Anonymous wrote:Clear communication. Don't assume any intention.
Help them with childcare etc.
When your own kid is doing something wrong, counsel them.
Include their relations - mom, dad etc - in celebrations.
Help them go on date nights.
Help in getting their domestic chores done. ie - pay for a house cleaner or a lawn maintainence guy after taking the input from them.
Don't gossip about them.
Have your own life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never criticize your DC’s partner before or after marriage to anyone unless it is to your own partner confidentially. It will get back to them and poison your relationship with them from that point on.
Yep. My mom was very critical of my husband after the first few years of marriage. It was unfounded and it really damaged our relationship.
Anonymous wrote:Never criticize your DC’s partner before or after marriage to anyone unless it is to your own partner confidentially. It will get back to them and poison your relationship with them from that point on.
Anonymous wrote:Don't lose control.
Don't yell.
Don't call names.
Don't go low.
Anonymous wrote:Never criticize your DC’s partner before or after marriage to anyone unless it is to your own partner confidentially. It will get back to them and poison your relationship with them from that point on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends highly on the culture but I always liked that my MIL treated me like a new friend when we first met; polite and interested in getting to know me, not overbearing, respected boundaries and the fact that her son had a nuclear family. She was warm and kind but didn’t expect that we would immediately have a mother daughter bond or speak to me as if I was her child and provide constructive criticism, unsolicited advice etc.
I view her now as a close friend and I like that relationship dynamic. When we meet up for coffee or she comes over for dinner we talk about life, hobbies, and work. We aren’t in a competition for who is a better wife or mother or who did things “right”. We have lived very different lives but I have the utmost respect for her. I think there needs to be that mutual respect and a desire to really know and care about the other person for the relationship to thrive.
Anonymous wrote:Depends highly on the culture but I always liked that my MIL treated me like a new friend when we first met; polite and interested in getting to know me, not overbearing, respected boundaries and the fact that her son had a nuclear family. She was warm and kind but didn’t expect that we would immediately have a mother daughter bond or speak to me as if I was her child and provide constructive criticism, unsolicited advice etc.
I view her now as a close friend and I like that relationship dynamic. When we meet up for coffee or she comes over for dinner we talk about life, hobbies, and work. We aren’t in a competition for who is a better wife or mother or who did things “right”. We have lived very different lives but I have the utmost respect for her. I think there needs to be that mutual respect and a desire to really know and care about the other person for the relationship to thrive.