| *Yawn*. You sound really dramatic. |
Quit trying to provoke people and get a life. |
| Think about how sad yout kids will be if you damage the relationship with their grandparents. |
What nonsense. OP has never said anything about damaging her children's relationship with their grandparents. She is only concerned about their safety and her ILs pawning her kids off to their daughter who is a known druggie is SICK. Children don't need to witness such crap. |
Not nearly as sad as you are writing this dumb, guilt-tripping post. Shoo! Be gone! Adults are talking. |
Probably as sad as they will be if OP leaves them in her ILs care and they let their crackhead aunt babysit. |
I don't see how refusing to supply an addict with money to kill herself damages the relationship with the grandparents. If anything, OP is the only voice of reason here. The enablers are slowly but surely helping to speed up SIL's death. |
I don't have any advice, OP, because I thankfully don't have to deal with these issues. But, if I were you I would make clear to your husband - now - that you are not OK with subsidizing his parents when they run out of money because they are feeding it to your SIL. Reiterate this whenever appropriate. It looks like their plan, such as it is, is to present him (and you) with a fiat accompli - they are out of money, it doesn't matter how it got that way, and you need to help them so [insert dire consequence] doesn't happen. If he won't tell them now that isn't going to happen, you at least need to make it very clear to him that you are not OK with spending family assets on this, and you certainly aren't going to cash out stock for them. Then, when it happens (and it will), you have a long history of this position, so he can't pretend he never knew you felt this way. |
OP you can't re-focus his guilt towards a program? If the parents are worried about what will happen to your SIL after they die, presumably going to a program will help your DH be more prepared. |
Yes, I was wondering the same thing - trying ot refocus him on why going to a program for relatives of addicts. DH, you agree what your parents are doing isn't working, right? So why not just at least go check out things that might work? It's not about tough love or hitting bottom or other silly phrases from the 80s. It's about developing strategies that help you, help us, help your parents deal with the reality. What are our real options here? TBH, OP, I wonder if you might benefit from attending, if DH won't? It might give you some tools and tricks and language and framing for your own interactions with your husband, who appears enmeshed in the dysfunction. |
Not the OP but I disagree with this suggestion. I don't see how it would benefit either of them. Let the druggie's parents deal with the addict. Addiction is, unlike cancer or a horrific accident, entirely preventable. The SIL could have avoided becoming a burden. She doesn't need her brother and his wife going to a program to learn about HER addiction. It's her problem and her problem only. What a bunch of codependents on this thread. |
That's crazy. The grandparents can have a perfectly fine relationship even after OP refuses to provide support for an addict. Using the kids would be a blackmail tactic. Do you think that's right? Only someone who has/had an addict relative can possibly understand how hard this situation is. I watched my parents throw away thousands of dollars to keep my brother out of jail. He'd never admit he had a problem until he was in trouble and then he'd cry and beg for help to get into a rehab program. He'd complete it and celebrate with a drink. My parents are in their 60s and have a 30-something adult child living with them because they just enable, enable, enable. He has no license and has to rely on them or Uber for rides. He has no credit card, so their credit card is attached to his Uber account. My mom made a passing comment when I redoing my home about not turning an extra guest room into my office because when they were gone, it would be my responsibility to care for my brother. I told her that was not happening under any circumstances. I'm the only one in my family who calls him out on his addiction and doesn't enable him. There's zero scenarios I can think of where I'd let him live with me. It took a lot of therapy for me to realize that I matter and putting myself first doesn't mean that I care about others less. |
+1 I attended Al-Anon and found it very helpful and was frustrated for years that my mother wouldn't go. I finally had to look at her as if she were an alcoholic and let go of wanting her to try Al-Anon. It was never going to happen and accepting that did improve my relationship with her (although YMMV). OP, the fact is that you are the relative of an addict and attending a group like that might help you deal with the fact that your husband is a straight-up co-dependent who is enmeshed with his parents. Sorry you have to deal with this. Good luck. |
Beg to differ. Fawning over addicts happens in all cultures and among all races. |
Oh, FFS. Going to Al-Anon to equip oneself is the exact opposite of being co-dependent. You are so ignorant. |