Anonymous wrote:It was decided this weekend that, for spring break, we will be joining my in-laws at a mountain chalet (cabin/lodge) resort for 5 nights. I only agreed to this because my husband grudgingly agreed to a vacation of my choosing last year, and he wants to appease his parents. Our kids love them too, so I am taking one for the team. But I’m seriously dreading it.
It’s a big place and we will have our own rooms and bathrooms, and sort of our own “wing”, but will be sharing common areas. Short of the usual advice such as to take lots of walks alone, make time to work out, find alone time, how do you deal with things like:
Mornings? I’m not a morning person. I’m not ready to socialize and be “on” right away. Is it wrong to send DH out to the common areas alone most mornings? And what about breakfast? I don’t eat it. I like coffee and maybe a hard boiled egg, but I’m not a big restaurant breakfast every morning person. Ok to stay home and send DH and the kids with his parents?
What about when I just need a break? Is it ok to just excuse myself and say I want to read? Go to the hot tub alone? Etc? I have a feeling my MIL will want to be my shadow, and I’m ok with that to an extent. How do I tactfully turn her away when I’ve had enough and need to recharge?
Also, what’s the best way to break it to the in-laws that we would like to have dinner/sightsee/do this alone as our nuclear family?
Any other tips for surviving shared quarters with in-laws is appreciated!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have the same sorts of issues and I don't think you can get a break when you're with inlaws. I just suck it up and show up for every breakfast and no alone time. No way could we ever have nuclear family time on a family trip like that. I think that's why most people find them exhausting...
Omg seriously? I will go insane!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First, I'd work at keeping expectations reasonable about what you will get out of this vacation.
Your DH should back you up when you don't want to go out to breakfast and go solo with the kids. But do try to attend one day with the group, I'd aim for day 2. You should definitely just tell DH you will need a BREAK and prep him for this ahead of time, and then do it. Go to your room and take an extremely long shower, lie down and nap, read a book, listen to a podcast, whatever.
But you will not get an entire day alone. And it is not reasonable to ditch the grandparents to have an outing/dinner with only our nuclear family. If grandparents bow out of something, fine. But you can not reasonably expect this.
I also would not plan to ever get to use the hot tub alone.
Focus on the fact that they are wonderful grandparents. My inlaws drive me nuts too, but are also very good grandparents, and I survive by reading a good novel ALONE while they get some "no mom around" time with my kids. It's a win win.
I know my MIL will expect/enjoy “alone time” without parents there, occasionally. I’m just hoping it’s more often than not!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP imagine if you just went, without all these ideas in your head about all the potential things that bugged you and inconvenienced you... Instead of making it difficult for everyone, you went with the flow and did things that made others happy for five days? Maybe not doing every single thing together, but most things.
I feel like this is sexist. It's what women get told their entire lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have the same sorts of issues and I don't think you can get a break when you're with inlaws. I just suck it up and show up for every breakfast and no alone time. No way could we ever have nuclear family time on a family trip like that. I think that's why most people find them exhausting...
Omg seriously? I will go insane!
It's 5 days... I think you're being unreasonable. We all have to take one for the team and do things outside our comfort zones. DH gave you the trip you wanted.
Can't you just suck it up and tolerate being an active participant for your DH and kids, for 5 days? It's not that big of a deal.
No, I think you're being unreasonable. Who takes a 5-day long vacation and expects everyone to be together every minute? That's not normal.
NP. Inlaws do this all the time. Especially if they're paying I think you're expected to do all activities together and go out to eat together.
Anonymous wrote:OP imagine if you just went, without all these ideas in your head about all the potential things that bugged you and inconvenienced you... Instead of making it difficult for everyone, you went with the flow and did things that made others happy for five days? Maybe not doing every single thing together, but most things.