Project 9 merge several biofamilies and resolve many conflicts


Help Stepsiblings Resolve Excessive Jealousy

Find and Fill the Needs Underneath the "Jealousy" - p. 1 of 2

By Peter K. Gerlach, MSW
Member NSRC Experts Council

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The Web address of this two-page article is http://sfhelp.org/Rx/sibs/jealousy.htm

        This is one of a series of Web articles suggesting solutions for common divorced-family and stepfamily relationship problems. This Solutions sub-series focuses on solving common problems between stepfamily siblings. Most ideas here apply equally to divorced or widowed parents and their minor and grown kids.

        This gives perspective on this nonprofit divorce-prevention site and how to best use it. These ideas aim to augment, not replace, appropriate professional counsel. Links below will open a popup or full browser page, so turn off your browser's popup blocker. Use your browser's "back" button to return from new windows.

        The "green-eyed monster" (jealousy or envy) is alive and well in the world, and in typical multi-home stepfamilies. This article focuses on what co-parents can do to help a child put down the burden of excessive envy of a stepbrother or stepsister. You'll read some perspective, an outline of the surface problems, and suggestions for filling possible real needs feeding the "monster." 

        For initial perspective, see three basic suggestions that begin this stepsibling sub-series, and the companion article on healing jealousy between ex mates


Perspective

       Have you ever envied another person, as a child or an adult? What kinds of thoughts and feelings did (or do) you have? Are you aware of anyone ever being jealous of you? What was it like to know that per-son coveted something (or someone) that you "possessed"?

        When major jealousy lives in your home, it brings blooms of discontent and resentment from one member's yearning for something possessed by another. The "something" can be physical or invisible. The longing, and the related relationship stresses, are just the same.

        Like taxes, headaches, and insects, some jealousies are worse than others. We all feel mild envies occasionally - "Gee, it must be nice to have the problems Alex does..." That good natured longing can escalate to traumatic thoughts and behaviors including real-life injury and death - "If I can't have you, no one can!" This article focuses on a level of ongoing jealousy between stepsiblings that someone  considers to be "excessive." Is that someone you?

        As with most relationship "problems" (unfilled needs), excessive jealousy teaches us some interesting things about the people involved. The more you and they understand these "things," the higher your odds for you're getting your needs met. See what you think about these "things"...

Basic Premises

        Like hunger and thirst, the feelings of  envy or jealousy are not intrinsically negative or bad. These feelings are normal symptoms of one or more unfilled human needs. Explaining this can free your jealous child from unwarranted guilt ("I shouldn't feel jealous of Amy.") or shame ("I'm a bad person because I feel so jealous.")

        The effects of excessively jealous feelings and thoughts may be harmful personally, if your child loses self respect or life balance from them; and/or socially, if one or more family relationships are stressed by anxiety, resentment, hurt, and guilt.

        Words can be important. Jealousy and envy may have different meanings and emotional "flavors" (associations) for different people. For instance, envy may feel acceptable as a normal, usually harmless human trait, while jealousy may incur sharp criticisms of moral "weakness" and "wrongness," or vice versa. Religiously zealous co-parents (bioparents and/or stepparents) may use their (Biblically unfounded) belief that envy is one of "the seven deadly sins," to shame or warn a young coveter.

        If you feel stepsibling jealousy is "a significant problem" in your home or stepfamily, define your terms. In this article, envy and jealousy mean the same thing. Build clarity on whether "the problem" is judged as a "personality flaw" or a behavioral stressor, for these are healed differently. 

        Option: poll your family members to learn their attitudes and biases about "jealousy" and "envy." You may be surprised at what you learn! How likely is it that your unconscious (good / bad) attitude about jealousy and jealous people is carrying on the belief of a judgmental ancestor or here/ine? What are you and others teaching each of your kids to believe about the rightness or wrongness of the normal emotion of envy?

        More premises about excessive stepsibling jealousy...

        All family members benefit by clearly distinguishing between jealous feelings, and behaviors (actions) caused by those feelings. Silently or vocally envying a stepbrother's baseball success has a different stepfamily impact than does spitefully hiding his glove so he can't be so successful.

