How to introduce your teenage kids to your new partner

How to introduce your teenage kids to your new partner

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After her divorce, Oksana Marafioti, 49, a writer in Las Vegas, spent 10 years dating for fun. Then, in 2021, she met her current partner, Tyler. “This felt different,” she recalls. A few


months in, she told her two sons that she wanted them to meet her new beau. “Great,” the then 14-year-old son responded, only half joking. “You are going to ruin my life!” It’s a common


dilemma among single parents: how to introduce a partner to a skeptical or reluctant teenager. According to pediatric health psychologist Emily Edlynn of Oak Park, Illinois, your split from


your child’s other parent can influence how the introduction goes. “If there is a lot of unresolved emotional distress, adding a new adult to the mix will be more complicated,” she says.


Your child’s developmental stage makes a difference as well, says Samantha Rodman Whiten, a clinical psychologist and host of _The_ _Dr. Psych Mom Show _podcast_._ Teens can be leery of


anything that might shake up their own day-to-day lives. “There’s something called healthy adolescent narcissism, which is a stage that any parent knows,” Whiten says. “They can be really


self-centered.” That said, conflict is not inevitable. We asked experts to share guidelines for negotiating this transition. ​ TEST THE WATERS​ “Kids this age pick up on everything,” says


Elizabeth Cohen, a clinical psychologist and author of _Light on the Other Side of Divorce._ Assume your kid knows there’s a new person in your life, and follow their lead on how much detail


they want, Cohen suggests. ​​​ DON’T JUMP THE GUN​​ “You don’t need to introduce your teen to every one-date wonder,” says Ann-Louise Lockhart, a child and adolescent psychologist and


parent coach in San Antonio. Still, make the introduction before years go by. John McElhenney, 61, a life coach in Austin, Texas, had an agreement with his ex-wife to wait six months before


introducing their two kids to anyone new. ​​“I didn’t want to wait forever,” he recalls. “When I met my now fiancée, it was important to see how she would get along with my daughter and son.


If she resented the time and attention I spent on them, I knew it wouldn’t work out.” ​ KEEP THINGS LIGHT ​A first meeting should be brief, with low stakes. Think smoothies in the park, not


an all-day beach hangout. “Awkward but funny” is how Marafioti describes the first meeting between her partner and her sons, at a breakfast spot. “My older son asked my boyfriend, ‘What are


your intentions with our mom?’ That cracked all of us up.” ​