Single Parent Dating - Tips for Introducing Your Kids to Your Dates
- Author Judy Porter
- Published November 11, 2007
- Word count 688
If you are a single parent, dating may be a source of simultaneous joy and anxiety. How do you explain to young children that you are dating? Should you introduce the kids to everyone you date, or is it better to wait until the relationship has reached a certain level of commitment? What if you fall in love with someone your kids end up not liking? Although these are common questions most single parents entering the dating scene have, there are truly no simple answers. Combining the following tips with your instincts and better judgment can help.
When you have young children, third grade or younger, explaining that you are dating is probably not necessary, at least not until you have met someone you are serious about. Introducing a young child to every man or woman you bring home is probably more damaging than helpful, and will likely only confuse your child. Remember that young children grow attached to people quickly, and thus, it is unfair to your children to bring someone into their lives whom you yourself are still unsure about. Once a relationship has reached the stage where you both envision a future together, the risk of heartbreak for both you and your kids becomes smaller.
Once you are dating someone you truly believe could be the one, you are faced with how to introduce your kids to the new man or woman in your life. It is wise to sit down with your children individually and have a conversation before bringing home someone who, to your children, is a stranger. If your children are old enough to understand the concept of dating, they might not necessarily be happy to hear the news. Kids ages nine and up, especially ones old enough to remember your divorce or separation, or who have lived through the death of a parent, tend to see their single parent's dating as a threat. Explain to your children that you are not trying to replace their father or mother, and that this new person will never take their mother's or father's place. Make sure to listen to how your children feel about what you tell them, and encourage them to ask any questions they have.
If your kids react positively or neutrally, you might schedule an age-appropriate activity all of you can do together. If your children seem extremely adverse to the idea of you dating, you might consider holding off on the introduction for a few weeks to give your kids time to let the news sink in. Once you and your kids are ready, plan an activity where everyone can have a good time. Choose mini-golf or an afternoon at the arcade over a sit-down lunch, because a hands-on activity will allow your kids the option of doing their own thing while warming up to your new love slowly, whereas a restaurant lunch will involve forced small talk and awkward silence.
Keep in mind, all children adjust differently. If your kids lived through and remember the times you and their father argued, or your kids' mother has only been dead a few years, the concept of a new man or woman entering their lives may be more than your children are emotionally ready to handle. Once a child has lost a parent, they may fear being abandoned. Although it may seem irrational to your adult mind, to a child, it may seem like you are abandoning them for a new man, or a new woman. They may also feel like you are trying to replace their father or mother, or they may be holding on to fantasies that you and your ex will get back together. If your children feel any of these things, they will most likely react negatively to anyone new you bring home, regardless of what a good person he or she might be or how much you love him or her. By reassuring your children that you love them, that they are your priority, and that your loyalties are to them, you will be allowing your children to accept your new relationship in their own time.
Judy Porter, contributing writer for www.parentfishing.com, a free online dating service for single parents. Dating as a single parent was only easy on The Brady Bunch. At ParentFishing.com, we make it easier by bringing together singles moms with single dads who know what it takes to date with a family. Find your partner here.
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