Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jumping in here. When you say bad things about his family you are saying bad things about him. Yeah, that hurts. Don't do it. You don't have to like them. Or get along with them. Or even see them. But don't talk bad about them.
How would you feel if your DH said bad things about your mom, who you love. You would feel crappy. And you are putting him in the impossible position of having to choose you over his mom. His mom! He is half of her.
Makes me nervous that you think it is OK to talk her down.
This. My sister can be very annoying. Dh doesn't really like her. I get that, but he doesn't have to say it to me. I don't expect them to spend time together, but I don't want to hear from dh that he doesn't like her. He can vent to his brother or his friends about it, not me.
But if the IL is specifically attacking -- not just being annoying, but specifically targeting -- the spouse, the person whose relative it is needs to speak up about it.
The op NEVER used the words attack/attacking, shee said the MIL never warmed up to her & has hurt her feelings.
I also vote now with the multitude of people who believe that this is the very same poster from this thread (which is probably why the op STILL hasn't returned after her initial post, even though we're 5 pages in).
http://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/641919.page
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Therapist here. When one of the partners in a couples counseling session think I am on their side (or against them) it usually indicates a personality disorder in the offended party. Maybe you should look at yourself, OP.
Wow..you sound like a fright with a license. I wonder how many marriages you broke up?
Oh for Christ's sake, grow up. That was a serious, calmly presented statement.
I'm well grown. In my 60s, and your presumptive remark makes you sound ineffective in your job. So, I repeat, how many marriages, under your watch, have broken up?
Uh, you're not replying to that therapist. You're replying to a husband frequently a target of a marriage counselor's scrutiny. Those sessions can be tough. If a person is whining on here that a marriage counselor was making her feel bad, it's a good assumption that she said something or has done something quite strange.
Or the therapist sucks.
Np here. In my experience, when one party is really unhappy with a therapist, it's usually because they're being told something they don't want to hear. Some self-reflection is usually in order.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jumping in here. When you say bad things about his family you are saying bad things about him. Yeah, that hurts. Don't do it. You don't have to like them. Or get along with them. Or even see them. But don't talk bad about them.
How would you feel if your DH said bad things about your mom, who you love. You would feel crappy. And you are putting him in the impossible position of having to choose you over his mom. His mom! He is half of her.
Makes me nervous that you think it is OK to talk her down.
This. My sister can be very annoying. Dh doesn't really like her. I get that, but he doesn't have to say it to me. I don't expect them to spend time together, but I don't want to hear from dh that he doesn't like her. He can vent to his brother or his friends about it, not me.
But if the IL is specifically attacking -- not just being annoying, but specifically targeting -- the spouse, the person whose relative it is needs to speak up about it.
Anonymous wrote:Therapist here. When one of the partners in a couples counseling session think I am on their side (or against them) it usually indicates a personality disorder in the offended party. Maybe you should look at yourself, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Therapist here. When one of the partners in a couples counseling session think I am on their side (or against them) it usually indicates a personality disorder in the offended party. Maybe you should look at yourself, OP.
Licensed clinical psychologist here. No way a licensed person wrote this, unless perhaps they are unethical and/or incompetent. Sadly, some people who should not become licensed professionals slip through the cracks. Just FYI: licensed mental health professionals are not suppose to give professional advice to anyone with whom they have no professional relationship. They are especially not supposed to deliver snarky one liners where they diagnose someone as an insult. Hopefully just a troll, though.
Anonymous wrote:Went to couples counseling 3 yrs ago. Counselor told me any issues I had were my problem. I was holding onto the cheating, abuse, and sacrifices I made for DH. It allowed his abuse and cheating to continue for several more years before I left.
Anonymous wrote:Therapist here. When one of the partners in a couples counseling session think I am on their side (or against them) it usually indicates a personality disorder in the offended party. Maybe you should look at yourself, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jumping in here. When you say bad things about his family you are saying bad things about him. Yeah, that hurts. Don't do it. You don't have to like them. Or get along with them. Or even see them. But don't talk bad about them.
