Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I try to be, but I know I'm not. I don't do anything specifically crazy, but I feel it is my husband's responsibility to communicate with his relatives. I'm sure they think I'm reserved, but I deal with my family and that keeps me pretty busy.
This is me. I think it's his job to communicate with his family, and he does a crappy job, but I have my own family to deal with.
Anonymous wrote:You're better than I am 01:14. I was a good DIL but not the DIL they wished they had. They were hoping for a surrogate daughter (they had 2 boys) but I didn't accept that role. I picked up right away they were clingy, dramatic and slyly manipulative. I was respectful and open to spending time with them but I kept my distance emotionally and that was very irksome to them. I had enough drama in my own family growing up. It took me a long time to break away from it and I wasn't willing to participate in someone else's drama. I also refused to be the communicator between DH and them. It's his job to manage the relationship with his parents, not me. DH and I were married 15 years when his mother died and his father died 2 years later. As DH has reflected on his parents and their relationship with me, he's acknowledged that I was not wrong in my perceptions of his parents. It was difficult for him to see because of his own issues with them. So, yes, I was a good DIL but not the one my ILs wished they had.
Anonymous wrote:I am probably not as warm as they wish I was. My husband grew up in a family that's very close. He talks to his mom almost daily, and they have a big family call each weekend. I grew up raised by nannies and haven't had any contact with my mother in 15 years.
Any time they call and ask to come visit, I say yes even if work is hectic or I've got a lot going on. I make sure we have foods they like, make reservations at restaurants they like, that they get alone time with DH.
If I'm going to their area for work I haul the kids along so they can spend time with them. I make sure we get cards/thoughtful gifts out for mothers/fathers day, their birthdays, christmas. I try to get together with them for either thanksgiving or christmas.
To be honest, I'm not really sure HOW to be a better daughter in law. I feel like I SHOULD do better or more somehow, but I'm not sure what exactly to do.
Anonymous wrote:I am in some ways, but not others. I encourage my DH to invite his parents and sister and niece to visit us, more than he would normally invite them (which is almost never). But, gah, I can barely stand them while they are here. His mother is the most nervous person in the world, and is anxious about everything, so she literally stands the whole time and hovers over all of us - mostly the baby now - saying "Careful!!!!" three hundred times an hour. Plus she chain smokes so she reeks. Any conversation is really grating, because basically anything we say she responds with, "OHMYGOD! That sounds awful!" My FIL is less grating, but he's completely sedentary so he just sits in a chair, which is okay, and he really loves our LO, so that's nice, but most of his comments to my DH are disparaging or mildly verbally abusive so that's not really something I want around our child much. So, once they are here, I can't wait for them to be gone after an hour or so.
I certainly hope that I will have a better relationship with my children's spouses, if that ever happens. But I hope I am better company!
Anonymous wrote:I am not a good in-law, but I am not a bad one either. During the early years of my marriage, my MIL tried very hard to establish her dominance. She manipulated and lied to ensure that my family of origin always got the short shrift in terms of time spent with us. After about 6 years, I called her out hard over Thanksgiving dinner and just let her have it with both barrels. I make the plans so I simply don't plan to see her. My husband is welcome to call her and arrange to meet her for breakfast or something. He doesn't so why should his relationship with her be more important to me than it is to him. Likewise, why should my daughter's relationship with his mother be more of a priority to me than my husband. If he wants them to have a closer relationship, it's up to him to facilitate it, not me. I ensure that she is included at the obligatory times -- Thanksgiving, Christmas, her birthday, and husband and daughter's birthdays. Other than that, it is my husband's business whether or not he sees her.