Anonymous wrote:Easy fix to this: Don't go.
Let him visit his family on his own next time.
If he doesn't like it, explain that you don't enjoy those trips because of the way he behaves. If he can only enjoy the trips home by acting the way he acts, then fine, he can go alone.
Period. End of discussion. Problem solved. [/quot
I do this too. I stopped going to his families house four years ago. The best thing I ever did. He even takes the kids with him.
Pure joy while they are gone.
Anonymous wrote:My husband totally regresses too. We get nothing done, no adult conversations. He lapses into how he acted as a teenager, just works and studies while his mom dotes on him. It's pathetic.
And when they visit us he disappears as well! He response is, oh, now there's more people to do the household stuff, bye!
Again, pathetic and immature. She's really done a number on him. Meanwhile he never learned how to fix things, run a household, pay bills, join a sports team, tidy up stuff into the hamper, or even what a dipstick is to check the car oil! I used to think it was because he was big city European. But now I know it's because his mom made him be one-dimensional: book smart. [/quot
Omg we are married to the same man. I'm so sorry for us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op again - now that I have a minute... DH drifts into a very negative cycle - starts talking about how bad out kids are (3 and 5) out loud, I front of them. Mostly picking on the 3 yr old. 3 yr old is not the best human on the planet, but he's pretty average for 3. DH does it bc ILs aren't around kids and they get flustered and ask - out loud - what's wrong with our kids. They like the kids best immobile and zombied in front of tv (then they go on and on about how they wish we'd leave them here for a week). DH will be negative about DC - damn those free museums; they stink. Etc. All this stuff that just isn't true. Just lots of negativity. And snark ones towards me - to his mom "mom, DW can't possibly eat at that restaurant. It's a chain. She's sooo snobby." (This when I vetoed mcdonalds bc we ate it for lunch the last two days in a row) all the non-stop negativity really pushes my buttons.
And he's not like this AT ALL at home???
So bizarre!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think people have really weird expectations of how things should be when they get married. Like you and your spouse start a completely new life, and it's you and only you from now on.
But that's not realistic, and I think pretty wrong. You get married understanding and accepting that the family is expanding and growing, and you are sharing your with your spouse - but you're not starting anew. Your spouse isn't going to change and you should not expect them to change just because you get married. Their family of origin is still a big part of their life. While the focus may change, you don't abandon that "old" part of yourself.
Some of you have some really bizarre conceptions of how your spouses should change their birth family, just because you get married. When you get married to someone, you embrace and accept people for who they are, including the "baggage" (like in laws). If that's how things always are, you can't expect someone to completely change.
Agreed but this only works if both sides think the same. Usually not, and the only person to get lecture with this is the one that has enough and vents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone who hates their spouse and calls them an ass and an asshole is a pretty disrespectful spouse.
I can't imagine my DH saying he hated me and that I acted like an ass and ruined his vacation because he didn't like how I was with my parents.
A really disrespectful way to speak about your spouse.
Please, my husband and I are super happy and have a great marriage and I've said to him "you're being an ass, you know that?" You and your spouse always tiptoe around each other and call it respect?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is part of the reason I stopped planning to spend time with my MIL. I plan the obligatory events. Thanksgiving, Christmas, birthdays. Beyond that I don't make any plans. If my husband wants to spend time with her, he can arrange it. Every now and then he will announce that "we" need to spend more time with his mom. Internally, I think, "why so we can watch the game show channel together and eat meals together without speaking to one another?" Out loud I say, "You are so right!" And then I do nothing.
+100000
OMG. We share the same MIL![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think people have really weird expectations of how things should be when they get married. Like you and your spouse start a completely new life, and it's you and only you from now on.
But that's not realistic, and I think pretty wrong. You get married understanding and accepting that the family is expanding and growing, and you are sharing your with your spouse - but you're not starting anew. Your spouse isn't going to change and you should not expect them to change just because you get married. Their family of origin is still a big part of their life. While the focus may change, you don't abandon that "old" part of yourself.
Some of you have some really bizarre conceptions of how your spouses should change their birth family, just because you get married. When you get married to someone, you embrace and accept people for who they are, including the "baggage" (like in laws). If that's how things always are, you can't expect someone to completely change.
Agreed but this only works if both sides think the same. Usually not, and the only person to get lecture with this is the one that has enough and vents.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone who hates their spouse and calls them an ass and an asshole is a pretty disrespectful spouse.
I can't imagine my DH saying he hated me and that I acted like an ass and ruined his vacation because he didn't like how I was with my parents.
A really disrespectful way to speak about your spouse.
Anonymous wrote:This is part of the reason I stopped planning to spend time with my MIL. I plan the obligatory events. Thanksgiving, Christmas, birthdays. Beyond that I don't make any plans. If my husband wants to spend time with her, he can arrange it. Every now and then he will announce that "we" need to spend more time with his mom. Internally, I think, "why so we can watch the game show channel together and eat meals together without speaking to one another?" Out loud I say, "You are so right!" And then I do nothing.
Anonymous wrote:I think people have really weird expectations of how things should be when they get married. Like you and your spouse start a completely new life, and it's you and only you from now on.
But that's not realistic, and I think pretty wrong. You get married understanding and accepting that the family is expanding and growing, and you are sharing your with your spouse - but you're not starting anew. Your spouse isn't going to change and you should not expect them to change just because you get married. Their family of origin is still a big part of their life. While the focus may change, you don't abandon that "old" part of yourself.
Some of you have some really bizarre conceptions of how your spouses should change their birth family, just because you get married. When you get married to someone, you embrace and accept people for who they are, including the "baggage" (like in laws). If that's how things always are, you can't expect someone to completely change.
Anonymous wrote:Op again - now that I have a minute... DH drifts into a very negative cycle - starts talking about how bad out kids are (3 and 5) out loud, I front of them. Mostly picking on the 3 yr old. 3 yr old is not the best human on the planet, but he's pretty average for 3. DH does it bc ILs aren't around kids and they get flustered and ask - out loud - what's wrong with our kids. They like the kids best immobile and zombied in front of tv (then they go on and on about how they wish we'd leave them here for a week). DH will be negative about DC - damn those free museums; they stink. Etc. All this stuff that just isn't true. Just lots of negativity. And snark ones towards me - to his mom "mom, DW can't possibly eat at that restaurant. It's a chain. She's sooo snobby." (This when I vetoed mcdonalds bc we ate it for lunch the last two days in a row) all the non-stop negativity really pushes my buttons.