It would be sad to miss out on a great spouse because you don’t like their family of origin. Good people come from all types of families. |
Then make your choice, by all means. Own your choice, live your choice, and stop complaining. Don't complain about a KNOWN challenge; a challenge you accepted thrice over by continuing to date, getting engaged, and getting married. |
| Inlaws weigh in more than I realized while dating. I'm not certain I would have chosen a different spouse but I'm not certain I wouldn't have. KWIM? |
I agree. My husband's family came with some known issues. I made my choice and I owned it. I am very happy but I know I wouldn't be if I was spending all of my time weaseling around crying about how life was unfair. Turns out that once I started looking at my inlaws differently they are actually pretty okay. There are some things I ignore and there are some things I grin and bear but I am sure they can say the same things about me. And before anyone says but mine are racist or mine are ... well, I could say the same things. My husband and I now have a multi-racial family, and we make it work with his family. Half the time when I read people saying that their inlaws are mean and abusive, I actually think that the OP or person writing set themselves up for it. So like the PP says, choose your challenges and then own them. |
Not that you shouldn't have been close with your Inlaws but there is less than zero chance they were choosing you over their blood relative. |
This. 100% I knew my husband has ADHD when I started dating him. Guess what I don't complain about? Seek strategies, yes. Seek out support, yes. Complain? Nope. |
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Op I thought my inlaws were great as well until after the wedding and then MIL turned into a crazy person. I would wait and see, I've so many stories where the wedding or a birth changes things however yes I would also be jealous of that as well.
When I married I thought I would be close with his family but things didn't turn out that way. I am really disappointed that I ended up with the in-laws that I have. I envisaged lots of family holidays together in harmony, I got coldness and ice, ignored on some occasions, it's really not that much fun and I've come to actively dislike them. It's a shame. Your sister is very lucky. |
I didn't have multiple suitors and multiple offers to choose from. Are you guys all like supermodels or something? |
Psst...some of us were content to not get married. GASP! |
| Op here. If I had dozens of suitors to pick from sure. I fell in love with who I did and his family turned out to be horrific. My sisters fiancé is her first and only boyfriend. She hot the jackpot the first time. |
You accepted bad treatment, you got bad treatment. You accepted a boyfriend who looked the other way, he turned into a fiancee, then a husband who ignored the problem. It's not bad luck, it's bad choices. Accept ownership of your live and slide into the driver's seat. |
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My MIL was literally in jail when DH and I got engaged. No, you don't always also pick the family. We are on the same page in terms of how we interact with both sets of in-laws.
OP, be happy for your sister.
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| My in laws are very micro aggressive. They made fun of my son's name, brought their own food to my baby shower. Complete whackos. |
| I had no idea how dysfunctional my in-laws were when I got married. That all came out later. |
| My in-laws were great before DH and I got engaged. Once we shared news of our engagement, things went a little crazy. All the family dysfunction came out, seemingly out of nowhere - it really took me by surprise. Took about 3-4 years to learn how to draw some very firm boundaries, and now we have a great (distanced but pleasant) relationship. OP, this is what you need to go for. |