Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because they're family. They raised me and my husband and we're willing to tolerate a little drama. I see people complain on this board as if in-laws are just really persistent and annoying strangers, rather than the people who raised their husbands.
There's annoying and somewhat passive aggressive, and then there's manipulative, controlling, and abusive. Big differences. Be glad you have the first.
Anonymous wrote:My FIL didn't respect my boundary of no photos of me, at all, in the recovery room after a very traumatic 20-hour labor followed by an emergency C. He "snuck" photos--twice. So I had him removed from the room.
Anonymous wrote:Because the blowback is worse.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not really sure what we're talking about. One man's "boundaries" are another man's "shutting people out of our family's lives because I really can't be bothered." Can this particularly firm pro-boundary pp please give an example of a boundary she enforces?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It must be nice to go through life thinking everything is simple and clear-cut.
It's not.
Usually people who have difficulty setting boundaries have interacted during their formative years with hyper-controlling, very strong-willed people who can manipulate and nag everybody until it's less exhausting to do what they want rather than fight.
Typically, everyone gets better at setting boundaries as they grow older and mature. Which means some door-mats learn to say no occasionally, and some strong-willed people get downright abusive, and cross boundaries more often.
Actually setting a boundary is simple and clear-cut. It's just hard.
But it is nice as you surmise. Try it and see.
Anonymous wrote:
It must be nice to go through life thinking everything is simple and clear-cut.
It's not.
Usually people who have difficulty setting boundaries have interacted during their formative years with hyper-controlling, very strong-willed people who can manipulate and nag everybody until it's less exhausting to do what they want rather than fight.
Typically, everyone gets better at setting boundaries as they grow older and mature. Which means some door-mats learn to say no occasionally, and some strong-willed people get downright abusive, and cross boundaries more often.