Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What exactly did these bumper stickers say?
This. What did they say, OP?
OP here. I don’t really want to say exactly but it was a play on words regarding my race’s perceived substance abuse problem.
The Irish have lots of drinking references and they embrace them. White people are fine with being made fun of and find it difficult to relate to hyper sensitivity. Lots of time whites assume other races are as resilient as they are.
Resilient? Ha! What about all the white trash snowflakes who started losing their shit when Obama was president? And who have started killing themselves in droves with opioids because the big bad foreign meanies are taking all their jobs and they can’t bother to work their fatasses harder?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What exactly did these bumper stickers say?
This. What did they say, OP?
OP here. I don’t really want to say exactly but it was a play on words regarding my race’s perceived substance abuse problem.
The Irish have lots of drinking references and they embrace them. White people are fine with being made fun of and find it difficult to relate to hyper sensitivity. Lots of time whites assume other races are as resilient as they are.
Anonymous wrote:You see them once a year?[/quote
Yes, they only come to our house about once a year if that. My husband will drive to their house about 30min away occasionally. Usually when I’m traveling for work
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She IS going to be in their lives. And she should be. You need to get over it.
Wow. No, the kid with dark skin does not need to hear that they need a bath. That is beyond gross.
OP only see her once a year so it should be pretty easy to make sure she is never alone with your children. If she starts making comments like this, I would just get up and say it’s time to go. Obviously, you never stay in the same house as her. DH can stay longer, but you get your children out of there. If she can’t control herself for an yearly visit then the visits become every other year.
+100
+1, but I would probably just end the relationship now. These people sound like garbage. I wouldn't subject my kids to hateful speech from people who are supposed to be family. I would also document everything for use in potential divorce proceedings to demonstrate that my husband's family was creating a hostile environment and should have no access to my children. I'm not saying that's the inevitable outcome, but it's best to be prepared.
Ending the relationship is a ridiculous suggestion. There’s is a difference between the stupid, thoughtless,racist actions of this mil and burning a cross on the lawn.
Op, I admire your fortitude. Your dh isn’t responsible for his mother’s actions or beliefs. He had the good sense to pick you after all so cut him some slack. Neither of you are going to change her. She doesn’t sound like she’s trying to be provocative.
I would definitely correct anything she says in earshot of you or your kids,
“Barb, you may not realize but when you say X, it’s hurtful.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She IS going to be in their lives. And she should be. You need to get over it.
Wow. No, the kid with dark skin does not need to hear that they need a bath. That is beyond gross.
OP only see her once a year so it should be pretty easy to make sure she is never alone with your children. If she starts making comments like this, I would just get up and say it’s time to go. Obviously, you never stay in the same house as her. DH can stay longer, but you get your children out of there. If she can’t control herself for an yearly visit then the visits become every other year.
+100
+1, but I would probably just end the relationship now. These people sound like garbage. I wouldn't subject my kids to hateful speech from people who are supposed to be family. I would also document everything for use in potential divorce proceedings to demonstrate that my husband's family was creating a hostile environment and should have no access to my children. I'm not saying that's the inevitable outcome, but it's best to be prepared.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She IS going to be in their lives. And she should be. You need to get over it.
Wow. No, the kid with dark skin does not need to hear that they need a bath. That is beyond gross.
OP only see her once a year so it should be pretty easy to make sure she is never alone with your children. If she starts making comments like this, I would just get up and say it’s time to go. Obviously, you never stay in the same house as her. DH can stay longer, but you get your children out of there. If she can’t control herself for an yearly visit then the visits become every other year.
+100
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She IS going to be in their lives. And she should be. You need to get over it.
Wow. No, the kid with dark skin does not need to hear that they need a bath. That is beyond gross.
OP only see her once a year so it should be pretty easy to make sure she is never alone with your children. If she starts making comments like this, I would just get up and say it’s time to go. Obviously, you never stay in the same house as her. DH can stay longer, but you get your children out of there. If she can’t control herself for an yearly visit then the visits become every other year.
Anonymous wrote:Only you can decide what is right for you, but here is another perspective.
I grew up without grandparents. It was sad and I was jealous of those who had access to their grandparents. My parents and my MIL live pretty far away. We try to see them as much as possible, but it's hard and the kids miss seeing their grandparents.
I know that the relationship with your in-laws is toxic due to racial bigotry (I'm not Caucasian, so I've seen some of it, too). I personally think that having a relationship with your grandparents is more important. I would personally allow the relationship as much as I could tolerate for the benefit of your children. As they grow older, you can teach them that their grandparents have some views that you don't agree with, that they are old and set in their ways and that it's old-fashioned and uneducated, but they are their grandparents. Learn to love them despite their faults and ignore the unfair comments that they say. You can teach children to disregard the views of their grandparents that you, the parents, don't disagree with. But you can't go back later and give them back the time with their grandparents that you deprive them of when their grandparents are alive.