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3 things you must do when the stepkids don’t like you
All Woman, Features, Relationships
Marie BERBICK-BAILEY  
June 22, 2026

3 things you must do when the stepkids don’t like you

BLENDED families can be beautiful, but they can also be complicated. One of the most painful realities a woman can face is marrying a wonderful man, only to discover that his children want absolutely nothing to do with her. You try to be kind, you try to be helpful, you show up with good intentions, and somehow, you still feel rejected.

If you’re a stepmother reading this, let me say something that may bring you comfort: Not every child who dislikes you actually dislikes you. Sometimes they dislike the situation. Sometimes they dislike the changes. Sometimes they are grieving the family they wish they still had.

One of the biggest mistakes women make is taking every negative reaction personally. Before you know it, you’re trying desperately to win approval, fix everything, or prove that you’re a good person.

Take a breath. Here are three things you must do when the stepchildren don’t seem to like you.

 

This is where many women get into trouble. You may be an amazing woman. You may be loving, nurturing, wise and supportive. But unless their mother is absent or has passed away, those children already have a mother. Your role is not to compete. Your role is not to replace. Your role is to build your own relationship with them.

Many children become resistant when they feel someone is trying to take a position they believe already belongs to someone else. Even when that is not your intention, they may perceive it that way.

Instead of forcing closeness, focus on consistency. Be respectful. Be kind. Be present.

Trust is built through repeated experiences, over time. One thing I’ve learned in life is that relationships grow naturally when people feel safe. They rarely grow when they feel pressured.

 

This is a hard one. When children are cold, distant, disrespectful, or indifferent, it can make even a confident woman question herself. “What am I doing wrong?” “Why don’t they like me?” “Maybe I’ll never fit in.”

Listen carefully. Their response to you is not necessarily a reflection of who you are. Children process change differently. Some adapt quickly. Others take years. A child may be angry about the divorce, angry at their father, angry at their mother, angry that life turned out differently than they expected. And unfortunately, sometimes you become the easiest target for emotions that were never about you in the first place.

Don’t spend your life trying to earn acceptance from people who are still processing their own pain. Remain kind. Handle things with maturity. Remain emotionally healthy.

A woman who knows her value does not allow every rejection to redefine her. She understands that some battles are internal struggles others are fighting, not evidence that she is failing.

 

Many stepmothers become exhausted because they carry responsibilities that belong to their spouse. You’re disciplining, correcting, enforcing rules, managing conflicts. And suddenly, you’re the villain.

The biological parent must take the lead when it comes to parenting and discipline, especially in the early stages of a blended family. That doesn’t mean you have no voice. It means wisdom understands timing. Allow their father to establish boundaries and expectations. Support him, but don’t rush into becoming the primary authority figure before the relationship has been built. Children generally accept correction more easily from someone they trust.

Focus first on connection. The influence will come later. If the stepchildren don’t like you today, don’t panic. Relationships are marathons, not sprints. Some of the strongest stepfamily bonds were not built in months. They were built over years of patience, grace, consistency, and maturity.

So keep showing up with integrity. Keep treating them with kindness. Keep refusing to become bitter. Because one day, the very child who pushed you away may look back and realise that through all the tension, all the awkwardness, and all the resistance, you never stopped showing up. And sometimes, that is what changes everything.

Marie Berbick-Bailey is a certified master life coach, women’s transformational coach, ordained minister, author, motivational speaker, wife, mother and big sister dedicated to empowering women to heal, thrive, and walk in purpose. Connect with her at www.marieberbick.com, www.marieberbickcoach.com, or e-mail marieberbick@gmail.com.

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