NP. That’s not about whether a woman “wears pants,” it’s about whether the man is passive and/or disinterested in his family, vs. if he is active and cares about his family. I have a cousin whose wife prefers to spend all Christmases with her family, and his family “gets” Thanksgiving. My ILs think this is unfair, but the son they raised goes along with it and rarely calls them and is completely disinterested in family dynamics. Whereas if I told my husband I only wanted certain holidays with my family, or I only wanted to vacation with my family and never his, he would laugh and say “Nope.” And he’s extremely mild-mannered. The thing is, the premise that “we only spend time with the ones who are fun” is false. My ILs are super boring and seriously overbearing. But we put up with it because they are still good people, and our kids benefit from knowing all of their extended family members, barring any abuse or toxic dynamics. Being super boring does not mean I would refuse to take the occasional vacation with them. |
| My parents are definitely the cool ones. They have a very young persona and are very active and love to do things with our kids. They are not too involved and never butt in and my husband really likes them. |
PP here (had not checked the thread in a long time). My parents were abusive and neglectful. I had a really difficult childhood but the problems in our family were very hush hush and not acknowledged, plus my parents stayed married, so no one knew. I didn't really understand it until I started having issues as an adult and started to understand how my childhood experiences were messed up. My sister does not even speak to our parents. I maintain a relationship but have a lot of boundaries. I want my kids to have relationships with family outside our immediate family unit, so I suck it up a bit. My DH's family is similar though less extreme. He finds them draining and they don't offer anything in the way of emotional support so we have to be judicious about time with them. I can tell you it's very hard to raise children when your family is more of a burden than a support. Often our kids are more emotionally mature than their grandparents. Its hard. |