
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


You’ve had the conversations. You’ve explained it properly.
So why do you keep ending up back in the exact same place?
If you’re listening to this and thinking “this is exactly what keeps happening,” you don’t have to stay stuck in it. You can book a Stepmum Clarity Call with me here.
Or, if you’re ready for a more structured way to get back in control of how this is affecting you, you can find the Back in Control programme here.
A stepmum recently said: “We’ve talked about this so many times. He listens, things improve… and then we’re right back where we started.”
If that feels familiar, this isn’t about you failing to communicate.
It’s about the pattern you’re both inside.
Because in stepfamily dynamics, insight and good conversations don’t always create lasting change. You can say it clearly, calmly, and in a way that lands — and still find yourself pulled back into the same dynamic the moment pressure hits.
A message from the ex.
A shift in plans.
A child needing something.
And suddenly, everything resets.
What this often points to is not a communication issue, but a Position Gap — where your role, influence, and place in the system aren’t holding consistently when it matters most.
From there, many stepmums move into what I call Always Adjusting — thinking more, softening more, carrying more — trying to stabilise something that isn’t structurally steady.
This is where the Influence Gap shows up:
high impact, low leverage.
And over time, that’s what becomes exhausting.
This episode will help you understand why these patterns repeat, why they don’t resolve on their own, and what actually needs to shift for things to feel different in a stepfamily system.
What You’ll Learn
If you’re a stepmum who:
This episode will help you make sense of what’s actually happening.
If this episode resonated, make sure you’re following Stepmum Space so you don’t miss the next one.
And if you know another stepmum who might be quietly going through this, send it to her — these patterns are far more common than most people realise.
Support the show
By Katie SouthYou’ve had the conversations. You’ve explained it properly.
So why do you keep ending up back in the exact same place?
If you’re listening to this and thinking “this is exactly what keeps happening,” you don’t have to stay stuck in it. You can book a Stepmum Clarity Call with me here.
Or, if you’re ready for a more structured way to get back in control of how this is affecting you, you can find the Back in Control programme here.
A stepmum recently said: “We’ve talked about this so many times. He listens, things improve… and then we’re right back where we started.”
If that feels familiar, this isn’t about you failing to communicate.
It’s about the pattern you’re both inside.
Because in stepfamily dynamics, insight and good conversations don’t always create lasting change. You can say it clearly, calmly, and in a way that lands — and still find yourself pulled back into the same dynamic the moment pressure hits.
A message from the ex.
A shift in plans.
A child needing something.
And suddenly, everything resets.
What this often points to is not a communication issue, but a Position Gap — where your role, influence, and place in the system aren’t holding consistently when it matters most.
From there, many stepmums move into what I call Always Adjusting — thinking more, softening more, carrying more — trying to stabilise something that isn’t structurally steady.
This is where the Influence Gap shows up:
high impact, low leverage.
And over time, that’s what becomes exhausting.
This episode will help you understand why these patterns repeat, why they don’t resolve on their own, and what actually needs to shift for things to feel different in a stepfamily system.
What You’ll Learn
If you’re a stepmum who:
This episode will help you make sense of what’s actually happening.
If this episode resonated, make sure you’re following Stepmum Space so you don’t miss the next one.
And if you know another stepmum who might be quietly going through this, send it to her — these patterns are far more common than most people realise.
Support the show