Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m curious what your DHs suggestion for dealing with this is? I mean certainly he offered to take time off work or something...
Yeah, I’m curious too.
In my experience, usually the guy is never as involved in getting things ready as the woman so it never feels like a big deal to them. What did your DH say?
Anonymous wrote:I’m curious what your DHs suggestion for dealing with this is? I mean certainly he offered to take time off work or something...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it were me (because I am a bitch), if I couldn't go on vacation by myself or with the kids for 5 days, I'd Jekyll and Hyde them.
First 5 days would be hosted glory. Homemade meals, set up pot of cofee and set out breakfast the night before. New towels every other day. Invitations to local holiday fun things. Their very favorite snacks and drinks, stocked.
On the sixth morning, they would wake up to a wasteland. I would not do a THING for them the rest of the trip. I'd be up in my room or out of the house, with the kids or without, as I felt that day. I would make dinners only for myself and my kids, and would say to them, "I'm not sure what Brad had planned for dinner. He assured me he'd be taking care of your extended visit that was sprung upon me; maybe he's getting you takeout on his way home." Ice. Cold.
No. This will cause conflict in the marriage and they get the satisfaction of knowing they antagonized you.
For me, I would to make it unpleasant for them and not worth doing this again. I would do everything I could to take vacation days and go on a trip with the kids. That way they’re staying in an empty house waiting for DH to get home and unable to go anywhere.
If you leave without the kids, then you reward them with access to the kids and spending time with DH in the evening. They will do this again next year for sure!
The Jekyll/Hyde will just cause lots of fights. Regardless of how your DH feels about boundaries, nobody likes to see their spouse be rude to their parents. They win if you do this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is your hill to die on. Seriously. If you don’t do something drastic they will always stomp all over your boundaries.
This is worth burning vacation days to get out of the house. Be SURE that you take the kids with you. Otherwise they’re getting rewarded with grandchildren time. Try to time it so the groceries are running out when you leave and your DH is in charge of them for the whole visit.
If they stomp all over your boundaries, you can only choose how you react, so for this trip my response to everything would be:
“I don’t know what DH planned, please check with him.” Big smile. Rinse and repeat.
This would be in response to questions about dinner, towels coffee, etc. Leaving with the kids makes the imposition uncomfortable for the in-laws. The “ask DH” approach makes it uncomfortable for DH. I would write down his office number, the admin number and any other contact info you have for him. Then I would have lots of “conference calls” and just mouth can’t talk handing them the list of numbers. The moment you’re done with calls you’re running late and rush out of the house - even if you’re just killing time at Starbucks.
If the ILs want to play games, show them you can play too.
This is perfect. Totally chipper and utterly unflappable.
Anonymous wrote:
This is your hill to die on. Seriously. If you don’t do something drastic they will always stomp all over your boundaries.
This is worth burning vacation days to get out of the house. Be SURE that you take the kids with you. Otherwise they’re getting rewarded with grandchildren time. Try to time it so the groceries are running out when you leave and your DH is in charge of them for the whole visit.
If they stomp all over your boundaries, you can only choose how you react, so for this trip my response to everything would be:
“I don’t know what DH planned, please check with him.” Big smile. Rinse and repeat.
This would be in response to questions about dinner, towels coffee, etc. Leaving with the kids makes the imposition uncomfortable for the in-laws. The “ask DH” approach makes it uncomfortable for DH. I would write down his office number, the admin number and any other contact info you have for him. Then I would have lots of “conference calls” and just mouth can’t talk handing them the list of numbers. The moment you’re done with calls you’re running late and rush out of the house - even if you’re just killing time at Starbucks.
If the ILs want to play games, show them you can play too.
Anonymous wrote:If it were me (because I am a bitch), if I couldn't go on vacation by myself or with the kids for 5 days, I'd Jekyll and Hyde them.
First 5 days would be hosted glory. Homemade meals, set up pot of cofee and set out breakfast the night before. New towels every other day. Invitations to local holiday fun things. Their very favorite snacks and drinks, stocked.
On the sixth morning, they would wake up to a wasteland. I would not do a THING for them the rest of the trip. I'd be up in my room or out of the house, with the kids or without, as I felt that day. I would make dinners only for myself and my kids, and would say to them, "I'm not sure what Brad had planned for dinner. He assured me he'd be taking care of your extended visit that was sprung upon me; maybe he's getting you takeout on his way home." Ice. Cold.