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Blissfully Blended Bullshit: The Uncomfortable Truth of Blending Families Paperback – June 18, 2019
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Rebecca Eckler
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Rebecca Eckler
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Print length216 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherDundurn
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Publication dateJune 18, 2019
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Dimensions5.5 x 0.8 x 8.5 inches
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ISBN-101459743938
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ISBN-13978-1459743939
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Editorial Reviews
Review
With her fearless voice, Rebecca Eckler takes us on her soul-baring journey of blending families, navigating the laugh-out-loud moments and heartbreaking realities with her trademark unapologetic honesty. ― Samantha Bailey, author of Woman On The Edge
Another totally entertaining and relatable read by Rebecca Eckler. As a blended family survivor, I had a visceral reaction to so many of the anecdotes. It is real and it is uncomfortable. This book is a must read for anyone considering (or living through) blending worlds. ― Joanna Track, Founder and Executive Publisher, TheBullet.ca
A touching and telling modern love story between husband and wife and mother and daughter and the balance of all the relationships in between. Eckler weaves her story of vulnerability and painful truths to reveal the unfiltered reality of blending families. With her raw sense of honesty and self-awareness, Rebecca Eckler provides an invaluable human approach. This is a valuable and eye-opening read for anyone contemplating a life of blended and splendid. ― Daniella English, Founder of thenotsosinglelife.ca
Another totally entertaining and relatable read by Rebecca Eckler. As a blended family survivor, I had a visceral reaction to so many of the anecdotes. It is real and it is uncomfortable. This book is a must read for anyone considering (or living through) blending worlds. ― Joanna Track, Founder and Executive Publisher, TheBullet.ca
A touching and telling modern love story between husband and wife and mother and daughter and the balance of all the relationships in between. Eckler weaves her story of vulnerability and painful truths to reveal the unfiltered reality of blending families. With her raw sense of honesty and self-awareness, Rebecca Eckler provides an invaluable human approach. This is a valuable and eye-opening read for anyone contemplating a life of blended and splendid. ― Daniella English, Founder of thenotsosinglelife.ca
About the Author
Rebecca Eckler is one of Canada's best-known journalists and authors. She is the international bestselling author of Knocked Up, Toddlers Gone Wild, Wiped!, and How to Raise a Boyfriend. Rebecca lives in Toronto.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Prologue
Where the fuck is my confetti? Where is my celebratory dinner? Oh, right. I’ve forgotten about the less-than-thrilled response I received from some members of my blended family when I told them I’d signed a book deal. I suppose breaking the news that it was about them might have had something to do with that. They didn’t seem overjoyed that I was going to write about the cold, hard, uncomfortable truth of what really happens behind the closed doors of blended families. Welcome to my life. Even before I sat at my computer to compose my thoughts on what this book would look like, certain members of my blended family already had their backs up, wondering what the hell I would be writing about and, of course, how they would be perceived. It’s not that they weren’t happy that I’d got a book deal. They just weren’t exactly enamoured with what they thought, or assumed, I was going to share. They were anxious. And, honestly, they should be.
I was “gently” advised by my partner to “be cautious” when writing about all of us ― all of us being myself, my partner and his two biological children, the son we have together, and my daughter from my first common-law marriage. One big happy-ish family! I felt like a child being told to think before I speak. I “gently” reminded him that I’m a grown woman. So, no, there was no dinner, no champagne toast, not even dying roses from a gas station in my honour when I got the go-ahead to tell my story about what it’s like to be in a blended family.
It’s a story worth telling. Holy shit, have my experiences opened my eyes, not just to the gargantuan reality of adjusting to life in a blended family, but also because of what I’ve learned about myself and relationships while blending. You kind of get a crash course in reality when trying to manage all the bullshit that comes along with this rapidly growing family dynamic.
Sometimes what happens in a blended family really is stranger than fiction. The fights and slights can be so ridiculous, I’m not sure anyone would actually believe me. Which is why I’ve never truly shared, nor have I found any book out there that can commiserate with me about what a shit show it is to be in a blended family.
