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Feel bad but I think I hate my 17 YO stepson

Lucci's picture

I've been on this site reading post for over a year now but this is my first time posting.  I've been with my wife for almost 16 years now.  Her son was about 1-1/2 years old when we first started dating.  His father died when he was three years old and i've been the only father he really knows.  I guess it would make more sense to start at the beginning but considering the day I've had I'm just going to start current and maybe back track on future posts.  Among the myriad of problems my wifes 17 year old has drugs is one of the larger ones.  We've been consistantly testing him every month.  One of those test that registers about 16 different types of drugs.  He tests positive every time and more recently he has come up positive for pills.  We used to ground him for a month with each positive test.  My wife thought that was too long so it was scaled back to two weeks.  He has spent the year on restriction for two weeks and off two weeks.  The problem is that my wife lets him off early.  When he back talks she says nothing to him and is just enabling the behavior to continue.  When he does get grounded he just sneaks out and leaves.  When he gets off of school he goes to a friends house and gets high instead of coming home. He comes and goes as he pleases.  He was officially grounded on Monday.Since restriction really begins when he starts following the rules of it it's been a week of him doing what he wants so it hasn't really started.  Today he was talking about hanging out with friends next weekend.  I said you still have two weeks to go before your off so he went to his room to pout about it.  My wife blames me for him for being unhappy.  Since when was restriction ever supposed to be fun.  What kind of parents would we be knowing he is spending his money on drugs and not trying to do anything about it?  Today she informed me that he will no longer be grounded for anything he does.  Her reasoning is that it isn't working so why punish him?  WTF.  So now he can do what he wants, drugs, failing school,  spending all of his paycheck (1300 a month) on god knows what with nothing to show for it but a positive drug test each month, not cleaning his room or doing laundry for a month at a time, leaving food wrappers in his room and molding drink cups and there are no consequences aside from Mom saying you shouldn't do that.  This has been going on for years now and I just can't pretend it doesn't bother me anymore.  I really resent him and her parenting and hope that graduating this year and moving out is the only thing i have to look foward to.  We just got a email from the school saying he's failing two classes and won't graduate unless he can turn it around.  Arrrgggg.  I don't know if my marriage will survice if i have to wait longer living with him.  Feels good to vent.  I'll give more background in the next post.  Thanks for listening.

Comments

Winterglow's picture

Call the cops next time you know he has drugs. Time to give him a taste of reality. Time he faced real consequences for his choices. 

tog redux's picture

Your wife is enabling his son, which is common for parents with drug-addicted kids.  This is not likely to end well, she's now given him a free pass to use drugs as much as he wants.  I'm not sure I could stay and watch her "love" her son to death like she is doing.

Exjuliemccoy's picture

Your SS has a drug problem. Your wife is right that grounding him isn't working, but that doesn't give her the right to just give up. She enables him, making her part of the problem and demonstrating why addiction is a family disease. You need outside support ASAP, because once your SS turns eighteen you can't compel him to do anything.

If you can afford rehab, put him in a good one. If not, find a counselor who specializes in addiction for him and another for you and your wife. You're going through a lot with both of them, and deserve to have your feelings heard and validated. Also consider finding a local chapter of  Nar-Anon and attending meetings, either alone or as a couple. Your wife and SS are sick TOGETHER, but if your wife isn't strong enough to change, the outlook for both your SS and marriage is bleak.

Somehow in all this strife, please make sure to take good care of you. It's easy to lose yourself in either a marriage or dysfunction, but your needs matter, too. Take a hard look at what you will and won't tolerate, and for how much longer. Have an exit strategy prepared.

Both my DH and I come from dysfunctional families, and have relatives who are addicts. Some are in recovery, some aren't, and one recently died after a lifetime of addiction aided and abetted by an enabling parent. The challenge is to get help for everyone involved and commit to the process, while having hard limits. My heart goes out to you, and I hope you'll stick around for support. We're here for you.