Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For many years, my Asian in-laws were fairly careful in what they said around me, and I spent little time with them.
At some point, I started having to spend time with them several times a week, and because I kept quiet and kept my smiling poker face on, they got used to me and see me as the token dumb white American. And whoa, did the racist talk come burbling out of them. It's like they're living in 1930 and it's fine to describe in detail their bigotry and talk about how disgusting they find us white, black, and hispanic people. They're so superficially polite and pleasant, but there's so much racism, homophobia, xenophobia, sexism, etc. And they go on and on about how ugly and fat we are and how bad we smell and how we're savages riddled with std's.
I'm white myself but it sounds like your Asian in-laws are not that far off base. Americans are fat, ugly, and riddled with std's. As a general rule. Pretty savage too, on the whole.
Anonymous wrote:I am a middle eastern woman who married into a white Republican family. My dh is amazing and not racist and advocates for open borders. His parents however are staunch Trump and Ted Cruz supporters. Although they have never been outright horrible to me and have been as kind and open hearted as they can, I still feel a distance there that will never be closed. I don't click with my MIL or SIL and although not mean or hostile, they think of me as "the other" and keep to themselves on family outings. The MIL is also very openly anti-immigrant and especially anti-Syrians due to the stuff thats happening over there. I try not to hold it against here because the news we hear every day is bad and I am the only loosely mulsim person she's ever encountered in her life. Her rants about white people being wiped out by immigrants and nationalism and racial purity scare me. Also given the fact that they openly support people like Trump and Cruz...I just can't deal.
I love my DH but I wish his family was very very different.
Anonymous wrote:For many years, my Asian in-laws were fairly careful in what they said around me, and I spent little time with them.
At some point, I started having to spend time with them several times a week, and because I kept quiet and kept my smiling poker face on, they got used to me and see me as the token dumb white American. And whoa, did the racist talk come burbling out of them. It's like they're living in 1930 and it's fine to describe in detail their bigotry and talk about how disgusting they find us white, black, and hispanic people. They're so superficially polite and pleasant, but there's so much racism, homophobia, xenophobia, sexism, etc. And they go on and on about how ugly and fat we are and how bad we smell and how we're savages riddled with std's.
Anonymous wrote:
OP here.
I'm trying not to be too hard on her seeing as she is the mother of my dh. I find her world view very concerning and her fears about whites being the minority in the country while knowing her own son married a non-white is just...I have no idea how to even take it. Her grandchildren will not be white!!
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't have phrased it this way, but I agree with the general sentiment. It appears that op is intolerant of anyone who doesn't share here world view.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a middle eastern woman who married into a white Republican family. My dh is amazing and not racist and advocates for open borders. His parents however are staunch Trump and Ted Cruz supporters. Although they have never been outright horrible to me and have been as kind and open hearted as they can, I still feel a distance there that will never be closed. I don't click with my MIL or SIL and although not mean or hostile, they think of me as "the other" and keep to themselves on family outings. The MIL is also very openly anti-immigrant and especially anti-Syrians due to the stuff thats happening over there. I try not to hold it against here because the news we hear every day is bad and I am the only loosely mulsim person she's ever encountered in her life. Her rants about white people being wiped out by immigrants and nationalism and racial purity scare me. Also given the fact that they openly support people like Trump and Cruz...I just can't deal.
I love my DH but I wish his family was very very different.
Bullshit.
If they were as ugly as you describe, they wouldn't accept you period. You're just mad because they don't drink your koolaid.
I wouldn't have phrased it this way, but I agree with the general sentiment. It appears that op is intolerant of anyone who doesn't share here world view.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a middle eastern woman who married into a white Republican family. My dh is amazing and not racist and advocates for open borders. His parents however are staunch Trump and Ted Cruz supporters. Although they have never been outright horrible to me and have been as kind and open hearted as they can, I still feel a distance there that will never be closed. I don't click with my MIL or SIL and although not mean or hostile, they think of me as "the other" and keep to themselves on family outings. The MIL is also very openly anti-immigrant and especially anti-Syrians due to the stuff thats happening over there. I try not to hold it against here because the news we hear every day is bad and I am the only loosely mulsim person she's ever encountered in her life. Her rants about white people being wiped out by immigrants and nationalism and racial purity scare me. Also given the fact that they openly support people like Trump and Cruz...I just can't deal.
