Anonymous wrote:I clicked on this thread after going through a couple of pages of the "do you think your husband will divorce you SAHMs?" The divorce statistic was cited a couple of times- first as the generally misunderstood 50% of marriages end in divorce, then later multiple times by those who cited more specific statistics.That is, marrying later, college educated, etc etc the divorce rate in some circles is much more like 20%.
So, then I read this thread, and here's what I'll say, bluntly:
- you are young, and married young
- you have not finished college, and you are not healthy
- your divorce possibilities are higher than average based on those two facts alone.
- so a "friend" after too many drinks tells you your MIL doesn't like you because you are fat and underemployed.
- in-law issues are a contributor to divorces.
Meanwhile:
- you and MIL have a polite relationship and you had no idea she might not like you
- you have no context other than drunken blurting for your MIL's supposed dislike.
Here's my advice:
Live your life. Ignore this info from your supposed friend. Focus on your life, your marriage, your health, your education. Keep your priorities straight and your focus on remaining in a healthy marriage and all the rest of it is just noise that doesn't matter.
If you focus on the negative, you will lose.
Anonymous wrote:I clicked on this thread after going through a couple of pages of the "do you think your husband will divorce you SAHMs?" The divorce statistic was cited a couple of times- first as the generally misunderstood 50% of marriages end in divorce, then later multiple times by those who cited more specific statistics.That is, marrying later, college educated, etc etc the divorce rate in some circles is much more like 20%.
So, then I read this thread, and here's what I'll say, bluntly:
- you are young, and married young
- you have not finished college, and you are not healthy
- your divorce possibilities are higher than average based on those two facts alone.
- so a "friend" after too many drinks tells you your MIL doesn't like you because you are fat and underemployed.
- in-law issues are a contributor to divorces.
Meanwhile:
- you and MIL have a polite relationship and you had no idea she might not like you
- you have no context other than drunken blurting for your MIL's supposed dislike.
Excellent analysis, PP. MIL is the least of OP's problems. Maybe time to pay attention to some of the other stuff?
Here's my advice:
Live your life. Ignore this info from your supposed friend. Focus on your life, your marriage, your health, your education. Keep your priorities straight and your focus on remaining in a healthy marriage and all the rest of it is just noise that doesn't matter.
If you focus on the negative, you will lose.
Anonymous wrote:The main thing you can do is adjust your expectations of your relationship with your MIL way, way down. And now you know not to trust her as a friend.
And I would mention the conversation to DH: "You know, honey, Jane said your mother said x about me. I find it puzzling...I never realized your mom had such a low opinion of me. Or does Jane have something against your mom? It really bothered me, and I'll admit it makes me feel weird about our next visit. Any insight?"
Anonymous wrote:She'll die one of these days. Just hold on to that happy thought.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:keep your head up. your personal story is interesting, but really all MIL think the girls their boys/sons pick are NOT good enough. you will never be good enough for her.
this is true of most mother in laws. when you have a kid she will judge your parenting too. learn to not take it to heart. if it wasn't your job or weight it would be something else.
if she already gets to you like this it will be a long road for you. just learn to ignore the negativity now. I repeat - she will never think you are good enough. most MILs act like this, you are just more in tune and caring about what she says. ignore - repeat.
I really disagree with this. I have seen a lot of great DIL/MIL relationships in my extended family precisely because this is not the case. I doubt my family is somehow magically the only functional one out there.
Anonymous wrote:keep your head up. your personal story is interesting, but really all MIL think the girls their boys/sons pick are NOT good enough. you will never be good enough for her.
this is true of most mother in laws. when you have a kid she will judge your parenting too. learn to not take it to heart. if it wasn't your job or weight it would be something else.
if she already gets to you like this it will be a long road for you. just learn to ignore the negativity now. I repeat - she will never think you are good enough. most MILs act like this, you are just more in tune and caring about what she says. ignore - repeat.