Topic : Getting Along With Your In-Laws

Number of Replies: 2432
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Created on : Thursday, July 07, 2005, 09:13:41 am
Author : dataimport
Love them, tolerate them, or despise them? Dealing with the in-laws can be stressful to a marriage. Share your stories and coping strategies.

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July 26, 2008, 2:38 pm PDT

money & in-laws= bad news

Quote From: lucky35

Hi, my husband and I have been married for almost 5 years and we recently moved from Alabama to Texas. When we lived in Alabama, my father-in-law dogged my husband all the time, but now that we have moved to Texas, he doggs me. He blames me for my husband not finishing college yet and he acts like I should never say one word to my husband about any financial matters or anything whatsoever! My husband is having a hard time keeping a job and I'm blamed for that too, because he says I put too much pressure on my husband regarding money, bills, and marital responsibilties.

 

Since the move to Texas one year ago, I have had two arguements, over the telephone, with my father-in-law. He constantly "loans" my husband money, but then expects me to help pay it back. He blames me for him loaning my husband money, also. He acts like if my husband wasn't married to me, then he wouldn't have to loan my husband any money, yet my father-in-law has been given my husband money and financial support long before he even married me.

 

I just need some help in how to deal with my father-in-law. I do not want his constant interfering into our marriage run me off or cause me to leave my husband. Please give me some advice on how to deal with a medling in-law. I want my marriage to last forever, but sometimes I feel like my father-in-law has an agenda and that is to get his son back to Alabama with him. Please help!! Thank you!!!

Your husband is allowing his father to meddle in your marriage! To preserve your marriage, your husband MUST create and enforce healthy boundaries with his father. That doesn’t mean that he has to argue/fight with his father; it simply means that he speak up for his wife. For example, if his father says something to him about you that is disrespectful or uncalled for, your husband can simply say, “dad, please don’t disrespect my wife. We appreciate your help over the years, and we want a healthy relationship with you…”
Do you know why your husband doesn’t speak up for you in regards to his father? Why does he allow his father to have so much knowledge about your life, especially your financial situation? For the well being of your marriage, it is best to not rely on financial assistance from your FIL in the future. When you owe that man NOTHING, you will feel a great sense of freedom!
 
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July 26, 2008, 8:26 pm PDT

MIL and her "Perfect Sons"

My mother-in-law thinks that her sons have never done any wrong in their lives.  Anytime someone's child acts up in public, she always says, "My boys never acted like that."  Now my niece is a teen.  I admit teens can be difficult at times.  Yet my mother-in-law always says, "My boys never would have said or done what she has done."  As a DIL, I'm thinking, if one of my kids does something wrong in front of her, is she going to be judgemental and tell everybody like she does when my niece does anything wrong.  I don't know what kind of dream world she is living in, but my husband can't even believe how perfect she seems to think he was growing up.  I love my children and think they are special, but I know that they are not angels.
 
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July 27, 2008, 6:48 am PDT

Perfect children, perfect mother

Quote From: yoshi31

My mother-in-law thinks that her sons have never done any wrong in their lives.  Anytime someone's child acts up in public, she always says, "My boys never acted like that."  Now my niece is a teen.  I admit teens can be difficult at times.  Yet my mother-in-law always says, "My boys never would have said or done what she has done."  As a DIL, I'm thinking, if one of my kids does something wrong in front of her, is she going to be judgemental and tell everybody like she does when my niece does anything wrong.  I don't know what kind of dream world she is living in, but my husband can't even believe how perfect she seems to think he was growing up.  I love my children and think they are special, but I know that they are not angels.

I think that has less that they're covinced their own child was perfect, more w/ the older woman believing they could do a better job parenting that child than the current mother.  It's more about "if I were that child's mother, they wouldn't act like that." 

I hear the same toned comments from varios older women, even just overheard comments in stores, restuarants, etc.   This seems to be quite a common attitude.  I guess they've raisd children, have a lifetime of experience, etc.  (I once read a quote that said the irony of old age is that you finally have all the answers but nobody want to hear them! lol)  It's a shame, she could use her wisdom to set an example of tolerance toward this teenager's angst.....

And, yes, she will be saying the same thing about your kids!  LOL!  Just realize & expect that; and if she's not being truly mean, or inappropriately vocal, maybe chalk it up to aging and roll your eyes.  And I guess we should try to remember for ourselves to keep a loving, humble attitude as our families grow versus turning bitter with age.

