Anonymous wrote:A peacemaker is going to make me sick over the long run.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Let them play their games. If you completely ignore it, they will be the ones that will be all in a huff and you'll be at peace. When your DH says what did you do to dad? Respond with i did not do anything wrong. I will not discuss with you. And just repeat over and over and over again. Your DH will get frustrated and eventually so along you.
Agree with this. Disengage. Let dh invite them if he wants them at the party. The more you tell him that his family is in the wrong, the more he will defend them. He's grown up this way and it's all he knows. If he realizes how awful their behavior is, you have a chance of things working out, but he has to discover that on his own.
Anonymous wrote:I went to a psychologist/counselor (by myself) yesterday. She seemed to think my husband has "dissociation". I've never been told this before. I told her that he almost has no recollection of previous bad events. It's like they didn't happen to him. He will say at the time that so-and-so was acting like a jerk, and then a week later will ask why I'm not inviting them over. When I ask him if he remembers the event, he acts like he has a vague recollection.
She said she feels like he not only doesn't have tools to deal with his family's drama, but that he can't, because if he dissociates, he hasn't learned strategies to deal with things.