Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand how you are here if DH is introverted. Mom, Dad: you’ve known my whole life I’m an introvert. Now I’m part of a family of introverts. To have a good visit, we’re going to need some downtime. Please dont holler at the kids when they are in the bathroom. Let’s structure the day like this: [fill
In the blank].
Obviously DCUM are terrible but your DH has a lifetime of practice here and should get you all
Cover.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've seen this thread before.
No, you don't need to suffer because your in-laws are insensitive to your needs and that of your family's. It's rude of them.
You need to stop the visits for a while, tell them you can't sit in a circle and converse all the time. It's not happening. They can be as mad as they want, and gripe and (hopefully) leave. And I mean you, because it looks like the real problem, as usual, is your husband, for not sticking up for his wife and kids.
I think this is literally
A copy and paste. I remember the bathroom detail.
Or maybe a Carolyn hax
Column
Anonymous wrote:This isn’t an extrovert vs introvert thing. By framing it this way you are ignoring that the grandparents are being rude and obnoxious.
Demanding 24/7 constant interaction and then rudely scolding anyone who takes a break is not extroversion! It’s anxiety driven or narcissism or just demanding rude behavior. I’m an extrovert and this would drive me nuts too!
1. Do not encourage , enable or give power to this crap. Entertain and visit with them but if they balk when anyone goes to the bathroom or needs to do something, tell them point blank to stop it. If you scurry back over to them, they learn this works.
2. Do not worry for one second that they will be upset or offended for you calling them out on their behavior. They are being rude and obnoxious! A reoccurring pattern on this board is people wanting to find a polite, soft way to get jerks to stop being jerks. It doesn’t work this way people!
Anonymous wrote:It’s so draining, I get it. Just play the game right back. They have no right to act like you are “wrong,” so just don’t accept it. Do what you want and if they complain, direct them to DH.
Anonymous wrote:I've seen this thread before.
No, you don't need to suffer because your in-laws are insensitive to your needs and that of your family's. It's rude of them.
You need to stop the visits for a while, tell them you can't sit in a circle and converse all the time. It's not happening. They can be as mad as they want, and gripe and (hopefully) leave. And I mean you, because it looks like the real problem, as usual, is your husband, for not sticking up for his wife and kids.
Anonymous wrote:How long are these visits, OP, and how frequent are they? You probably just need to suck it up and not expect everybody to do things your way. That’s what good hosts do.
Anonymous wrote:I know that during family visits, I need to be “on” more. I’m an introvert and I know that during visits, I need to extend and give all I can. So I’m already doing all I can do. I’m already going above and beyond, “sucking it up,” etc.
DH and our kids are introverts, too. We try to get ahead of this dynamic by planning lots of activities when ILs are visiting. Visits can be stifling, as ILs expect full attention 24/7, and even reading a magazine or book is “rude”. My kids are old enough to notice, want time to themselves, and are very uncomfortable when ILs are around.
ILs are able-bodied and have their full mental faculties. This has been a longstanding dynamic, it’s just now at a point where it’s not just DH and me noticing it, the kids are starting to dread their visits, too. They simply don’t want to sit around in a circle and “chat” all the time. They want to be able to move about the house (our own house!) freely, without getting accused of “disappearing” every time they dare to go to their rooms to play or read or relax for a bit. My oldest nearly snapped when they loudly asked “WHERE WERE YOU” for the 500th time, and she was simply in the bathroom. She’s getting to be the age where she doesn’t want to discuss that she was in the bathroom.
Any advice?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is this obsession with reading magazines and being "rude"? There have been threads about this before.
I think it’s a generational thing. My ILs are like this, and so is my mom, to some extent. But my mom would only see it as rude for a one-day or one-meal visit, not a visit of multiple days. My dad is an introvert, thank goodness. But my ILs expect focused conversation from sunup until sundown.
What generation is still reading magazines? That part doesn't make a lot of sense.
Silent, Boomer, and GenX. I switched all my books and magazines subscriptions to digital and read them on my ipad but I have friends that like to buy magazines sometimes while in the supermarket or traveling.
So how old is OP that she wants to read her magazines in peace?
It’s a coping strategy to get a blessed five minute break from constant chatter. Are you slowly realizing people need a break from you?