Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you saying they are narcissists and this will turn into torture?
Or are they just being super nice to her?
If the latter, would you them rather be nasty to her?
I would prefer that they wait until she is actually engaged to their son before they start treating her like his fiancée.
Anonymous wrote:The OP is not talking about being a kind and welcoming parent, she is talking about a potential MIL who offers monetary gifts like vacations bait. Not a visit our beach house for the weekend, but a European vacation. I asked the OP if her DD declined an invitation, how does the parent react? Would they keep pushing, do they get their DS to reinforce? What comes off as nice, has an undercurrent of control.
Where are the posters who have MIL’s who lay great guilt on their son and DIL’s time even though the DIL has a family of their own? It started at some point and you let it slide.
Anonymous wrote:I “love bomb” (not sure exactly what the term means, but I am interpreting as “shower with affection and attention”) my son’s girlfriend, bc she is a wonderful person and treats him very well, and I appreciate anyone who loves and values my kids. I “love bomb” his longtime best friend, also, for the same reasons.
Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of people posting don't have experience with highly manipulative and controlling people who have charm. The red flags are that they want OPs daughter for all holidays/vacations, etc. My friends and I have been through this back in the dating world and when you are young it seems amazing at first. Until you make a misstep or need to set a boundary. Over time the mask comes off.
Relationships develop gradually. Totally fine after a year for them to tell her they like her a lot, invite her for some holidays, but respect if she can't come and even invite on a vacation. It's the degree of what they are doing. They may not show any of the other side yet, believe me it comes.
Anonymous wrote:Are love bombing her!
Really, it is her first serious relations (though she is in her twenties). I want her to take it slow, and focus on her future career, but I feel like they are really laying it on thick. It makes me think they want to lock her down, because their son is unlikely to do better.
Anonymous wrote:Are love bombing her!
Really, it is her first serious relations (though she is in her twenties). I want her to take it slow, and focus on her future career, but I feel like they are really laying it on thick. It makes me think they want to lock her down, because their son is unlikely to do better.
Anonymous wrote:To be fair, men too can remember bad impressions or keep grudges.