool in these situations and super-cordiality is an amazing superpower in the face of such tricky circumstances. It's the thing that will help your step-son the most, this forebearance which does not come naturally to you.
Thanks, guys, for helping me not feel like an awful person. Lucky for me, though I dislike fronting, I am very good at being charming and faux.
I would be dangerous if it weren't so damned boring and I am so lazy.
(And I'm all humble, too!)
ETA: It IS made easier by the fact that M is a great kid, and I am falling in love with him.
I want to feed lines form Monty Python's Argument Clinic sketch to Cleverbot.
I want to feed lines form Monty Python's Argument Clinic sketch to Cleverbot.
I want you to feed lines from Monty Python's Argument Clinic sketch to Cleverbot, too. So why are you lying on the sofa?
Erin, you are a good step-mom.
You sound like you are doing awesome.
And hopefully D is doing his part by not rehashing their very over romantic relationship to you. You only have continued contact because they share (and you share now as well) a child. It's not a "who is the better wife" thing, it's raising a happy, well-adjusted M thing.
Though I will admit I now secretly thrill to hear stories from my dad about when he and my mom were together. But I only hear them on the rare chance that he and I are having dinner alone and it's not a wistful thing, it's just we share people that we don't really talk about with other people around. It's also that I am in my mumblethirties and he and my stepmom have been awesomely together for over 25 years, so it's not a confusing message for anyone. Just fun to hear.
Modern families are hard. But modern kids need the adults in their lives to be grown ups and, honestly I think, subsume some of their wants and needs for the kids when it comes to dealing with the other parents.
Erin, you are
decidedly
not an awful person.
Erin, you are a great step-mom! Your priorities are clearly right: the needs of the child come first.
Here's a weird thing. I've taken no medications today. No antidepressants, no antianxiety meds, no painkillers, no decongestants, no antihistamines. I didn't plan it; I just forgot everything until about two hours ago. Now, I'm not taking this as proof that I don't need any of them, but it's heartening to know that if I skip a day, I don't fall apart.
I'm tapering off my antidepressant. I've done this before, unsuccessfully, but I haven't been in such a good emotional place before, in many many years. Also, the high dose of Wellbutrin I was taking was causing tremors in my hands, and I didn't want to risk that becoming permanent. So I went from 450 mg/day to 300, and now I've gone to 150. My shrink is keeping an eye on me, and thinks that the Deplin may be making a real difference in how much I need. He says that if I'm one of those people who doesn't metabolize folate/folic acid very well, the Deplin might prove to be all I really need. (Deplin is methylfolate, a version of that B vitamin that's already in the form the body needs it to be in.) If my problem turns out to have been a lack of vitamin B-whatever all this time, that would explain why no antidepressant has ever really worked for me. We'll see, I guess. More adventures in chemical enhancement.
Personally, I think Prozac and birth control pills screwed me up completely and permanently in my early twenties, and after twenty years of one unsuccessful drug after another, all I can do now is try to control the damage. Prozac etc surely have saved many people's lives and made many people's lives better, but I don't think I'm one of them.
I think more people have problems with birth control pills than realize it.
I've been on bcp since I was 17.
Erin, what everyone said.
You are not an awful person. You're a kind, good one.