Anonymous wrote:OP, you get to have alone time. You should - it will make you better company. And it’s your vacation, too.
You can’t control how they feel about it. So let go of that. They may be fine with it. They may be put off. That’s not on you.
I think it’s reasonable for your DH to establish with his parents that you are an introvert and really need alone time to recharge. So you like your coffe in the AM alone, or you like to take a walk alone, or you’re really lucky king forward to your reading time alone, or all of the above. He should lay the groundwork, and then you keep up the identity.
We have done this successfully with my DH among my very, very social e rendezvous family, who love to share houses and do everything together. Everyone just knows that Pete likes his alone time, needs his alone time. He shows up for big dinners and occasional big outings, but no one bats an eye now when he leaves a party to take a walk for an hour or goes upstairs to read while we are all gabbing in a communal kitchen. They accept what they see as quirk and don’t take it personally. Joint vacations are hard for him but would be torture without time to himself. I’m cool with that. That’s who I married.
Can your DH back you up this way?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have the same sorts of issues and I don't think you can get a break when you're with inlaws. I just suck it up and show up for every breakfast and no alone time. No way could we ever have nuclear family time on a family trip like that. I think that's why most people find them exhausting...
Omg seriously? I will go insane!
It's 5 days... I think you're being unreasonable. We all have to take one for the team and do things outside our comfort zones. DH gave you the trip you wanted.
Can't you just suck it up and tolerate being an active participant for your DH and kids, for 5 days? It's not that big of a deal.
No, I think you're being unreasonable. Who takes a 5-day long vacation and expects everyone to be together every minute? That's not normal.
Anonymous wrote:If you’re going to be a whiny B just stay home. Nobody wants to be around a negative Nancy.
Anonymous wrote:If you’re going to be a whiny B just stay home. Nobody wants to be around a negative Nancy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have the same sorts of issues and I don't think you can get a break when you're with inlaws. I just suck it up and show up for every breakfast and no alone time. No way could we ever have nuclear family time on a family trip like that. I think that's why most people find them exhausting...
Omg seriously? I will go insane!
It's 5 days... I think you're being unreasonable. We all have to take one for the team and do things outside our comfort zones. DH gave you the trip you wanted.
Can't you just suck it up and tolerate being an active participant for your DH and kids, for 5 days? It's not that big of a deal.
No, I think you're being unreasonable. Who takes a 5-day long vacation and expects everyone to be together every minute? That's not normal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have the same sorts of issues and I don't think you can get a break when you're with inlaws. I just suck it up and show up for every breakfast and no alone time. No way could we ever have nuclear family time on a family trip like that. I think that's why most people find them exhausting...
Omg seriously? I will go insane!
It's 5 days... I think you're being unreasonable. We all have to take one for the team and do things outside our comfort zones. DH gave you the trip you wanted.
Can't you just suck it up and tolerate being an active participant for your DH and kids, for 5 days? It's not that big of a deal.
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s fine not to join them for breakfast. Just say you’re not a morning person and need some time to get going. If your MIL can’t accept this, too bad for her. However, it’s not fair to make plans for the day and exclude them. Perhaps you could plan one outing that you know they wouldn’t join, such as a 5 mile bike ride.