Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn't think about it as much as I should have.
+2
+1,000
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn't think about it as much as I should have.
+1. I didn't think about them at all. Knew he had parents but somehow they didn't matter. If I was reliving my life again I would be looking much more closely at the family
Me too. Also, it's one thing for these nutty people to be your in-laws. When they become your children's grandparents, it's a whole new ball game. I did not think about that at all and really regret it.
This. His family is tearing us apart. Had I known DH was this tied to his Mommy and afraid of her as a grown man, I'd have thought twice. That and I should have been a bitch from Day One with my MIL to eliminate a power struggle with her. If I'd have put her in her place and not been so focused on making friends with her, perhaps the resulting estrangement would have allowed DH and I to mature as an independent married couple.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We dated for 2.5 years before getting engaged and then were together for another year before marriage. After about a year, we started joining family events as a couple. We had 2.5 years of family events to gauge what our soon-to-be-inlaws were like, so we went into the marriage knowing what the status quo would be. Both sides have issues, but we deal with both sets of inlaws as a family unit and we prioritize our own nuclear family. To make things easier, we discuss and then the spouse that is related to the inlaws handles the communication of our family priorities to the extended family. But we do get along with both sides well.
Do you have kids?
Anonymous wrote:Oh my goodness. This thread is making me sad. I love, love, love my in-laws. My MIL is a role model for me in many ways--she is sharp, loving but not at all overbearing, fun, and very, very funny. My BILs and SILs are all good people, too, and one SIL is now a close friend.
I probably would have married DH anyway but honestly, his family was a huge selling point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn't think about it as much as I should have.
+2
+1,000
Same
Agree.
Me too. Also a lot of their family issues/history were kept from me until we had been married for some time. Things like depression, suicide, Physical/emotional, and drug and alcohol abuse. Had I known all of this before the marriage it would have shed light on some of DH's behaviors that didn't seem like such a big deal, but now are becoming problematic. Had I known the history, more red flags would've been raised early on.
Plus a million.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you got married, how much did you really think about marrying into your spouse's family?
Were you happy about joining your spouse's family? Or did you just think that you can be married to your spouse without having to deal with his/her family?
Not enough. I thought it would be an issue because her family lived very far away (thousands of miles) and we only saw them 2 or 3 times in 13 years.... but.... what I learned is you can take the wife out of the family but you can't take the family out of the wife... she could not get past some of her childhood experiences... remained angry with her mother and her boyfriends and projected that anger onto the nearest man (me). Where the spouse comes from is very important. They are a product of their childhood. I lean towards the thought that families should be "matched" i.e. equal in many ways.... (traditions, moral attitudes, income, etc.) just makes understanding each other easier.
Anonymous wrote:When you got married, how much did you really think about marrying into your spouse's family?
Were you happy about joining your spouse's family? Or did you just think that you can be married to your spouse without having to deal with his/her family?
Anonymous wrote:We dated for 2.5 years before getting engaged and then were together for another year before marriage. After about a year, we started joining family events as a couple. We had 2.5 years of family events to gauge what our soon-to-be-inlaws were like, so we went into the marriage knowing what the status quo would be. Both sides have issues, but we deal with both sets of inlaws as a family unit and we prioritize our own nuclear family. To make things easier, we discuss and then the spouse that is related to the inlaws handles the communication of our family priorities to the extended family. But we do get along with both sides well.