This is not a memoir about being a step-parent or having stepchildren or the step-parent–stepchild relationship. Not that I don’t touch on it. But this is more my account of how blending families affects everyone, including people you’d never consider, like our exes, or our ex-in-laws, our new in-laws, and even the dog.
The truth about blending families can be fucking harsh. Those who haven’t gone through it and are dating others with children, are thinking about blending, are embarking on blending, or are just curious about what it’s like to blend families probably just figure it’s an … adjustment? Perhaps a process to learn, a path to travel, a mountain to climb, a field to plant, a knot to unravel, a Coen brothers movie to fully understand. In other words, a difficult but seemingly surmountable challenge.
Ha! Challenge. Living it, I’d probably use a much different word. Every single one of us in my blended family has our own perception of our roles in each other’s lives and in our blended household. We may all live under the same roof, but our experiences are totally different and can even be contrasting at times. Our truths may have discrepancies and may even have zero basis in reality. Everyone else’s sense about what it’s been like for them to blend is a reflection of them, just as my reactions while blending reveal a lot about me.
My family ― the kids, the grandparents, the Boyfriend, and the exes ― know that honesty and candour are my MO. This memoir is my truth, and, unfortunately, truth can sound an awful lot like criticism. Some people ― yep, I’m gonna go there ― can’t handle the truth. Or, at the very least, they would prefer to ignore it than to admit and confront it. Believe me, I’ve been on that side, too. But I know my truth from talking to others in blended families ― some successful, some not so much, some not at all ― and comparing notes to see if I’m just batshit crazy, or if they could relate to a lot of the bullshit I’ve found comes along with blending. I mostly know about the bullshit of blending from living it, from being honest about the way I feel in certain situations and the way I think everyone else feels in my blended family, and, also, from the hundreds of texts and email exchanges over the years with the cast of characters in my blended family. Thank you, iCloud!
So, yeah ― blah, blah, blah ― the truth will set us free. But first it will piss someone, or everyone, off. Or, who knows? Maybe everyone in my blended family will let out a huge sigh of relief that it’s not just us who thinks navigating our new roles is a bit of a shit show. Maybe they’ll even have a good giggle. What screws most of us up is a picture or the fantasy in our heads of how a family is supposed to be, how we are supposed to treat each other, and how we are supposed to look. I hope that when my family looks back on the most difficult times, we’ll also remember the awesome memories we’ve created and continue to create. I know I will. Even for all of our scars and bumps and bruises and imperfections and missteps, it hasn’t all been all bad.
There is one thing I’m pretty sure we’d all agree on, though ― and I do mean just one! The process of blending families comes with a considerable amount of bullshit.
Still, knowing that the people who have been in my life now for years ― the family I’ve gained after blending and as we continue to blend ― are, for lack of a better word, perturbed over what I’m going to write kind of stings. I’m not going to lie. I’m legit hurt by their lack of enthusiasm.
So, okay, I don’t exactly have a cheering section. There is no confetti. No bouquet ― flower, fruit, balloon, or otherwise ― in my future. But maybe, just maybe, this book will be like blending families: completely unexpected, with some WTF, but also a whole lot of, “Oh, really? I hadn’t thought of it that way!” My family need not fear that they will come off looking like assholes while I come across all roses and rainbows. Quite the opposite, actually. Many times I’m the one who comes across as the schmuck. Many, many times, my dark, jealous, resentful side surfaces, and often my feelings are completely irrational and immature, to the point that it horrifies even me.
But I’m not one to shy away from sharing my account of the hard truths, the less-than-ideal realities, and all the bullshit I was completely unprepared for by blending. I wouldn’t be me if I held back. So I don’t plan to.