 
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July 27, 2008, 9:14 pm PDT

Help me with my Mother-In-Law from Hell

I have been married to my husband for 15 years, and for 15 years I have put up with my Mother-in-Law. When we first got married I tried to be as nice as i could be with her. I would take her to lunch, go shopping with her, talk to her,etc. But as the years went by all she would do is complain about everything and everybody...so I stopped taking her places.

She is now 79 years old and is worse than ever. She has 3 sons and 1 daughter and all of them have dissowned her except for my husband. No one visits her or calls her. It has gotten so bad that we won't answer the phone because SHE might be calling. We can't move away (because my husband feels that someone has to look out for her). She lives less than a mile from us. I have so many stories to tell of just how evil she is but there isn't enough space. I wish I could be on the Dr. Phil show with her. We need a mediator to sort all of this out, because as of today we had a big argument over the phone and now I am not talking to her. Somebody please help me!!!

 

 
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July 30, 2008, 12:58 am PDT

Terrible problems with Daughter-in-law

Hi everybody,

This is my first posting here and I'm looking for advice.  I have one son and he is married and has two young children, ages 3 and 20 months.  They have been married almost 4 years.  My husband passed away on 8-4-07 and this has been a year from hell for me.  With the one year anniversary coming up, I'm a little over emotional right now and the problems with my DIL aren't helping any.  My son and his family live in the same town as me yet I have only seen my grandchildren on 4 different occasions this year, each time for less than 1 hour.  I am not allowed to go to their house (my son says they don't want to have to clean up for me).  My son works a hectic and varied work schedule that often includes nights so sometimes he goes long periods of time without spending much time with his own family.  That complicates things, too. 

 

Without going into a terribly long history, my DIL is mad at me because I told my son that I was upset when I walked into my husband's hospice room in the week before he died and she was sitting with her arm around his neck stroking his hair.  It bothered me.  She never bothered to tell him she loved him until he was dying and then she becomes the ever-caring DIL.  My husband and I were happily married for 27 years and NO woman was allowed to stroke his hair regardless of his condition!  My DIL and I had a confrontational phone call this past June and she brought this up and told me that I had no right to feel that way.  She said "He was dying and I was comforting him.  At least I was there."  (Implying that I wasn't.)  I would never have told her about this and I'm sorry I told my son.  I should have known better.

 

She also says that I blame her for never getting to see the children.  She admitted on the phone that she won't bring them to me by herself because she feels uncomfortable around me.  I told her it's my son's fault as well but apparently that doesn't satisfy her.  During that horrible phone call, I apologized to her for ever hurting her feelings and begged for her forgiveness 7 times.  I said we needed to move forward and put this all behind us and work towards being a happy family.  As Dr. Phil says, I was trying to be the hero and stand up and accept responsibility.  She never accepted my apology or gave me forgiveness.  She ended the conversation by telling me "to go to hell" and hanging up on me.

 

There's more but I won't go into anything else.  I honestly think she enjoys having the upper hand in this.  I think she enjoyed having me "beg" her forgiveness and not giving it.  She hasn't spoken to me since.  Not even at the granddaughter's birthday party this past weekend.  My son says she doesn't want to see or speak to me.  Which also means, I don't get to see the children.  That's the power she has.  She has the power to keep the kids away from me because my son is often working weekends and evenings.

 

I am at a loss to figure out how to solve this. I love my grandchildren and it hurts me that I can't see them.  It hurts that she hates me so much and I honestly don't know what I've done to make her so mad...if I've done anything at all.

 

Any ideas?

