Anonymous wrote:If she didn't say anything to you directly, ignore.
Anonymous wrote:NP. To be fair to OP, my husband would not see the problem either with telling about dinner with my parents because it was in the context of letting HIS mom know that any day was free because of it.
Not a drama queen, he just doesn't think two steps ahead like I do. He sees it as passing along neutral information.
Anonymous wrote:I can't understand why your DH told you about this. I swear most of the problem with in-laws is from husbands communicating to their wives that their parents (usually the mom) is upset about something trivial and communicating to their parents (usually the mom) that the wife is upset about something trivial. Your DH should learn to say, on the spot, that there is nothing wrong with you scheduling time with your parents because he wasn't available and he wants to be there to see his parents too, what day next week works? And then say nothing to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't understand why your DH told you about this. I swear most of the problem with in-laws is from husbands communicating to their wives that their parents (usually the mom) is upset about something trivial and communicating to their parents (usually the mom) that the wife is upset about something trivial. Your DH should learn to say, on the spot, that there is nothing wrong with you scheduling time with your parents because he wasn't available and he wants to be there to see his parents too, what day next week works? And then say nothing to you.
So true and comes down to lacking the emotional intelligence/willingness to do emotional labor to evaluate what he should do about it, so passing it off to his wife.
+1. Why tell them about dinner with your parents and why tell you that she was offended. He is a low-key drama queen if he is leaving you to deal with this. If he had done his job as husband/son better, he'd have seen this coming.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't understand why your DH told you about this. I swear most of the problem with in-laws is from husbands communicating to their wives that their parents (usually the mom) is upset about something trivial and communicating to their parents (usually the mom) that the wife is upset about something trivial. Your DH should learn to say, on the spot, that there is nothing wrong with you scheduling time with your parents because he wasn't available and he wants to be there to see his parents too, what day next week works? And then say nothing to you.
So true and comes down to lacking the emotional intelligence/willingness to do emotional labor to evaluate what he should do about it, so passing it off to his wife.
Anonymous wrote:I can't understand why your DH told you about this. I swear most of the problem with in-laws is from husbands communicating to their wives that their parents (usually the mom) is upset about something trivial and communicating to their parents (usually the mom) that the wife is upset about something trivial. Your DH should learn to say, on the spot, that there is nothing wrong with you scheduling time with your parents because he wasn't available and he wants to be there to see his parents too, what day next week works? And then say nothing to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You say nothing, DH talks to his parents
She expressed to him that she feels I personally slighted her because she had shown interest and I ignored it. I guess in a way I did? I did choose what interested me most, in light of dh not being home. I feel it’s either on me to ignore or smooth over?
Anonymous wrote:You say nothing, DH talks to his parents