Anonymous wrote:It's not in my house because I was never offered the furniture nor did I ask
If my parents were going into a home then it would be appropriate to start dismantling their house and rifling through their possessions perhaps but this seems ghoulish. I don't ever presume that other people possessions in their own home are up for grabs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My SIL has designs on the money my parents are planning on leaving to us.
She cleaned out all the decent furniture in my parent's house when my husband and I were living abroad. I came home to find that the woman had taken my childhood bedroom furniture from my childhood home and installed it in her child's room without even discussing it with me!
She has never worked and goes running to my parents whenever she wants something expensive -- like private school, summer camp, private college -- that is not feasible given my brother's salary.
Yeah, my parents are also to blame for acting like doormats but I can't see what possible benefit I could derive from being friendly to someone like that.
I don't think this is shocking. Your parents were probably glad to get it out of the house if you were old enough to be married and living abroad.
They could have at least asked her first. And I say this as someone whose niece has all of my old bedroom furniture. But my parents did ask me first.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My SIL has designs on the money my parents are planning on leaving to us.
She cleaned out all the decent furniture in my parent's house when my husband and I were living abroad. I came home to find that the woman had taken my childhood bedroom furniture from my childhood home and installed it in her child's room without even discussing it with me!
She has never worked and goes running to my parents whenever she wants something expensive -- like private school, summer camp, private college -- that is not feasible given my brother's salary.
Yeah, my parents are also to blame for acting like doormats but I can't see what possible benefit I could derive from being friendly to someone like that.
I don't think this is shocking. Your parents were probably glad to get it out of the house if you were old enough to be married and living abroad.
They could have at least asked her first. And I say this as someone whose niece has all of my old bedroom furniture. But my parents did ask me first.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My SIL has designs on the money my parents are planning on leaving to us.
She cleaned out all the decent furniture in my parent's house when my husband and I were living abroad. I came home to find that the woman had taken my childhood bedroom furniture from my childhood home and installed it in her child's room without even discussing it with me!
She has never worked and goes running to my parents whenever she wants something expensive -- like private school, summer camp, private college -- that is not feasible given my brother's salary.
Yeah, my parents are also to blame for acting like doormats but I can't see what possible benefit I could derive from being friendly to someone like that.
I don't think this is shocking. Your parents were probably glad to get it out of the house if you were old enough to be married and living abroad.
Anonymous wrote:My SIL has designs on the money my parents are planning on leaving to us.
She cleaned out all the decent furniture in my parent's house when my husband and I were living abroad. I came home to find that the woman had taken my childhood bedroom furniture from my childhood home and installed it in her child's room without even discussing it with me!
She has never worked and goes running to my parents whenever she wants something expensive -- like private school, summer camp, private college -- that is not feasible given my brother's salary.
Yeah, my parents are also to blame for acting like doormats but I can't see what possible benefit I could derive from being friendly to someone like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People with normal SILs don’t write about it. Well, except I will here: my SILs are awesome to me. They really do love me like I’m their actual sister.
People who are mean to their sibling’s wives are probably also mean to other people. I doubt they save it for their SILs.
+1 I love my sis in law. She's changed my brother's life in an incredibly positive way.
Anonymous wrote:My SIL and MIL had a dynamic where they decided everything and made all the plans and dh just showed up. It worked for a while with me but then our plans just became too hectic with kids and both our schedules. We can't just show up when other people need us all the time. We like it when our schedules get taken into account.
And then my SIL was really really upset anytime I tried to change anything about holidays. She was upset I rotated holidays between her family and mine. She was upset when I brought a dish that wasn't traditionally on her mom's Christmas table. She refuses to come when I host because she wants her mom to host instead (but then my parents aren't invited).
I'm not pushy, but she is. We still get along great and I just ignore things she says that I don't agree with. If we lived closer, we'd get along great. I'm a bit sad she never married and didn't have kids.