 
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July 31, 2008, 7:51 am PDT

Missing our son

Our son and daughter-in-law will soon be coming to visit.  A little background...they were married two years ago.  Our daughter-in-law is a very controlling individual and would prefer our son to be an orphan.  Unfortunately for her, he has a very loving and involved family.  Our son has been in the army for 5 years and will be completing his contract next year.  He returned from Afghanistan in May and to surprise him, we sent him his classic car, which we had stored for him for the past 5 years, by transport.  Instead of being appreciative, he called and complained/yelled at us that we had not sent the title with the car so that his wife could have all the transfer arrangements made before he got home.  The car was titled to us.  We intended to send the title once the car arrived safely.  This conversation took place the 2nd night back from Afghanistan.  Then, he proceeded to yell at us for not calling his wife enough while he was gone.  Never mind that she had not called us once to report on him or that we had called her, sent emails, cards, packages, etc...What would possess a wife to bring those items to the forefront on your second night back.  We had planned to be there to greet him but she never called to say when he was arriving and we are several states away.  This has been an ongoing battle since they met.  We do not complain about her behavior and have never brought up any of her behaviors.  We greet her with open arms.  In fact, before he left, she sent us an email saying we were the best in-laws in the world, yet when he is gone, she does not call, does not take our calls, does not write, and finds something to complain about when he returns.  We try to call about every 2 weeks when he is home but they do not take our calls but he will return the call when he is away from her and the house.  When they were married 2 years ago, we had had a situation which created tension at the wedding.  We smiled and tried to be everything he wanted us to be, and have never referred back to the situation, but he constantly says, "you ruined my wedding", while we were the ones not invited to be in any wedding pictures and we were the ones that were not included in before wedding activities.  His grandmother got so mad that she "let him have it" at the airport prior to our departure and he has not called her since.  We have asked to visit but they always have excuses.  We have invited them home.  Last summer, they were here just before his deployment and he had such a great time, he left me a note in the sheets like he used to before he was married.  He is scheduled to re-deploy in Feb. and they have agreed to come home next month.  If fact, he asked us to drive 2 hours to pick them up at the airport, which he knows we would go to the ends of the earth for him.  We are not sure what to do about the situation while they are here but we are tired of hearing the criticism.  She is going to run out of things to complain about because we have less and less communication with him.  She is grasping at straws.  When ever he brings it up, we tell him that life is too short to dwell on the past.   After they were married, she informed me that I was the "know-it-all of the north" and that my son would constantly say, "my mom says this, my mom does it this way..." unbeknown to me so I know she is jealous of the relationship we have with our son.  We never in our wildest dreams would have imagined this happening to our relationship as were were VERY close and had a very respectful relation ship with both of our sons.  We want to be a part of our son's life.  We didn't think that marriage meant either/or.  We have wonderful relationships with my parents as well as my husbands parents.  He had role models.  We don't think he is happy but is trying ti keep the peace at home.  What would possess a wife to bring up these things after he husband has just returned from overseas.  We suspect some of his behavior could be related to his experiences overseas.  What do we do? 
 
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July 31, 2008, 11:51 am PDT

Year from hell

Quote From: lsgenie

Hi everybody,

This is my first posting here and I'm looking for advice.  I have one son and he is married and has two young children, ages 3 and 20 months.  They have been married almost 4 years.  My husband passed away on 8-4-07 and this has been a year from hell for me.  With the one year anniversary coming up, I'm a little over emotional right now and the problems with my DIL aren't helping any.  My son and his family live in the same town as me yet I have only seen my grandchildren on 4 different occasions this year, each time for less than 1 hour.  I am not allowed to go to their house (my son says they don't want to have to clean up for me).  My son works a hectic and varied work schedule that often includes nights so sometimes he goes long periods of time without spending much time with his own family.  That complicates things, too. 

 

Without going into a terribly long history, my DIL is mad at me because I told my son that I was upset when I walked into my husband's hospice room in the week before he died and she was sitting with her arm around his neck stroking his hair.  It bothered me.  She never bothered to tell him she loved him until he was dying and then she becomes the ever-caring DIL.  My husband and I were happily married for 27 years and NO woman was allowed to stroke his hair regardless of his condition!  My DIL and I had a confrontational phone call this past June and she brought this up and told me that I had no right to feel that way.  She said "He was dying and I was comforting him.  At least I was there."  (Implying that I wasn't.)  I would never have told her about this and I'm sorry I told my son.  I should have known better.

 

She also says that I blame her for never getting to see the children.  She admitted on the phone that she won't bring them to me by herself because she feels uncomfortable around me.  I told her it's my son's fault as well but apparently that doesn't satisfy her.  During that horrible phone call, I apologized to her for ever hurting her feelings and begged for her forgiveness 7 times.  I said we needed to move forward and put this all behind us and work towards being a happy family.  As Dr. Phil says, I was trying to be the hero and stand up and accept responsibility.  She never accepted my apology or gave me forgiveness.  She ended the conversation by telling me "to go to hell" and hanging up on me.

 

There's more but I won't go into anything else.  I honestly think she enjoys having the upper hand in this.  I think she enjoyed having me "beg" her forgiveness and not giving it.  She hasn't spoken to me since.  Not even at the granddaughter's birthday party this past weekend.  My son says she doesn't want to see or speak to me.  Which also means, I don't get to see the children.  That's the power she has.  She has the power to keep the kids away from me because my son is often working weekends and evenings.

 

I am at a loss to figure out how to solve this. I love my grandchildren and it hurts me that I can't see them.  It hurts that she hates me so much and I honestly don't know what I've done to make her so mad...if I've done anything at all.

