Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take a genuine interest. Listen. Ask questions about their family of origin, their friends, their work. Remember their favorite foods, activities, people, interests.
My local ILs of 2 decades have never taken the time to ask me about myself, yet I could map their family trees, have heard all of their stories and could win a trivia game about them. They are entirely self focused and know nothing about me but think that we’re close.
Many people see questions about family as nosiness and casual comment on something can rub a nerve wrong way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take a genuine interest. Listen. Ask questions about their family of origin, their friends, their work. Remember their favorite foods, activities, people, interests.
My local ILs of 2 decades have never taken the time to ask me about myself, yet I could map their family trees, have heard all of their stories and could win a trivia game about them. They are entirely self focused and know nothing about me but think that we’re close.
Many people see questions about family as nosiness and casual comment on something can rub a nerve wrong way.
Anonymous wrote:Take a genuine interest. Listen. Ask questions about their family of origin, their friends, their work. Remember their favorite foods, activities, people, interests.
My local ILs of 2 decades have never taken the time to ask me about myself, yet I could map their family trees, have heard all of their stories and could win a trivia game about them. They are entirely self focused and know nothing about me but think that we’re close.
Anonymous wrote:When I hear proud claims of, "treating them like family" it makes me skeptic because once your child committed to them, they became his family hence yours too. Family. Not "like family".
Anonymous wrote:Things that my wonderful MIL have done for me, the DIL
- included me in family pictures at weddings
- given me family recipes
‐ invited me out to dinners if they were in town, even if my BF now DH wasn't available
Now that we're married with kids, MIL
- got an apartment near our house and helped take care of the babies for a year
- gave me family jewelry
- includes me in discussions about their estate planning
- lots of casual communication, texts, facetime
- cards for my birthday and our anniversary
- gives us lots of space, noncritical but always available to help
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The biggest source of contention with my in-laws is when they have expectations for how, when, and where we spend time together as a family and don’t consult me to see if that is how I want to spend my time, energy, and money. It feels so disrespectful to not be consulted, particularly because I run the household, the calendar, the kids activities, and pay all the bills. Don’t assume that just because you asked your adult child that they have discussed it with their spouse. Don’t make the couple feel guilty if they say no to a request. Your DIL or SIL may have different values and prioritize their time and commitments differently than you do. Accept them as they are, not how you want them to be.
This is 100% a husband issue. I'm not judging, as we've been to therapy over how my DH's family treats me. In any case, I've learned to hold a very firm line. If you get on the same page with your DH and he manages his parents appropriately, this problem will go away.
I've had to direct my ILs to coordinate with their son directly. If we decline to do something, I know they'll respect the message more if it comes from him. Their family also has horrible communication skills, and I'm not dealing with lousy dynamics that I didn't create.
Anonymous wrote:The biggest source of contention with my in-laws is when they have expectations for how, when, and where we spend time together as a family and don’t consult me to see if that is how I want to spend my time, energy, and money. It feels so disrespectful to not be consulted, particularly because I run the household, the calendar, the kids activities, and pay all the bills. Don’t assume that just because you asked your adult child that they have discussed it with their spouse. Don’t make the couple feel guilty if they say no to a request. Your DIL or SIL may have different values and prioritize their time and commitments differently than you do. Accept them as they are, not how you want them to be.
Anonymous wrote:Treat them the same as your child. If your son gets a $100 birthday gift, so should wife.
And yes, treat them as equals but hopefully you treat your kids as equals too. I had one parent that still treated me like a child in my 20s and it strained our relationship.
Anonymous wrote:
Loving the partner is a gift to your DC, both families, and yourself as well.