What I Wish I Knew as a New Stepmom
(and How Painting Helped Me Learn It)
When Nothing Seems to Be Working
Do you ever feel like no matter what you do in your role as a stepmom, you're fumbling through unfamiliar territory? Like you're trying to follow an invisible script that changes daily?
I’ve been there too.
Despite reading books, taking parenting classes, and even going to therapy, I kept asking myself: What am I doing wrong?
Turns out, all those so-called “failures” were really lessons in disguise. I didn’t know what I didn’t know. And every misstep was showing me a different way not to stepparent. Funny how shifting your mindset can make all the difference.
The Messy Middle: Learning Through Mistakes
Recently, I started playing with watercolor painting. Let me tell you, my first pieces were far from frame-worthy. My grandkids made joyful little finger paintings, while I sat there feeling clumsy and frustrated.
That feeling? It brought me right back to the early days of being a stepmom. I often felt out of place, unsure of my role, and constantly questioning whether I belonged.
A painting teacher once told me, “You have to go through the ugly stage before you find the beauty.” At the time, I laughed. But the more I practiced, the more I saw the picture take shape. And the more I showed up for my family—flawed, messy, still learning—the more my place in our blended family became clear.
Why We Expect Perfection Too Soon
In both art and stepparenting, we often expect to “get it right” from the start. But life doesn’t work that way. Mastery comes from showing up again and again, through the doubts and the mess.
With 35 years of stepmom experience under my belt, I can tell you: the learning never really ends. Even as an empty nester in retirement, I’m still discovering new layers of what it means to love, grow, and redefine my role.
From Failing to Finding Your Way
What if we stopped seeing failures as flaws and started seeing them as stepping stones?
Many artists, inventors, and changemakers credit their greatest insights to what didn’t work. So why not apply that same grace to our relationships?
Instead of hiding from our mistakes, we can learn from them. Instead of waiting for perfection, we can embrace progress. One brushstroke, one moment, one breath at a time.
Your Stepfamily Masterpiece Is Still in Progress
To all the stepmoms (and stepdads) out there: pick up your brush. Keep painting. Keep showing up. You don’t need a finished product to be proud of your work.
Every misstep is part of the process. Every hard moment holds the potential for transformation.
So the next time you feel like you’ve failed, ask yourself:
- What did I learn?
- What can I try differently?
- How am I growing through this?
Your masterpiece is unfolding—beautiful, messy, and uniquely yours.
Ready to Keep Growing?
If today’s blog resonated with you—if you’ve ever felt like you’re learning through trial and error, wondering if you're doing it "right"—you’re not alone. And you don’t have to figure it all out by yourself.
That’s why I created the Stepmom Resource Library—a free collection of tools, tips, and guides designed to support you through every messy, beautiful, evolving stage of stepmom life.
Inside the library, you’ll find:
- Expert guidance from a certified stepmom coach (that’s me!) with over 30 years of lived experience.
- Practical strategies for setting boundaries, managing stress, improving communication, and navigating stepfamily conflict.
- Worksheets, checklists, and templates you won’t find anywhere else—because sometimes you need more than just good advice.
- A supportive space filled with other stepmoms who get it—no judgment, just real talk and encouragement.
Whether you’re just starting your journey or have been in the trenches for years, the Resource Library is here to help you thrive—not just survive.
Join for free today:
https://stepmomcoach.com/SMLibrary
Because you're building something that matters—and you deserve support along the way.
I feel these tips are great for stepmoms and all moms! It’s never going to be perfect. We are going to make mistakes. As long as we learn from them and use them to fuel us forward. Building relationships with stepkids takes time, persistence, connection and lots of patience. Depending on the ages of the kids when you come into their lives, they want to know you love them, you’ll be a consistent force in their lives and that you’ll listen to them. It takes time to develop those relationships.
Exactly. Stepmoms are going to make mistakes. It’s nice if you’re in an environment that is accepting and understands the intent it’s a lot easier. I say jump in and make some mistakes – if you do, you’ll have more successes at the same time. Thanks.
failures may show you what doesn’t work…so true…sometimes we need to know what is not working to discover what will work.
So true Sharona. When everything is going well in our lives, we don’t feel there is a need to make the changes that could help us improve. Yet when we fail, only then will we seek alternative solutions.
Yes! We high-achieving women (in particular) believe that if we are not instantly successful in doing new things that we are a failure. Which is not only ludicrous but trains us to not take risks. When we don’t take risks, we don’t put ourselves up for promotion. We don’t ask for raises. We don’t go for the big stretch — and in the end (as in “the end of our lives”) we suffer. It’s not just regret but in the the comforts of retirement at much lower levels of Social Security benefits and pensions, to name a few. So yes — please stop expecting to achieve perfections (which doesn’t exist anyway) and “practice.” And thanks for letting me vent!
Jackie, you bring great points around risk taking, especially for women. When we don’t up ourselves out there, it costs us big time in terms of financial gains, like those you mentioned above.
I was raised with the attitude “look pretty and don’t talk.” How is this going to help me move in this world, to raise step/kids and provide for my family in case something happens to my husband? I love the feeling of security that my husband provides, and I am well capable of doing the same for him because we are willing to take risks and not be afraid of failing.
Thanks for those points you brought up.