โMy ex-husbandโs parents obviously werenโt thrilled about me divorcing their son.
Soon after the divorce, I drove to my in-lawsโ house and had a very long and open and difficult and awkward and beautiful and complicated conversation with them.
We decided not to point fingers or blame or judge. We just talked about the most important thing: the kids.
We decided to put our differences and our pride aside and focus on what really matters: family, forgiveness, love.
I remember one particular phone call early on, while things were still really tense between their son and me.
His mom said: โWell, if youโre not technically my daughter-in-law anymore, then from now on youโre my daughter.โ
And they have treated me like one since.
This week will be another Thanksgiving holiday spent at their house. Iโve always been welcome.
Once I started dating my current husband, I assumed the invitation to Thanksgiving would stop, but no. The invitation was extended to him as well.
Itโs been like this for years now, all of us getting together for the holidays.
Today, we once again ate together as one big family. Today, my husband helped my ex-husbandโs mom set the table and clean up, as he does every year.
Today, I listened as my ex-husband and current husband discussed work and football and parenting.
Today, I watched my ex-husband play superheroes with my son from my second marriage.
Today was about all the stuff that really matters and not about the unnecessary drama we humans tend to create.
None of this divorce, remarriage, co-parenting stuff is easy. In some ways, itโs the hardest part of my life.
But the hard work and our โkids first, egos lastโ formula has been worth it. So, so worth it.
Note: The left photo is of my ex-husbandโs mom and I from last yearโs Thanksgiving. The second photo is from today, my current husband helping my ex-husbandโs mom set the dessert table.
This story was submitted to Love What Matters by Kristina Kuzmic. You can follow her journey on Facebook and Instagram, and order her book. Be sure to subscribe to our free email newsletter for our best stories.
Read more about co-parenting:
A Guide To Successful Co-Parenting With Your Ex
Co-parenting With A Narcissist Is Cruel, But You Can Take Your Power Back
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