Not the poster you were referring to and still have little kids so no a MIL , but time and again, we see posts by DIL's wanting one set of rules and acts of tolerance for their families and a different set for their DH's. Perhaps this describes you. In any event, this is not a tit-for-tat situation, but a question of whether the poster is taking a less tolerant approach to her inlaws than she would to her own family.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your parents were wanting to visit under the same circumstances would you be fine with your husband telling them they should not?
Not op. PP life is not FAIR. Only children adhere to this immature everything-must-be-tit-for-tat-in-our-families mentality. You seem to pop up with this craziness in every post about in laws. My guess is you are a mil or fil who feel your children must give you exactly the same amount of facetime as the other in laws. No. People are different. Some are wonderful and some are unbearable. There is no "law" that things have to be equal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your parents were wanting to visit under the same circumstances would you be fine with your husband telling them they should not?
Not op. PP life is not FAIR. Only children adhere to this immature everything-must-be-tit-for-tat-in-our-families mentality. You seem to pop up with this craziness in every post about in laws. My guess is you are a mil or fil who feel your children must give you exactly the same amount of facetime as the other in laws. No. People are different. Some are wonderful and some are unbearable. There is no "law" that things have to be equal.
While I agree with you, I think the question you are addressing was meant to point out that her DH should be dealing with this, not her.
Anonymous wrote:If your parents were wanting to visit under the same circumstances would you be fine with your husband telling them they should not?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your parents were wanting to visit under the same circumstances would you be fine with your husband telling them they should not?
Not op. PP life is not FAIR. Only children adhere to this immature everything-must-be-tit-for-tat-in-our-families mentality. You seem to pop up with this craziness in every post about in laws. My guess is you are a mil or fil who feel your children must give you exactly the same amount of facetime as the other in laws. No. People are different. Some are wonderful and some are unbearable. There is no "law" that things have to be equal.
Anonymous wrote:If your parents were wanting to visit under the same circumstances would you be fine with your husband telling them they should not?
This.Anonymous wrote:If your parents were wanting to visit under the same circumstances would you be fine with your husband telling them they should not?
Anonymous wrote:My in-laws, who rarely visit us (we usually go to them, 3,000 miles away) want to visit this fall. They are nice people, and our kids would enjoy the visit. However, DH and I are going through a rough time right now in our relationship, and we don't want the added stress of a 7-day in-law visit now, just as things are slowly getting better between us.
How do we politely decline/postpone? We'd like to just postpone them until spring, but aren't sure what to say, since they almost never visit us. Work excuses won't work, unfortunately.
Any suggestions?