        Like all relationship problems, "excessive stepsibling jealousy" can be seen as either a problem or an opportunity. Your and other family members' choices between these two attitudes will determine whether the kids' jealousy causes resentment, hurt, anxiety, guilt, and shame among you, or curiosity, compassion, constructive confrontation, and cooperative problem solving.

        The opportunity here is for you all to learn (a) what really causes jealousy, (b) how to spot and express envy honestly, and (c) what to do about it as stepfamily teammates!

        Several personality traits may help explain why one child may be burdened by jealousy, while a sibling isn't. Key traits...

  • A sense of entitlement. Do you know people who believe the world owes them various prizes like love, success, wealth, and freedom? They believe they deserve such things because they're human, or "special." Such dissatisfied kids and adults unconsciously sentence themselves to perpetually resenting life's "unfairness." Other people see those prizes as blessings bestowed randomly by "fate," and/or earned by self responsibility, courage, risks, honesty, and hard work.

  • Personal and/or family shame. Kids and adults afflicted by this crippling attitude ("I am clearly worthless and unlovable") can fruitlessly seek to ease their pain by acquiring "things" - power, wealth, attractive companions, and prized objects. Your jealous child may semi-consciously feel if s/he had what his or her stepsib has, she'd somehow be more worthy, lovable, or "OK." Note that shame-based kids usually come from shame-based caregivers.

        A third personality trait that can shape the intensity of kids' envy is...

  • Personal insecurity. If your (step)child is jealous of a sibling's family or parental status ("Wendy is my stepdad's favorite girl"), and/or is scared of parental rejection and abandonment ("My Mom likes my new stepsister better than me!") they can fantasize magic curses or "pick on" the favored stepsib.

        Because most stepfamilies are founded on (a) years of pre-divorce relationship anxiety and stress; (b) divorce "abandonments" by one or both bioparents; and (c) alien, scary post-divorce circumstances like stepfamily life; average kids in divorcing families and stepfamilies have more reasons to feel insecure and overwhelmed than peers in intact, high-nurturance biofamilies.   

        By themselves, these three traits are neither good nor bad. What the traits cause may or may not distress various kids and adults in your stepfamily. 

        Three more premises about resolving your stepsib's excessive jealousy: 

  • Parental favoritism is real. Normal bioparents and stepparents develop mild or strong preferences for individual biokids and stepkids - and other co-parents and relatives. Despite earnest attempts to deny or hide such preferences, co-parents (like you?) "leak" them in small verbal and non-verbal ways  - e.g. eye contact or avoidance, voice tone, smiles or frowns, touching (or not), reflexive endearments,... 

            Insecure kids and defensive bioparents are specially alert and responsive to such clues. They promote ongoing clear and covert jealousies, until responsible co-parents face them squarely. One of 60 common stepfamily myths is "We all must love each other (equally, like an ideal biofamily)." A far more viable goal is striving to earn mutual respect, while acknowledging normal preferences!

  • Often (always?) the "thing" that your (step)child consciously or verbally covets is not the real prize. Your boy may say "I wish I had all the friends that (my nerdy stepbrother) Frank does." What he really needs is help building self respect, and social skills and confidence, but he can't say that yet.

        Even young adult kids often lack the concepts, awareness, and precise vocabulary to express their real needs. So if you co-parents try to fill jealous kids' surface complaints ("Let's ask that nice boy down the block to come for lunch."), you risk harvesting frustration, discouragement, and stress over time. Those breed self doubt and dwindling relationship resiliencies. Look for the primary needs underneath the "envy" (below).

  • To heal "excessive stepsibling jealousy," it's vital for you co-parents to separate it from related stepfamily role and relationship problems. For example: a father may criticize a jealous stepson ("Face it, Meg. Your Jeremy's a selfish, anal-retentive wimp"). This will most likely polarize Meg toward defending her son and her parenting. The co-parents can wind up arguing cyclically over "the boy's jealousy."

        They'll miss identifying (a) Jeremy's primary needs, and (b) resolving their adult problems (false-self dominance, unresolved guilt, and ineffective communication). In such scenarios, unaware co-parents can easily be drawn into stressful values and loyalty conflicts and associated relationship triangles. These are sure sources of escalating stepfamily uproars. Stay tuned for better options! 

