Anonymous wrote:OP again. The past few years when MIL would come up for her birthday, she only came by herself and occasionally with her husband. This party would be different because the entire family would be coming.
Anonymous wrote:
So, I found a 5 day yoga retreat at the same time as the birthday festivities about 3 hours away. Would it be unforgivably rude of me to be "on retreat" instead of hosting my in-laws that weekend? The weekend could go on as planned with everyone, except me. So if they celebrate with pizza on paper plates, I won't see it or care.
My husband has already given me his blessing, but I am concerned that my in-laws would be very hurt. Should I do it?
Anonymous wrote:I think when you get married you STOP differentiating between "blood" and "non blood" relatives, especially as it relates to your spouse's parents - who gave him life and ostensibly raise him to be the man you fell in love with.
Throw. The. Party. Find a happy medium - not pizza on dollar store plates and not surf & turf either. Give her this day and go on retreat the following week.
Anonymous wrote:If the rest of the family is okay with pizza and paper plates, why can’t you go along with it? That’s the easiest option instead of skipping the birthday altogether.
Also, I think it’s fine to tell everyone that if you host, MIL is welcome to stay at your house as usual but all other relatives need to find a hotel.
Skipping the birthday altogether seems... welll mean and passive aggressive.