Anonymous wrote:OP here. Husband is Hispanic. SIL does not appear on Facetime calls or any other phone calls. She is around, but she is not present on the screen and will just call out a Hello when I/my parents say Hello to her directly. There is literally no way to get to know her. Even when we are together, she asks no questions, does not respond to questions other than one word answers, etc. The fact that she communicated that she is uncomfortable in our town is stunning given her typical quiet nature.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is likely your family, and not your town or neighborhood, that make your sister in law feel uncomfortable. I am Asian and I feel very uncomfortable being around my husband’s white supremes family that I have come to realize early on are prejudice against all non-white races. I have dated other white men and never felt this way around their families. Yes, I do regret marrying into this family and I wouldn’t be surprised if your sister in law feels the same way. Mine was a shotgun wedding.
If you really do care about your sister in law’s feelings, then you would do whatever you can to make her feel comfortable visiting you in Virginia. You would never speak down about any non-white races with her present. You would never suggest your brother visit without her. Doing so may give assumptions that your family is ashamed for her to visit you.
Thank you for your insight. I am not sure what to do to make her comfortable? I mean, these are bare minimum expectations - but to be clear, we don't listen to Fox News, we don't listen to right-wing radio, we all abhor Trump, my husband is not a White person, my children are not White, and everyone openly supports social justice movements and efforts with both their time, their money, and their jobs (I work in the social justice field, as does my Mom). These alone do not make us anti-racist, but they do mean that we are aware of some of the issues, are trying to educate ourselves, and trying to be better and to raise our children better.
Anonymous wrote:Is she asking for your consent for them never to visit your parents? Or is she just telling you how she feels? Rather than look for a "solution," I'd ask whether there are things that you or your parents are doing that are making her feel like an outsider (either ask her, or ask your brother) that you could change. And then listen, without being defensive or rushing to justify your behavior. If there's really nothing you are doing, then I'd think that they could visit sometimes, but that most visits would be either in California or in a "neutral" location.
Anonymous wrote:It is likely your family, and not your town or neighborhood, that make your sister in law feel uncomfortable. I am Asian and I feel very uncomfortable being around my husband’s white supremes family that I have come to realize early on are prejudice against all non-white races. I have dated other white men and never felt this way around their families. Yes, I do regret marrying into this family and I wouldn’t be surprised if your sister in law feels the same way. Mine was a shotgun wedding.
If you really do care about your sister in law’s feelings, then you would do whatever you can to make her feel comfortable visiting you in Virginia. You would never speak down about any non-white races with her present. You would never suggest your brother visit without her. Doing so may give assumptions that your family is ashamed for her to visit you.