Where the fuck is my confetti? Where is my celebratory dinner? Oh, right. I’ve forgotten about the less-than-thrilled response I received from some members of my blended family when I told them I’d signed a book deal. I suppose breaking the news that it was about them might have had something to do with that. They didn’t seem overjoyed that I was going to write about the cold, hard, uncomfortable truth of what really happens behind the closed doors of blended families. Welcome to my life. Even before I sat at my computer to compose my thoughts on what this book would look like, certain members of my blended family already had their backs up, wondering what the hell I would be writing about and, of course, how they would be perceived. It’s not that they weren’t happy that I’d got a book deal. They just weren’t exactly enamoured with what they thought, or assumed, I was going to share. They were anxious. And, honestly, they should be.
I was “gently” advised by my partner to “be cautious” when writing about all of us ― all of us being myself, my partner and his two biological children, the son we have together, and my daughter from my first common-law marriage. One big happy-ish family! I felt like a child being told to think before I speak. I “gently” reminded him that I’m a grown woman. So, no, there was no dinner, no champagne toast, not even dying roses from a gas station in my honour when I got the go-ahead to tell my story about what it’s like to be in a blended family.
It’s a story worth telling. Holy shit, have my experiences opened my eyes, not just to the gargantuan reality of adjusting to life in a blended family, but also because of what I’ve learned about myself and relationships while blending. You kind of get a crash course in reality when trying to manage all the bullshit that comes along with this rapidly growing family dynamic.
Sometimes what happens in a blended family really is stranger than fiction. The fights and slights can be so ridiculous, I’m not sure anyone would actually believe me. Which is why I’ve never truly shared, nor have I found any book out there that can commiserate with me about what a shit show it is to be in a blended family.
This is not a memoir about being a step-parent or having stepchildren or the step-parent–stepchild relationship. Not that I don’t touch on it. But this is more my account of how blending families affects everyone, including people you’d never consider, like our exes, or our ex-in-laws, our new in-laws, and even the dog.
The truth about blending families can be fucking harsh. Those who haven’t gone through it and are dating others with children, are thinking about blending, are embarking on blending, or are just curious about what it’s like to blend families probably just figure it’s an … adjustment? Perhaps a process to learn, a path to travel, a mountain to climb, a field to plant, a knot to unravel, a Coen brothers movie to fully understand. In other words, a difficult but seemingly surmountable challenge.
Ha! Challenge. Living it, I’d probably use a much different word. Every single one of us in my blended family has our own perception of our roles in each other’s lives and in our blended household. We may all live under the same roof, but our experiences are totally different and can even be contrasting at times. Our truths may have discrepancies and may even have zero basis in reality. Everyone else’s sense about what it’s been like for them to blend is a reflection of them, just as my reactions while blending reveal a lot about me.
My family ― the kids, the grandparents, the Boyfriend, and the exes ― know that honesty and candour are my MO. This memoir is my truth, and, unfortunately, truth can sound an awful lot like criticism. Some people ― yep, I’m gonna go there ― can’t handle the truth. Or, at the very least, they would prefer to ignore it than to admit and confront it. Believe me, I’ve been on that side, too. But I know my truth from talking to others in blended families ― some successful, some not so much, some not at all ― and comparing notes to see if I’m just batshit crazy, or if they could relate to a lot of the bullshit I’ve found comes along with blending. I mostly know about the bullshit of blending from living it, from being honest about the way I feel in certain situations and the way I think everyone else feels in my blended family, and, also, from the hundreds of texts and email exchanges over the years with the cast of characters in my blended family. Thank you, iCloud!
So, yeah ― blah, blah, blah ― the truth will set us free. But first it will piss someone, or everyone, off. Or, who knows? Maybe everyone in my blended family will let out a huge sigh of relief that it’s not just us who thinks navigating our new roles is a bit of a shit show. Maybe they’ll even have a good giggle. What screws most of us up is a picture or the fantasy in our heads of how a family is supposed to be, how we are supposed to treat each other, and how we are supposed to look. I hope that when my family looks back on the most difficult times, we’ll also remember the awesome memories we’ve created and continue to create. I know I will. Even for all of our scars and bumps and bruises and imperfections and missteps, it hasn’t all been all bad.