 

Any ideas?

It is understandable that you where shocked and hurt when you walked into your husband’s room to find your DIL stroking his hair; but, you say that she never told him that she loved/cared for him before that; but did that really matter in that moment? He wasn’t well, he needed and deserved comfort. If your DIL did nothing, that would have been the wrong thing to do, also; so it sounds like she couldn’t win in your eyes no matter what she did. She is probably very hurt that you were offended by her actions. In her eyes, she was simply comforting a sick person. The ‘thanks’ she gets is you being mad about it, instead of glad that someone was there. So when she said that at least she was there, you have to try to not take it personally and think this, isn’t it good that someone was there?  Her comforting actions are nothing to be jealous about. She wasn’t trying to take him from you.
My advice for you regarding your DIL probably won’t be easy for you to follow, but it might make a huge difference in your life. I know because my Mil and I have had some very rough times in the past, and now we get along great- better then I ever thought we could, all because she apologized and I knew that she meant it. My advice for you is this: write a short letter addressed only to your DIL. Make it short and to the point- words on paper seem to have more meaning then over the phone. All you need to say is something like this, “I’m sorry for my actions/words towards you over this past year. It has been a difficult year for me and I hope that you can forgive me. I truly love you, my son and your precious children. I want you to know that I appreciate that you are a good wife and mother to them. Can we please put the past behind us and start over, creating a healthy, happy relationship? That would mean the world to me.” Using the word “appreciate” somewhere in the letter will make a huge difference. We all want to hear that we are appreciated. I wish you the best.
 
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August 3, 2008, 12:10 pm PDT

Name the Game

Quote From: freyler

Hey everybody,

I've been with my partner since i was 16, i'm now 23 and we share a 20 month old son together.

My future inlaws, although live in the u.s.a and we are currently in Australia, are very controlling. I have never felt comfortable around them and they have always disaproved of me. They are very well off people, and their life revollves around spending money. They fund my 24 year old partners education and because of this they hold it over his head, and he das to do everything they say or they threaten to cut it off and he still has 2.5 years left to go.

On a recent trip to see them i put in 100 percent effort to get along wtih them, and on day 5 they totally cracked up because they felt i was disrespectfull for spending the nights with my father and not them. I am a compromising person and i despretly wanted to get along with them but telling me i'm disrespecful for going to my dads at night because he works all day and only gets home late at night, and i he wanted to see his grandchild, and i wanted to see him. This is not a compromise, it doesn't matter that i spend from 8am to 7pm with them, they always expect more.

They then started to use my partners education against ME!! Saying that i will benefit from his education and that i owe them!

this is all in a nut shell of course, so many things have been said aobut me, and i spend nearly every day crying on this holiday becuase they refuse to just be adults and get along.  THen i get stuck in the middle becuase my partners wants us to all get along and he expects me to break my back for them just so everybody will be happy, but i'm not wiling to do that when it invovles me sacrifising time with my dad, whom i only see every few years.

I was only letting them see my son,  because only two months ago they decideed to ackowlege him, before that they didn't accept my child, and never spoke about him. NOw they expect me to be greatful that they have decided to play some interest in him.

Gosh i could wrote a novel over all this.

This is all in a nut shell of course, there is soo much more between the lines.

Thanks for letting me get it all out, would love to hear about other inlaw problems.

Fiona

My first husband's mother thought  she was a witch and could cast spells. His father was mellow but ridgid individual who just dealt with whatever came along. I have seen many "guilt trips" put on people and here is how you deal with it. In the case of the financial help for education. It is a gift (unless they said it was a loan). Write them a thank you note. Explain that you will be visiting both families equally because you love them both. Then if they pull out the "guilt trip," rephrase the statement. So, are you saying that because you are helping John/Jane with tuition that we owe you ALL of our time? (Wait for an answer). Then say, we appreciate your help, but we love you all both regardless of the financial contribution. Our visits are about love and respect. A true gift does not imply obligation.

My father's mother, the dowager, wanted us for dinner EVERY Sunday. My mother cut the trips to everyother Sunday so that our family had it's own independence and traditions. Some people are master's of the guilt trip. My husband and I are on the same frequency. My mother (89) lives with us. I will not let her make his life miserable or talk him into doing things that are unreasonable. Even at 89 she has some chores here and some things to do. Sometimes she does the guilt trip on me, but she taught me too well!

Be polite, be firm, be calm assertive. Then make your plans. (the person to set the limits with your in-laws should be your spouse.)