I love my DH but I wish his family was very very different.
Bullshit.
If they were as ugly as you describe, they wouldn't accept you period. You're just mad because they don't drink your koolaid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry, OP. I agree with the PP that you need to think of them as willfully ignorant and stupid. And, in the US culture, you absolutely do NOT marry the family. You marry your spouse and are required to be civil to your ILs but not deferential. Hugs.
Thank you.
So far, I am proud of taking the high road but it hurts. I think my MIL is a lovely woman and very living and giving to other white people. It just hurts to feel discriminated like this.
I'm sorry, but you cannot describe someone as a "lovely woman" and qualify that they are generous only to "white people" in the same sentence. There are many appalling racists and bigots throughout history (leaving aside even slave owners) who were generous to only their race. Maybe we're willing to give our founding fathers a pass in historical context, but in 2016 in the US there is literally no excuse no matter where you are from in this country. The inability to filter biased information from Fox News is not an excuse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry, OP. I agree with the PP that you need to think of them as willfully ignorant and stupid. And, in the US culture, you absolutely do NOT marry the family. You marry your spouse and are required to be civil to your ILs but not deferential. Hugs.
Thank you.
So far, I am proud of taking the high road but it hurts. I think my MIL is a lovely woman and very living and giving to other white people. It just hurts to feel discriminated like this.
Anonymous wrote:I am a middle eastern woman who married into a white Republican family. My dh is amazing and not racist and advocates for open borders. His parents however are staunch Trump and Ted Cruz supporters. Although they have never been outright horrible to me and have been as kind and open hearted as they can, I still feel a distance there that will never be closed. I don't click with my MIL or SIL and although not mean or hostile, they think of me as "the other" and keep to themselves on family outings. The MIL is also very openly anti-immigrant and especially anti-Syrians due to the stuff thats happening over there. I try not to hold it against here because the news we hear every day is bad and I am the only loosely mulsim person she's ever encountered in her life. Her rants about white people being wiped out by immigrants and nationalism and racial purity scare me. Also given the fact that they openly support people like Trump and Cruz...I just can't deal.
I love my DH but I wish his family was very very different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hmmm...rants on racial purity, yuck. What do you say when she does this? i would be PISSED. PISSED. And tell her never to talk like that again in your presence (or, kids, if you have them).
This is a good point. Do you have kids? If not, I would probably divorce. You can't ignore your ILs once you have kids, and they will influence your kids.
I really wish I had chosen a better father/family for my kids.
Not yet. I am honestly scared to think of having kids with them involved. I know my dh would make a wonderful kind father. His parents are kind loving people but their hearts are closed off to the muslim world and anyone who is not white. I've heard them speak ill of mexicans, blacks are of course the worst and even asian people.
I worry about my children being exposed to these conversations at the dinner table. I worry my MIL will try to force them to go to church. DH and I have talked about raising them loosely muslim but immersed in christian/american tradition such as Christmas and Thanksgiving.
Okay, so this is not the same thing, but there are parallels. I am South Indian and dark skinned. My husband is north indian and light-skinned. His parents hated me spot on, from the beginning, because I didn't speak the right language or have the 'ideal' skin color. Whatever. Like you, when they said racist things (and they said it about South Indians, blacks, Hispanics, Asians, everyone - other than north Indians), I'd hold my tongue, never respond with anything but a blank stare, and change the subject. My DH would rant at them but it didn't change things (they just got careful not to say racist stuff in front of him, but they'd say offensive things to me when we were alone). Like you, I was terrified about what this would mean about my kids. Fast forward a decade. For whatever reason, my own two kids look like me, and speak my language fluently. They have taken on my culture (my food, the music I grew up with, my religious leanings) without me shoving it down their throat - I don't emphasize that they take it on. But I don't apologize for who I am and ignored whatever BS the in-laws had to say about it.
Point it - you're their mom. Believe it or not you 'trump' everyone else. Your beliefs - whether you love your heritage or shy away from it - is what they will be exposed to far more than whatever toxicity comes from their grandparents. Mom and dad are the ocean, the rest of the world is just little raindrops.