There is one thing I’m pretty sure we’d all agree on, though ― and I do mean just one! The process of blending families comes with a considerable amount of bullshit.
Still, knowing that the people who have been in my life now for years ― the family I’ve gained after blending and as we continue to blend ― are, for lack of a better word, perturbed over what I’m going to write kind of stings. I’m not going to lie. I’m legit hurt by their lack of enthusiasm.
So, okay, I don’t exactly have a cheering section. There is no confetti. No bouquet ― flower, fruit, balloon, or otherwise ― in my future. But maybe, just maybe, this book will be like blending families: completely unexpected, with some WTF, but also a whole lot of, “Oh, really? I hadn’t thought of it that way!” My family need not fear that they will come off looking like assholes while I come across all roses and rainbows. Quite the opposite, actually. Many times I’m the one who comes across as the schmuck. Many, many times, my dark, jealous, resentful side surfaces, and often my feelings are completely irrational and immature, to the point that it horrifies even me.
But I’m not one to shy away from sharing my account of the hard truths, the less-than-ideal realities, and all the bullshit I was completely unprepared for by blending. I wouldn’t be me if I held back. So I don’t plan to.
Product details
- Publisher : Dundurn (June 18, 2019)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 216 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1459743938
- ISBN-13 : 978-1459743939
- Item Weight : 11.3 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 0.8 x 8.5 inches
-
Best Sellers Rank:
#713,223 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,109 in Divorce (Books)
- #78,112 in Biographies
- Customer Reviews:
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Reviewed in the United States on September 3, 2019
Verified Purchase
This book struck home for me. Being in a blended family situation is the most complicated of any relationship I have ever experienced. It hurt to read. But it also made me feel like I'm not crazy. Did it give me hope? No. But it made me realize that the feelings are real and I am not alone in struggling to find my way.
6 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on January 23, 2021
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I honestly couldn't even finish it... it made me sick to read the bs selfishness. this felt like it was written by my toxic stepmother... i bought it thinking it would be from an adults point of view growing up as a child of messy divorce and toxic abusive relationships (i guess i didn't read the bio far enough, because now i see this wasn't written for children of divorced parents and blended families).... I was wrong.. don't buy unless you are the toxic stepmom who needs to play victim and get validation.
One person found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on March 23, 2020
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Author's complete lack of self-awareness is absolutely stunning...and nothing humorous about any of it. A woman who feels her daughter will always come first, before her husband, is a woman who will not have a successful marriage. I suspect that if Boyfriend had told her his two daughters came before her, it would not have been well-received. There is a place in the book where author is upset two stepdaughters won't go to her daughter's summer camp, but I suspect she would not be receptive to her daughter attending the summer camp preferred by the stepdaughters. The blended family lives in her house, vacations at yet again, her house. She pays for things to get her way. Too bad the family didn't get some family counseling, and too bad, the author didn't get some marriage counseling. What a mess.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 5, 2020
Verified Purchase
I love the raw open and honest story that so many of us can relate to, the issues that nobody else wants to admit and the feelings that we all in blended families feel awful and alone for having. Every family thinking of blending should be required to read this, to open their eyes to the reality they need to prepare for, bc forewarned is forearmed
Reviewed in the United States on December 1, 2020
Verified Purchase
I loved that Rebecca talked about her relationship like she talking to her best friend. So honest and raw. I'm brand new into my blended family and reading some stuff and thinking "me too!" throughout the book was awesome. I've been searching for books on blended families and this was the first one that made me think that I wasn't crazy.
Reviewed in the United States on August 8, 2019
Verified Purchase
Agree with a previous review you have to be in the right mindset before reading. It was a great book, brutally honest but sad. I walked away feeling disappointed.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 14, 2020
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so excited to read looks like a great book !
5.0 out of 5 stars
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By Tina Mcpeak on July 14, 2020
so excited to read looks like a great book !
