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The Merchild & The Unicorn, Part 2

Of all the things I lost when I got divorced – and I lost a lot – the immediate possibility of a second child and a sibling for E was perhaps the hardest to get over. At the time that I’d always thought I would be planning my next pregnancy, I was separating from my husband. As my peers in new motherhood were achieving that coveted family-of-four status, I was meeting with lawyers, negotiating parenting time and division of assets, and plotting my re-entry to the workforce.

I always wanted two kids. After my pregnancy I packed all my maternity clothes away for future use, and as E outgrew her onesies I saved those, too. Even after divorce threw my plans into question, I held onto those clothes. I even remember one emotionally-charged trip to Target when I purchased a trio of newborn-sized onesies as a promise to myself that, some day, I would bring another child into the world.

I can tell you now, more than five years into this journey, that what I experienced was nothing short of grief. The loss of the family and the life I thought I would have was just that – a loss, and I grieved it.

For years.

I remember the phrase “growing family” (as in, “Congratulations on your growing family!” in the Facebook comments of a pregnancy announcement) being especially cutting, because what was my family doing – shrinking? Did I even have a “family” anymore?

For a long time, I felt like the answer to that last question was no. But perhaps the reason for that is the toxic language we use to describe families who have gone through divorce.

“Broken family.”

“Broken home.”

Well. It’s no wonder I felt like shit. I wish we would eradicate these phrases from our vocabulary, because they imply just that – that a parent and their child(ren) are not a real family, and that their home is dysfunctional and in need of fixing. Let me tell you, my family was more broken when we all lived under one roof. E’s dad and I get along much better now than we ever did before, and I have watched E transform from a shy, cautious baby/toddler into an extroverted, adventurous, social little human. There is nothing “broken” about her family. She just has two homes, each headed by a parent who loves her more than anything.

Gradually, my “new normal” became just “normal.” I realized I had been a single mother longer than I had been a married mother and then, it happened: I was lying in bed alone on a week night, waiting for sleep to come, not long before E’s third birthday and my second anniversary of single motherhood, and I suddenly realized that I didn’t want another baby anymore. It startled me, like finding a photo of yourself you hadn’t known was taken. For two years I’d thought my only hesitation in having another baby was the fear of watching another fledgling family fail, but this was just a deep, calm knowledge that I simply didn’t want to. I didn’t want to do the long nights, the nursing, the diapers, or the potty training.

But more importantly, I actually liked my life.

Just as it was.

I liked my work, and I loved the relationship that was growing between me and E. We were becoming quite the little team by that point, and I wanted to keep nurturing that.

We weren’t broken. I didn’t need a spouse and we didn’t need four people to make a family. We were a family – just a super tiny one. That was the moment my grief ended, and I started making choices.

About six months after that night, I donated all of those old clothes, and the never-worn onesies, too. I gave myself a moment to cry, to feel, and found I didn’t really need to. I had gently laid those old dreams to rest, and I was ready to chase some new ones.

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The Merchild & The Unicorn, Part 1

I don’t know how to adequately describe the shame and embarrassment I felt at becoming a 28-year-old divorcée and single mother to a first-born 1-year-old, so I won’t try here. I will just say that, whether they were or they weren’t, I felt that everyone must be thinking, “what on Earth is wrong there?” I don’t think it was entirely in my head though, because a few people did ask me if E was “planned.” (She was.)


When I went to the divorced parenting seminar that my state requires for all divorcing people who share children, I was the youngest person there by at least 10 years. I was also the only one who had a child under the age of three, which I know because the presenter asked for a show of hands in various age groups.


Aside from my feeling like a serious fuck-up, the class was valuable; it was led by a family therapist who had decades of experience counseling people in exactly my situation. I especially remember when he broke from the required script to say, “I’ll tell you the three things common to the blended families who succeed”*, and I quickly flipped over my packet to take thorough notes. I guess I always knew that I wanted to get married again…even sitting in the middle of court-mandated divorce class. Call me a romantic.


However, the things that I wanted in my next partner changed substantially over the course of the next 2-3 years. Back then, I thought the most important trait in a prospective spouse would be the capacity to love another person’s kid.


I was wrong.


I came to realize that I needed someone with the capacity to love a child with whom he didn’t share genetic material, while also respecting and accepting our existing family structure and me as her parent.


What do I mean by that?


First, I mean that our existing family structure includes her dad. He is E’s family and therefore, by extension, a part of ours. Any and all adults in this family need to operate with an eye toward giving E the best and happiest life possible. There’s no room for egos, or jealousy and insecurity about the ex, because there is a long road of birthday parties, school plays, science fairs, graduations, and the like ahead of us. Second, I needed someone who respected and supported me in my role as her parent, rather than trying to share the title with me, or worse, undermining me.


And somewhere in those years, the embarrassment and shame I had felt at my situation largely disappeared and was replaced with a strength and pride I had never known before. I’d weathered the hardest season of my life yet, been torn down to what felt like nothing, and rebuilt myself. I was flourishing at work, my daughter was flourishing in preschool, a beautiful bond had grown between us, and I was proud of myself, dammit. I still am.


I didn’t want to settle for anyone who was trying to audition for the role of E’s dad and my white knight. E has a dad, and I don’t need to be saved. What I did want was a partner, and if E’s family expanded to include more people who loved and supported her then all the better. But anything less would be a downgrade to the status quo, and therefore a non-starter.


