Anonymous wrote:Early 30s and no kids. Married ~3 years. Spouse for our entire marriage has had some serious boundary/control issues with parents which was not great and we ended up seeing a marriage counselor.
To this day, If I ever say “no I’d rather not”, “maybe we can do this instead”, “X came up so maybe we can reschedule” spouse immediately goes into fight or flight mode and becomes argumentative. They talk to parents once a week and we see them once a month or so it’s not like I’m trying to estrange anyone, it’s just they have this need to ensure whatever their parents want happens without any variance or protest. They are never like this with my parents or other friends we socialize with. Many times these arguments last for days.
We are starting with another marriage counselor now but had anyone dealt with this? Does it get better?
Anonymous wrote:I agree with the responders who are telling you to terminate this marriage before having children. It truly will get so much worse.
BTDT.
My ex began to skew very closely to his parents after marriage. Before marriage this was well masked.
His brother exhibited the same during his relationship & marriage. My ex-SIL and I compared notes after our divorces (we were good girls during our marriages and didn't air our respective laundry to each other).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Two things, one it is really helpful for discussions - validate their perspective, some people just cannot hear your point of view until they feel thy have been heard. But you also need to be clearer yourself. Saying ‘I’d rather not’ is not ‘No’. Maybe your spouse think you are okay with plan.
I hear what you’re saying, but even when I very explicitly say “no” there’s still conflict. If I say it down the road they’ll say “why did you change your mind”, if I say it early on they’ll say “why do you hate my parents”, “why is this the hill to die on and can’t we do it their way” , etc.
I feel like livestock walking a very narrow electric fence-lined path. ANY variance from “the correct path” I get shocked and we argue for days. It is emotionally draining and suffocating to feel like you can’t express your preferences.
Anonymous wrote:Divorce. Seriously. It’s not worth it. If you have kids, it will get one million times worse.
Anonymous wrote:Two things, one it is really helpful for discussions - validate their perspective, some people just cannot hear your point of view until they feel thy have been heard. But you also need to be clearer yourself. Saying ‘I’d rather not’ is not ‘No’. Maybe your spouse think you are okay with plan.