How would you feel if your DH said bad things about your mom, who you love. You would feel crappy. And you are putting him in the impossible position of having to choose you over his mom. His mom! He is half of her.
Makes me nervous that you think it is OK to talk her down.
This. My sister can be very annoying. Dh doesn't really like her. I get that, but he doesn't have to say it to me. I don't expect them to spend time together, but I don't want to hear from dh that he doesn't like her. He can vent to his brother or his friends about it, not me.
But if the IL is specifically attacking -- not just being annoying, but specifically targeting -- the spouse, the person whose relative it is needs to speak up about it.
Anonymous wrote:I think you should bring this up with the therapist to make sure you heard her right. Obviously, it's legitimate for your husband to feel hurt if he feels like you dislike his family (whether or not your dislike is justifiable.) Also it's not "throwing you under the bus" to tell your therapist how he feels about it! It's a perfectly acceptable thing to say in therapy, and in fact is what he should be talking about.
That said, obviously you should be allowed to talk about your feelings as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jumping in here. When you say bad things about his family you are saying bad things about him. Yeah, that hurts. Don't do it. You don't have to like them. Or get along with them. Or even see them. But don't talk bad about them.
How would you feel if your DH said bad things about your mom, who you love. You would feel crappy. And you are putting him in the impossible position of having to choose you over his mom. His mom! He is half of her.
Makes me nervous that you think it is OK to talk her down.
This. My sister can be very annoying. Dh doesn't really like her. I get that, but he doesn't have to say it to me. I don't expect them to spend time together, but I don't want to hear from dh that he doesn't like her. He can vent to his brother or his friends about it, not me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Therapist here. When one of the partners in a couples counseling session think I am on their side (or against them) it usually indicates a personality disorder in the offended party. Maybe you should look at yourself, OP.
Wow..you sound like a fright with a license. I wonder how many marriages you broke up?
Oh for Christ's sake, grow up. That was a serious, calmly presented statement.
I'm well grown. In my 60s, and your presumptive remark makes you sound ineffective in your job. So, I repeat, how many marriages, under your watch, have broken up?
Uh, you're not replying to that therapist. You're replying to a husband frequently a target of a marriage counselor's scrutiny. Those sessions can be tough. If a person is whining on here that a marriage counselor was making her feel bad, it's a good assumption that she said something or has done something quite strange.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Therapist here. When one of the partners in a couples counseling session think I am on their side (or against them) it usually indicates a personality disorder in the offended party. Maybe you should look at yourself, OP.
Wow..you sound like a fright with a license. I wonder how many marriages you broke up?
Oh for Christ's sake, grow up. That was a serious, calmly presented statement.
I'm well grown. In my 60s, and your presumptive remark makes you sound ineffective in your job. So, I repeat, how many marriages, under your watch, have broken up?
Uh, you're not replying to that therapist. You're replying to a husband frequently a target of a marriage counselor's scrutiny. Those sessions can be tough. If a person is whining on here that a marriage counselor was making her feel bad, it's a good assumption that she said something or has done something quite strange.
Or the therapist sucks.
Np here. In my experience, when one party is really unhappy with a therapist, it's usually because they're being told something they don't want to hear. Some self-reflection is usually in order.
Anonymous wrote:We have a new therapist we go to discuss issues we have been having. One of them is that I find his family hard to deal with. My MIL has never warmed up to me and she has the tendency to be a little out there. My DH, when I tell him about instances where she hurts my feelings, tells me I am not allowed to say bad things about his mom as that hurts his feelings. I feel frustrated because DH gets his feelings cared for, my MIL earns her respect and I get nothing. No one is caring for MY feelings.
When we went to our last appointment, my DH threw me under the bus and said I talk about his mom negatively and that hurts his feelings. Our therapist said that I am not allowed in any circumstances to talk negatively about his family as to him they will always be important and wonderful.
I was kind of confused...what am I supposed to do?