I met a divorced LDS woman about 3 years ago. Her husband had cheated on her for over a decade and was not a supportive parent. After they divorced she was left to raise 4 very unruly children on her own. These children had significant behavioral issues and were in constant trouble at school for stealing, disrupting class, poor grades, and violence.
The child of most concern was her 10 year old daughter who could be so violent that my wife used to have to barricade herself from inside her bedroom until help could arrive (the daughter used to chase her mother with a hammer). My observations, during our dating period, told me that she had a very permissive parenting style that she had learned from her own parents. In fact, because she was spending so much time in college to try to finish her degree, her parents contributed significantly to the rearing of the children.
I love her parents very much. They are good people. My mother in law is in the Stake Young Women's Presidency and my father in law is on a Stake High Council. But their permissiveness with the grandchildren was shocking to me. The children would kick them without the grandparents responding with discipline. The children painted the floors in the home and destroyed things without the parents saying anything to them about it. All along my in-laws quoted scriptures and General Authority talks to justify their permissiveness. For example, my father-in-law reminded me that President Hinckley said one of the worst things his father ever did to discipline him was to give him a disapproving look. I pointed out that the young Hinckley was unlikely punching his father or painting the family walls with green spray paint and so a disapproving look was sufficient.
In the end, it was necessary for my wife and I to move further away and forge our own family unit, putting some needed distance between us and the Utah family. The oldest daughter was being expelled from her school for refusing to abide by school rules and it was a good chance for us to start over in a new place.
While my 3 stepsons have adapted well to our new family, my stepdaughter has not improved her behaviors. My wife chose to home-school her for 2 years because the girl will not comply with authority. The stepdaughter has been extremely abusive to my wife for as long as I've known her. She screams and tantrums at the slightest provocation and truly brought great distress into our home. Because of the family dynamic, almost all discipline with the stepdaughter has been done through my wife rather than from me. My role has largely been to be supportive.
But I just can't countence my wife being so denigrated by her daughter in my presence and a few times spoke with firmness to her about how her behavior is unacceptable. This infuriated the child who is wholly incapable of accepting counsel. She began to secretly communicate with her grandparents in Utah, telling them she was being abused through our allegedly ultra-restrictive rules. Behind our backs, my mother in-law was giving my stepdaughter, now 14 years old, emotional support and empathy that emboldened the child's defiance. She became increasingly hateful toward everyone in our household. She wouldn't participate in FHE or family activities with us. She was also calling her father in Utah to lament to him how awful her life was. Any attempt we made to gain control of the situation only gave the child more fodder to justify her position that we were abusing her. We prayed, read books on parenting, sought counsel from leaders and did all we could but none of it had a discernible impact on her.
The final straw was when my wife told her that because of her continuing hostility it would be necessary to discontinue home school and to enroll her in public school the coming year. When my wife refused to consent to the child's demand that she be permitted to skip a grade, my stepdaughter stormed out of the house - went to a complete stranger's home in our subdivision whom none of us knew - had a sobbing fit while accusing us of abusing her - and used the stranger's home as a haven to call her father using the cell phone she had just stolen from her mother when she left the house. In front of this stranger she spent the next 2 hours begging her father to let her come live with him. Unbeknownst to us, the father called my mother in law in Utah who generally supported premise that the child was in a "bad situation" - suggesting that we were too harsh or restrictive on the child and ignoring the child's lifelong history of attempts to have her way in all situations.
In the end, we knew that if something wasn't done that either the father or the child herself was going to make some kind of report to Child Protective Services against us. We also knew that even though there was absolutely no evidence, no witnesses, no proof of any kind - save the word of this child only - that we were doing anything abusive, there is a real threat to the authority of parents if social services thinks a child is being mistreated. We decided that the best thing we could do for the next few months was to have the child go stay with her father in Utah.
Our problem has not improved, however. Since the child has been in Utah with her father for the last few months, she has spent a significant amount of time with her grandparents who are lavishing her with praise, money, gifts, trips and attention. In the meantime, my other stepchildren who have been good, obedient children, are getting relatively no attention from their grandparents. They are seeing their sister getting a lot of attention and gifts as a result of her willful defiance of her parents.
The larger issue for us, though, is that the child is not learning any accountability for her selfish actions. Being sent to her father's home, where she truly does not want to be, was meant to be a consequence of her own poor choices. The temporary isolation from our family unit was meant to create in her a craving to rejoin our home with some measure of penitence or humility. But because of the overabundance of time and attention from her grandparents, the child has only become more defiant toward us and has absolutely no desire to rejoin our family. My wife has spoken to her mother ad nauseum about this and has clearly and respectfully asked her mother to stop gossiping with the child and to put reasonable limits on the fun excursions and adventures so that the child may experience a twinge of isolation from the family. The mother always agrees to my wife's requests, but absolutely will not abide by her word. She continues to "spoil" the child, give her a sympathetic ear to the child's outrageous lies and to interfere with our objectives for the child. This behavior by my wife's mother has caused my wife incredible distress. Such a contentious relationship has never been a part of their lives, but it is currently poignant and distressful.
Here I am. The son in law who loves his wife and cares for her children - and I don't have a clue what to do. Can anyone help with some kindly advice on what my focus should be through all this or how I should conduct myself?