 
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August 3, 2008, 12:23 pm PDT

Narcissistic Personality Disorder

     Hello,

I am wondering if there has ever been a show on NPD. My family is having a terrible time because one in law has this and has tried their best to rip the family apart. This person is highly manipulative, has attacked each family member for one thing or another and then lies to the others about it, is jealous of all the other kids (all full grown 40-50 yr old adults now)  as if one of the actual kids instead of an in-law, throws fits, compulsively lies and then blames everyone else in the family for all the problems they cause, people getting angry, etc.  The behavior I am talking about is absolutely outrageous behavior. No respect for our elderly parents to the point of what looks like verbal elder abuse. Anyone out there have this kind of thing going on??
 
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hopeful
August 3, 2008, 12:31 pm PDT

Question

Quote From: truman4

Our son and daughter-in-law will soon be coming to visit.  A little background...they were married two years ago.  Our daughter-in-law is a very controlling individual and would prefer our son to be an orphan.  Unfortunately for her, he has a very loving and involved family.  Our son has been in the army for 5 years and will be completing his contract next year.  He returned from Afghanistan in May and to surprise him, we sent him his classic car, which we had stored for him for the past 5 years, by transport.  Instead of being appreciative, he called and complained/yelled at us that we had not sent the title with the car so that his wife could have all the transfer arrangements made before he got home.  The car was titled to us.  We intended to send the title once the car arrived safely.  This conversation took place the 2nd night back from Afghanistan.  Then, he proceeded to yell at us for not calling his wife enough while he was gone.  Never mind that she had not called us once to report on him or that we had called her, sent emails, cards, packages, etc...What would possess a wife to bring those items to the forefront on your second night back.  We had planned to be there to greet him but she never called to say when he was arriving and we are several states away.  This has been an ongoing battle since they met.  We do not complain about her behavior and have never brought up any of her behaviors.  We greet her with open arms.  In fact, before he left, she sent us an email saying we were the best in-laws in the world, yet when he is gone, she does not call, does not take our calls, does not write, and finds something to complain about when he returns.  We try to call about every 2 weeks when he is home but they do not take our calls but he will return the call when he is away from her and the house.  When they were married 2 years ago, we had had a situation which created tension at the wedding.  We smiled and tried to be everything he wanted us to be, and have never referred back to the situation, but he constantly says, "you ruined my wedding", while we were the ones not invited to be in any wedding pictures and we were the ones that were not included in before wedding activities.  His grandmother got so mad that she "let him have it" at the airport prior to our departure and he has not called her since.  We have asked to visit but they always have excuses.  We have invited them home.  Last summer, they were here just before his deployment and he had such a great time, he left me a note in the sheets like he used to before he was married.  He is scheduled to re-deploy in Feb. and they have agreed to come home next month.  If fact, he asked us to drive 2 hours to pick them up at the airport, which he knows we would go to the ends of the earth for him.  We are not sure what to do about the situation while they are here but we are tired of hearing the criticism.  She is going to run out of things to complain about because we have less and less communication with him.  She is grasping at straws.  When ever he brings it up, we tell him that life is too short to dwell on the past.   After they were married, she informed me that I was the "know-it-all of the north" and that my son would constantly say, "my mom says this, my mom does it this way..." unbeknown to me so I know she is jealous of the relationship we have with our son.  We never in our wildest dreams would have imagined this happening to our relationship as were were VERY close and had a very respectful relation ship with both of our sons.  We want to be a part of our son's life.  We didn't think that marriage meant either/or.  We have wonderful relationships with my parents as well as my husbands parents.  He had role models.  We don't think he is happy but is trying ti keep the peace at home.  What would possess a wife to bring up these things after he husband has just returned from overseas.  We suspect some of his behavior could be related to his experiences overseas.  What do we do? 

After reading your letter, I think I may know what is happening. Is it possible that the DIL has low self-esteem and comments from her husband like (hypothetical), " this spaghetti isn't the way Mom makes it," "Mom kept a cleaner house than you do."  Perhaps it is not you, but your son who may be the problem. The daughter-in-law may resent competing with you even if it is only through your son. Also the stress of separation can be pretty intense. Perhaps offer to keep the kids for a week to let her get a break and some good rest. It is hard to know the whole thing, but your son may not realize wives need positive feedback for the difficult job they have. Find ways to compliment her on what she does, wears, cooks or whatever. Calm assertive, friendly, think before you speak. Also, wives who manage alone while husband is away become more independent, which returning husbands sometimes resent creating strife.

Good luck! M.

 

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