Anonymous wrote:I went through this, too. My husband ended up leaving, and later found out his parents blamed me. I literally had no part in it, it was all him saying they abused him and setting boundaries. It’s a shame. Be careful with this.
Anonymous wrote:Enjoy the peace and let it go. We have almost no relationship with my ILs. DH resents having to send them both money every month (he is divorced and didn't save enough for retirement), and he doesn't want to see or talk to them much. My kids barely notice. They have a close relationship with my parents because we get along, and they plan and cover family vacations with my siblings and their kids, and they stay with them from time to time when DH and I want to get away.
Anonymous wrote:Late January wasn't that long ago, of course your kids don't miss their grandparents. You don't need to see parents/grandparents often to have a good relationship with them, OP. A lot of families see grandparents infrequently, due to personal preference, being busy, or long distance. My parents and in-laws are in Europe. We see them once a year at most. It's fine!
That's before we get into questions of whether everyone likes each other and whether their behavior is stressful. BTW, "original trauma"? Unless you're really talking about serious abuse, I think that's a ridiculous wording. It's OK to just say that his parents demanding/critical/whatever they are, and accept that fewer contacts make your nuclear family feel a little less put-upon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's weird is that it took therapy to "discover" his trauma is from his parents and the solution is to pull back completely.
There are lots of reasons to pull back from parents, but you typically are aware of them.
Either he was bizarrely clueless, or his therapist is pushing him into a more drastic step than necessary.
And this comes from someone who has limited involvement with his parents—I've known them for 44 years, needing some space from them wasn't a revelation...
I entirely agree. It dawned on me as a young teen that my parents weren't normal people. I had to suffer through the teen years with them, and didn't distance myself until I was 32-33, but believe me, OP, no therapist had to tell me that my original trauma was stress triggered by my parents! And my kids, growing up in a normal home, sensed their grandparents were off when they were very little, preschool to elementary.
So either this is manufactured, or your husband is pretty dumb.
Anonymous wrote:
Yes. Husbands choice to pull back. Also his family.
Haven't seen inlaws since Oct of last year. He speaks to them more so on the phone.
Our children are adults so that kinda' made things easier.
Anonymous wrote:DH discovered in therapy that his main source of stress and “original trauma” is/was his parents. He’s been gradually pulling back, and I’ve noticed a sort of calm envelop our home. It’s also really strange at the same time. We haven’t seen them since late January. I keep feeling like I should ask, will we ever see your parents again? but I know it’s not my place. Strangely, our kids don’t even seem to miss them. They haven’t even asked about them. Could they sense something was off with them, too? Something I chose to ignore? If I’m being honest, I’m loving the peace. But, it does feel so, so, strange.
Anyone else have this type of “relationship” with your parents or ILs? How do you manage these feelings? What is it like when you inevitably see them after these long breaks? I’m thinking it will feel so fake and forced once we finally do. How do you cope?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's weird is that it took therapy to "discover" his trauma is from his parents and the solution is to pull back completely.
There are lots of reasons to pull back from parents, but you typically are aware of them.
Either he was bizarrely clueless, or his therapist is pushing him into a more drastic step than necessary.
And this comes from someone who has limited involvement with his parents—I've known them for 44 years, needing some space from them wasn't a revelation...
I entirely agree. It dawned on me as a young teen that my parents weren't normal people. I had to suffer through the teen years with them, and didn't distance myself until I was 32-33, but believe me, OP, no therapist had to tell me that my original trauma was stress triggered by my parents! And my kids, growing up in a normal home, sensed their grandparents were off when they were very little, preschool to elementary.
So either this is manufactured, or your husband is pretty dumb.