Anonymous wrote:You need to stop being the main point of contact with your ILs, and shift that responsibility to your DH. This can be challenging once the pattern has been established. I got into this pattern with my ILs when my kids were small, and though I was doing a kindness/favor. The problem is: once they get used to it, they take it for granted and get mad at YOU when you can’t meet their needs.
How to get out of this pattern without blowing the relationship up? As someone said, start taking awhile to get back to them. Says lots of “gosh I don’t know...I’ll check with DH and have him get back to you!” (And then tell dh “hey your mom was wondering about xyz, can you please get back to her”) If they send text fishing for info, always be polite but don’t get wrapped up. “Hi Susan, glad you and Bob had a great dinner. Yes, Larlo is enjoying soccer. Hope you are enjoying this beautiful weather!” rather than spilling details or getting too overly friendly. They can’t find fault with you (nor can DH) as you are being polite.
Odds are your DH will get frustrated with being bothered all the time and end up setting boundaries all on his own. BTDT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, if you are in the traditional role where your in laws count on you to coordinate everything, drop the rope. Let your husband be responsible for managing his parents. If he forgets to tell them about a game or concert or whatever, oh well.
OP here. I did play that role for a long time and have tried to wean them (and me) off this for the last couple of years. When they come to me with requests, I I usually tell them to talk to DH. I redirect to him as much as possible in a nice way. The problem is that my husband plays this role pretty badly as he is more disorganized (and many times has no clue what the children’s schedule is) so they always come back to me. He sucks at coordinating and can’t see an issue with how obnoxious, rude and overbearing his parents are. His view is that we should “just deal with it because they love us.”
Great! Now you nicely “forget” and become disorganized too.
+1. Don’t let them get back to you. Miss the calls, leave texts on read, when they ask about things double down on the “um, I’m not sure, talk to DH about scheduling that”. And when they barge in, be polite but don’t entertain or be the super host. Say hello and go run an errand while your DH takes care of things. He will soon learn that they are pushy and overbearing.
Yup I do all of this. “Oh gosh I don’t even know when the recital is, DH said he was checking. I’m sure he’ll call you back when he has time.”
+1. Be friendly, be polite but let DH facilitate everything with them. And please stop answering the phone when they want to talk to the kids daily. When your husband gets 10 missed calls from them everyday wanting to chat, he can deal with that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, if you are in the traditional role where your in laws count on you to coordinate everything, drop the rope. Let your husband be responsible for managing his parents. If he forgets to tell them about a game or concert or whatever, oh well.
OP here. I did play that role for a long time and have tried to wean them (and me) off this for the last couple of years. When they come to me with requests, I I usually tell them to talk to DH. I redirect to him as much as possible in a nice way. The problem is that my husband plays this role pretty badly as he is more disorganized (and many times has no clue what the children’s schedule is) so they always come back to me. He sucks at coordinating and can’t see an issue with how obnoxious, rude and overbearing his parents are. His view is that we should “just deal with it because they love us.”
Great! Now you nicely “forget” and become disorganized too.
+1. Don’t let them get back to you. Miss the calls, leave texts on read, when they ask about things double down on the “um, I’m not sure, talk to DH about scheduling that”. And when they barge in, be polite but don’t entertain or be the super host. Say hello and go run an errand while your DH takes care of things. He will soon learn that they are pushy and overbearing.
Yup I do all of this. “Oh gosh I don’t even know when the recital is, DH said he was checking. I’m sure he’ll call you back when he has time.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, if you are in the traditional role where your in laws count on you to coordinate everything, drop the rope. Let your husband be responsible for managing his parents. If he forgets to tell them about a game or concert or whatever, oh well.
OP here. I did play that role for a long time and have tried to wean them (and me) off this for the last couple of years. When they come to me with requests, I I usually tell them to talk to DH. I redirect to him as much as possible in a nice way. The problem is that my husband plays this role pretty badly as he is more disorganized (and many times has no clue what the children’s schedule is) so they always come back to me. He sucks at coordinating and can’t see an issue with how obnoxious, rude and overbearing his parents are. His view is that we should “just deal with it because they love us.”
Great! Now you nicely “forget” and become disorganized too.
+1. Don’t let them get back to you. Miss the calls, leave texts on read, when they ask about things double down on the “um, I’m not sure, talk to DH about scheduling that”. And when they barge in, be polite but don’t entertain or be the super host. Say hello and go run an errand while your DH takes care of things. He will soon learn that they are pushy and overbearing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You were rude. They were offered tickets. Watch your words around your kids. Keep events a secret if you don’t want them attending.
Wrong. They were offered tickets, so sit in their seats, watch the show and take pictures afterward just like everyone else, not barge backstage where she wasn't allowed, refuse to leave and demand immediate photo ops as the kids were getting ready to go onstage. GTFOH.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, if you are in the traditional role where your in laws count on you to coordinate everything, drop the rope. Let your husband be responsible for managing his parents. If he forgets to tell them about a game or concert or whatever, oh well.
OP here. I did play that role for a long time and have tried to wean them (and me) off this for the last couple of years. When they come to me with requests, I I usually tell them to talk to DH. I redirect to him as much as possible in a nice way. The problem is that my husband plays this role pretty badly as he is more disorganized (and many times has no clue what the children’s schedule is) so they always come back to me. He sucks at coordinating and can’t see an issue with how obnoxious, rude and overbearing his parents are. His view is that we should “just deal with it because they love us.”
Great! Now you nicely “forget” and become disorganized too.
Anonymous wrote:You were rude. They were offered tickets. Watch your words around your kids. Keep events a secret if you don’t want them attending.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, if you are in the traditional role where your in laws count on you to coordinate everything, drop the rope. Let your husband be responsible for managing his parents. If he forgets to tell them about a game or concert or whatever, oh well.
OP here. I did play that role for a long time and have tried to wean them (and me) off this for the last couple of years. When they come to me with requests, I I usually tell them to talk to DH. I redirect to him as much as possible in a nice way. The problem is that my husband plays this role pretty badly as he is more disorganized (and many times has no clue what the children’s schedule is) so they always come back to me. He sucks at coordinating and can’t see an issue with how obnoxious, rude and overbearing his parents are. His view is that we should “just deal with it because they love us.”