So I was looking, but not daring to hope, for a single man in his 30s, with the strength to take on the role of Stepdad, the maturity to occasionally be in a room with her dad without losing his head, the courage to see my fierce independence as something to be celebrated rather than something to be tamed, and didn’t mind that I didn’t want to bear his children (but more on that later).

I was looking for a unicorn.

*You may be wondering what those three things are! He said the three things common to successful blended families are: 1. They got involved post-divorce, 2. They took it slow, taking their time in the relationship and in introducing the kids, and 3. They got extra help.

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The Merchild and Her Questions

“Mamma, have you ever been married?”

E was four years old, and it was the first time she asked one of the questions that I had known would come since her dad and I split up a month after her first birthday. I didn’t know when the questions would start, or what form they would take, but I knew she would have them and I would have to explain to her that her dad and I were not just two people living in separate houses who both just happened to be her parents. I will say that I did not expect her to ask me such a pointed question about my marital history, but that is the thing about E: she never fails to surprise me.

As such, I remember damn near everything about that moment: I remember it was the first really nice day of spring, and we had spent a strangely pleasant afternoon on the lawn of our favorite brewery with E’s dad (yup, we occasionally socialize for her benefit). I remember the warmth of the sun and the scent of new earth, and E and I went for ice cream with my sister, who had also joined us on the excursion, afterward.

It was on the drive to get ice cream that E asked her question – out of absolutely nowhere, I might add. I was so caught off guard that I repeated the question back to her. Nope, I heard her correctly; my preschooler had just asked me if I had “ever been married.” In retrospect, this was about six weeks before said sister’s wedding, in which E would be a flower girl, and my cousin had gotten married a few months prior, so perhaps weddings were on her mind. Honestly, I will never fully understand how the gears in her head turn, I just know that it often humbles me and forces me to stay on my toes.

I tried to keep my voice as even as possible. “Yes…I’ve been married. But I’m not anymore.”

“Oh!” Her surprise was genuine. “Who were you married to?”

A perfectly reasonable follow-up question, but it still further frayed the calm demeanor I was trying to cling to. “Um. I was married to your dad.”

“Oh. My. Gosh. I did not know that!”

She didn’t ask or comment anything further, then we pulled into the parking lot of the ice cream stand.  I was kind of glad I had a witness, because it gave me someone to exchange glances of shocked amusement with when E wasn’t paying attention.

While that was the first time E ever asked me about my personal experience with marriage, and when she learned her dad and I had a relationship outside of her, it was not the last. Truthfully, I had thought the silver lining in getting divorced while my kid was still in diapers might be that she would never know a different life, and therefore couldn’t miss living with her mom and dad under one roof.

Well, my child has proven my assumption to be comically false, many times over. Last summer, around the time I got engaged to my now-spouse, she discovered The Parent Trap (the Lindsay Lohan remake; have you seen the original?? It hasn’t aged well) and that intensified her questions.

“Why did you and my dad break up?” (“Some people work better together if they’re not married, and your dad and I are like that.”)

“Why are you having two weddings?” (“Sometimes people decide to get married again after getting divorced. And now I get to have you there!”)

“Are you my dad’s girlfriend, too?” (“No, being one man’s girlfriend is more than enough for me.”)

“How are babies born?” (Seriously. The kid does not quit.)

These are not questions that a parent in a nuclear family will ever have to face (except for the last one, that is universal!), and I am in the unenviable position of formulating answers that strike a delicate balance of:

  • First and foremost, being honest,
  • Being age-appropriate,
  • Remaining neutral on a subject that is indelibly tied to the most painful chapter of my life to date (NBD, right?), and
  • Protecting my own personal boundaries…intentionally listed last because what even are boundaries when it is just you and your kid?

Over time, I have gotten better at giving simple, respectful responses to tough questions posed by a tiny person while staying true to these values. Usually, I’m able to do it in the moment. If it’s an inopportune time or I need more than two seconds to formulate a response, I ask her if we can talk about it later (and then we do). A couple times when it’s just felt too personal and it’s truly irrelevant to her, I’ve answered her question with the question, “Is it important for you to know?” and she has actually admitted that it’s not and let it go. (This kind of scenario came up more often when I was dating, and she asked something like who I had dinner with while she was at her dad’s, etc.)

I have also, somewhat reluctantly, recently become more comfortable with simply giving her the old, “I’ll tell you when you’re older.” Because there are just some things my six-year-old does not need to know, regardless of how tight our bond is…although, between you and me, it will be kind of cool to one day go out with her when she’s all grown up and spill a l l   o f   t h e   t e a. Maybe she’ll even pick up the tab for once. But for now, we just have tea parties.

I am not here to tell you that I have it all figured out, because I don’t. Yes, I have learned a few things along the way but I am still learning, and I think I always be. Because the challenges of parenthood never cease, and that is especially true for parents leading non-traditional families.

About Me

Hello, and thank you for visiting my blog! I am the mother of one adorable “merchild” (my six-year-old child, E, she/her unless and until she tells me otherwise).

I was a single mother and coparent for most of E’s life until I recently remarried. I have found that while there is no shortage of parenting blogs, there aren’t that many telling tales from the trenches of solo parenthood and the singular triumphs and struggles that come with it. Since starting this journey, I have relied on the stories of others’ experiences for strength as I charted a new course through family life. I hope this blog will be a similar source of inspiration and humor for other single parents and blended families!