By Tina Mcpeak on July 14, 2020
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Reviewed in the United States on October 22, 2020
Verified Purchase
So raw, so real, so funny!!!
Top reviews from other countries
mysharona
2.0 out of 5 stars
Voyeuristic revenge book lacking in depth or analysis
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 24, 2019Verified Purchase
I was keen to read this as someone who has recently blended and also added an extra baby into the mix. Despite the prevalence of blended families these days, there are few books on the subject, so the author rightly attempts to fill this gap. I found myself identifying with some aspects of what she describes and some of the reflections on the differences between blended families and traditional families, relatable and reassuringly familiar, but deeply lacking in any meaningful analysis. The depth is that of a slightly tipsy conversation with your mate. A lot of whingey questions and not many answers. I found the chapters repetitive, all pretty much the same - just the trigger for her upset each time was a slightly different event. As the author says, her partner appears to be someone very ready to take, a selfish and self centred person. But the author is not particularly different herself. There are frequent examples where she criticises her partner for a particular behaviour, then in the next sentence she also does the exact same thing, without, apparently the self-awareness to even realise she's doing the exact thing she criticises him for. Sometimes she reflects on this, but very frequently she does not, or, says, that's just fine for her to do it. The irony outweighs all reflection. She fully embraces the importance of writing from the heart and one's own experience which results in a good raw read sometimes, but she seems to forget writing is also a craft, that experiences need to be refined into a piece of decent writing. The unfiltered bitterness feels amateurish and unsatisfying. I imagine the author can write a reasonable piece for a magazine, but a book requires another level of wordcraft. The most important thing the author misunderstands, for me, is a mature grasp of a parent's role, which may explain why she finds it so hard to become a step-parent. Being a parent is never, ever, a two way emotional street. Children don't ask to be born, nor ask for the various adults in their lives. Emotionally they owe their parents and any other significant adults - nothing. As a parent it is our role to authentically and reliably give love to children who depend on us and if they choose to give it back, we can know we've done a good job. Respect and good behaviour can be expected, but love cannot. Although the author's partner sounds like a financially selfish person with an inability to take any emotional responsibility, it felt unpleasant and voyeuristic that his texts and words were transcribed word for word. As if she is sharing what were once private intimate photos, the reader is left feeling complicit in her revenge.
Jamie 3166
1.0 out of 5 stars
not the best publication
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 16, 2020Verified Purchase
Not quite what i was expecting. Looking more for a 'handy guide' on how to get being a step dad to awkward children right!!
Caymann
2.0 out of 5 stars
No wonder it didn’t work
Reviewed in Canada on August 18, 2019Verified Purchase
While I appreciate her honesty, I found her very dislikable and selfish and also a hypocrite. I wouldn’t be taking any advice from her. Her writing is all over the place and repetitive. It’s no surprise her relationship didn’t work out. I don’t even want to keep this book on my bookshelf.
2 people found this helpful
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Lauren Nickol
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good read for those about to blend
Reviewed in Canada on June 5, 2019Verified Purchase
I purchased this book right before planning a blend with my partner. I have read many blogs and books about this topic but I have found by far this book is the most realistic and truthful of them all. I could completely relate to all of the feelings she was describing and it also helped my partner and I come up with many areas of discussion to address pre-blend. It helped me feel not alone and like someone really understood how truly difficult it is blending and caring for someone else’s biological children. Warning/spoiler- it’s a bit discouraging and does not have a happy ending. But overall, I’m so happy I read it and it has help to lower my expectations.
Heather Clarke
5.0 out of 5 stars
Highly entertaining!
Reviewed in Canada on June 21, 2019Verified Purchase
I always love Rebecca Eckler's hilarious, honest writing, and this one is as good as her others! Super fascinating dive into the world of blended families.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Highly entertaining!
Reviewed in Canada on June 21, 2019
I always love Rebecca Eckler's hilarious, honest writing, and this one is as good as her others! Super fascinating dive into the world of blended families.
Reviewed in Canada on June 21, 2019
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