Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The 4 month old baby of a New York firefighter just died of covid. It was on abc news.
Please. This man doesn’t care about his own newborn, you think he’s going to care about someone else’s?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's the long term plan? If they shut the grocery store, will they go out of business? If the store really is "everything" to them, what would happen in that scenario? What would they do with their lives?
Well the husband would obviously want his parents to live with OP forever. I would not last 3 days!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's the long term plan? If they shut the grocery store, will they go out of business? If the store really is "everything" to them, what would happen in that scenario? What would they do with their lives?
Well the husband would obviously want his parents to live with OP forever. I would not last 3 days!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can’t make parents do things. They don’t lose their rights to autonomy just because we don’t like their decisions. Uncomfortable, but true.
OP here and yes, I completely agree. My parents are the same age as ILs and very concerned about their risky behavior, but they told me that it's up to ILs to decide to stop working on their own and that it's not my and DH's place to try to control their behavior. I was surprised by their position, at first, but now I see that autonomy is something that all older people are sensitive to.
Can you take the baby and say at your parents while ILs stay with DH?
Anonymous wrote:What's the long term plan? If they shut the grocery store, will they go out of business? If the store really is "everything" to them, what would happen in that scenario? What would they do with their lives?
Anonymous wrote:The 4 month old baby of a New York firefighter just died of covid. It was on abc news.
Anonymous wrote:I am not one of the DCUMers who are constantly advocating divorce. I am a firm believer that marriage is a compromise and both parties have to work to make any marriage good and healthy. That said, it doesn't sound like your DH will ever compromise on anything, and this is just a sign of what is to come in a whole assortment of issues.
I think you need to ask yourself how you feel about the longterm chances for your marriage surviving. Do you want to stay married to him, given that is personality likely won't change? If you did divorce, can you support yourself and the kids? I suspect he would make divorce a nightmare.
If you do love him and do want to stay married to him, then I don't see how you keep the ILs away. And then you might very well be facing them living with you even longer term.
Your husband clearly has a stronger bond to his parents than his own children and uses unreasonableness to get his way. Guilting you over his parents' potential death due to their own irresponsible behavior, at the risk of your own family, is not a psychologically healthy man, IMO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can’t make parents do things. They don’t lose their rights to autonomy just because we don’t like their decisions. Uncomfortable, but true.
OP here and yes, I completely agree. My parents are the same age as ILs and very concerned about their risky behavior, but they told me that it's up to ILs to decide to stop working on their own and that it's not my and DH's place to try to control their behavior. I was surprised by their position, at first, but now I see that autonomy is something that all older people are sensitive to.