Anonymous wrote:Remember boundaries are for your mental health and not to punish others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Particularly if you and spouse are the oldest/first to get married/have kids...
We moved out of state, life is 100000000% better now. No more surprise visits, no more taking DH on fun outings, no more taking my precious kids away from me to visit FIL's new evil spouse. Best of all NO more fights!
Anonymous wrote:Particularly if you and spouse are the oldest/first to get married/have kids...

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Particularly if you and spouse are the oldest/first to get married/have kids...
1. No is a complete sentence.
2. You are not responsible for their feelings. If they are angry, pouty, disappointed or whatever that they don’t get to stay with you unannounced for 8 weeks or whatever that’s their problem.
3. Understand that pushy, rude people hate boundaries. They are selfish and will react. Ignore them.
4. Never give in to manipulation, it only grows the beast.
5. Be mindful of not establishing faux traditions. You travel out on ground hogs day two years in a row and it becomes an expectation into eternity. Nope.
6. Be consistent, training boomers is like training puppies without the cuteness.
Anonymous wrote:Keeping them on an information diet. Only announce decisions about our lives after the fact/decision had already been made, so as not to invite their input. Example: not sharing baby names after said baby is born.

Anonymous wrote:Particularly if you and spouse are the oldest/first to get married/have kids...