        Pause for a moment to digest these ideas. Can you summarize the key points you just read? What caused you to read this article? Are you getting any of what you seek? Before proposing specific solutions to "excessive stepsib jealousy," let's explore...


What's the Surface Problem?

        Details vary infinitely, but the surface symptoms of this blended-stepfamily "jealousy problem" are pretty constant. See if you see elements of your situation here...

Prior biofamily events cause the " jealous" child to grow a mix of excessive insecurity (anxiety), shame, and/or entitlement. These historical events can be denied, justified, analyzed, debated, regretted, and forgiven, but never changed. The traits can be modified, over time;

The nuclear stepfamily's three or more co-parents unconsciously establish emotional "environments" in their kids' several homes. These environments promote (a) envy (e.g. by adults often expressing biases and envy, or acting jealous); or (b) equality, fairness, sharing, and gratitude for existing possessions; then...

One or more kids verbally and/or non-verbally express "significant" resentment about, and longing for, "something" that one or more of their stepsiblings "have." The "something" can be tangible ("why can't I have a phone in my room too?") or invisible ("My stupid brother likes Zack (my stepbrother) better than me! I hate 'em both!"); and...

The envious child may or may not (a) hint for, request, or demand co-parental validation, sympathy, and support ("So Mom, tell my Zack how dumb he is!"); or (b) express their jealousy in covert or overt ways, over time; and...

The envied child may or may not notice this jealousy. If s/he does, s/he may...

  • exploit it ("Eat your heart out, you pathetic Megadork!") or...

  • feel guilty and anxious, and defend themselves; or...

  • minimize or ignore it; or...

  • whine or complain to a sibling or adult; or

  • confront the jealous sib and try to resolve the problem.

One or more co-parents can (a) notice these surface "envy problem" symptoms them-selves, or (b) react dutifully because another family member hints, asks, or demands that they do; or (c) the co-parent may trivialize or ignore the child's envy and/or other family members' reactions.

The jealous child may accept their situation and emotionally rebalance; or continue to feel "upset;" while any "upset" co-parents (a) conclude that no change is possible, or (b) keep trying various solutions over time - which probably promote escalating loyalty conflicts and relationship triangles; while...

Their three or more biofamilies continue to merge, and other role and relationship conflicts ebb and flow. The co-parents may or may not gain skill and effectiveness at resolving the dynamic mix of stepfamily problems that keep evolving... 

        This complex household and stepfamily sequence may take months or years to play out. In it, different members experience different small to major "problems." "Excessive stepsibling jealousy" is rarely the only problem. If the co-parents are skilled at resolving family role and relationship problems, the eventual outcome will be higher self esteems, stronger household and stepfamily bonds, and a decline in daily tensions.

        For perspective, many people (without credible research data) estimate that over half of typical U.S. stepfamilies separate or divorce, and  unknown millions of others endure major daily stress because co-parents (a) are too wounded, and (b) can't problem-solve effectively.

        In summary, typical specific surface "jealousy" problems include...

  • one child growing increasingly hostile and bitter toward one or more stepsibs;

  • one or both of that child's bioparents (or biosiblings) "siding with" them (or not) against the envied stepchild,...

  • causing that child's parent/s to become protective and polarize, withdraw, or attack; and...

  • some relatives may take sides, covertly or aggressively, and...

  • co-parents try their best to diffuse and "fix" these interconnected problems, with some or no success, over time.

        If so, everyone feels vaguely or increasingly dissatisfied, and their several biofamilies continue merging and evolving toward unity and bonding or disinterested or opposing camps. 

        Notice this "wide angle" family systems way of looking at the set of problems related to "excessive stepsibling jealousy." Your focusing narrowly on "fixing the jealous child" risks (a) the youngster feeling blamed, bad, and guilty; and (b) you adults missing and not filling various members' primary needs.

        This article defines the surface problem as "excessive" stepsibling jealousy. Each person in your home and stepfamily is the Earth's only expert on what "excessive" means. Implication: you co-parents may feel the stepsibling envy is "tolerable," but your child may not. Whose opinion comes first with you?

These are typical surface problems (symptoms) centered on "excessive stepsibling jealousy." What causes these symptoms, and what can you co-parents do about resolving the causes?

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Updated  October 22, 2008