Anonymous wrote:Same thing happened to me early in my marriage with BIL and MIL. Get out now. Seriously. I know you are newly married and majorly in love but unless your husband is laying down the gauntlet and seriously ending this BS, you will have a life of drama. I hate my in laws but have to pretend to get along for the sake of my son and husband. I wish I was stronger 15 years ago and left. It was a precursor to a lot of other issues, these people raised your husband and he lived this life. This is what he knows - the Apple doesn’t fall far from the tree, as they say. Or get lots of marriage therapy, now!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for your input.
My husband's mother is very overbearing and narcissistic. When you tell her she has done something wrong, she will deny deny deny. She cannot do anything wrong and it always someone else's fault or it is a "misunderstanding." Or she will cry and play victim until the person confronting her feels bad and lets it go.
Her husband doesn't dare speak up to her, DH and SIL fall for every one of her tricks and get manipulated by her.
My husband HAS told her to be nice and inclusive to me. She tries, she gets me nice presents, gives me hugs but then also gets drunk and can't help but let her true feelings out which is that her son made a mistake by marrying me and that I am taking her son away etc etc. That I am not a good fit for him or a good partner etc etc
SIL is MIL's minion and is #teammommy and as such tries her best to ignore me and make me feel like I don't belong. She always displays mean girl behavior by making sure none of their cousins like me etc
DH has told them to be nice and treat me kindly as "my wife is sensitive."
It seems to go in one ear and out the other.
We are going to a therapist who DH tells that he has done everything he can but that his family are difficult and won't listen. He also told her that he is intimated by his sister as she will freak out and get mean so he just lets her be.
Meanwhile she said that their behavior isn't DH's fault and I need to make peace with them and not take them so personally.
Sorry OP...but the problem is a self-admittedly spineless husband AND a bad therapist.
Here's the thing though: Probably one of the things that attracted you to him (and him to you, frankly) was that you liked his non-confrontational easy-going manner and he liked that you would take charge like he is used to.
Not that you are LIKE SIL or MIL (not saying that, exactly...just that you are MORE like them--assertive, free to speak up, etc.-- that HE is.) See? He chose what was familiar to him in terms of the power dynamic. But uh-oh...that creates conflict and DH doesn't know how to deal so he just appeases. And he thinks he is appeasing everyone by not taking sides or by only getting just slightly upset and putting a bandaid on the situation.
The minute the drunk MIL came out with spewing of her "true feelings" is when she should no longer have been welcome in your home. Not because you are "sensitive" but because she is actively undermining your marriage commitment. Marriage is hard even WITHOUT our "loved ones" working against us.
Sorry OP, but I would tell him I've had enough and leave. Before you have kids. This will never end.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
MIL and SIL have felt that way ever since DH announced we are getting married. I thought they would settle in after we were married and they get used to having me around. The issue is they never liked me (or any of DH's previous GFs as they always feel threatened by any other woman) and now it is out in the open.
DH has stood up for me multiple times and we limit contact generally. He has told his mom and sister to knock it off but they have personality issues and do not care. DH does say that he will not be able to cut them off ever as they are his family. So limiting contact and only going over for special occasions it is.
However, I do not know how I can sit in the same room as them as I feel very hurt and unappreciated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had an awkward encounter with my SIL a few months ago where she told me that I am breaking her family up. It’s no longer a secret she and my MIL dislike me. How am I expected to deal with these people during the holidays?
What is the issue really about? What did you do or not do, OP? Would you even tell us? If you are treating one or both of them like crap, or expect the "status quo" after they are married (for example, if you were disrespectful and abusive to your brother all his life) - maybe your SIL is tired of your crap, and maybe your brother is seeing the truth, and you don't like it?
Anonymous wrote:I had an awkward encounter with my SIL a few months ago where she told me that I am breaking her family up. It’s no longer a secret she and my MIL dislike me. How am I expected to deal with these people during the holidays?
Anonymous wrote:This is our second therapist.
Our first one also told us that I need to not hold DH accountable for his family's behavior/actions. He cannot control them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, until your husband can create some healthy boundaries, abide by them & most of all STICK TO THEM... these women will always have power over him.
Until they feel some true consequences of their actions, sadly This. Will. Never. End.
He's already said he can't cut them off... that's fine.
What he can do is make them accountable for their words & make them responsible for how they use them.
Read this OP.
Where to Draw the Line: How to Set Healthy Boundaries Every Day
https://www.amazon.com/dp/0684868067/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_Pl84Bb0C9YY4G
Yes, yes, yes - a million times *YES*.
Anonymous wrote:OP, until your husband can create some healthy boundaries, abide by them & most of all STICK TO THEM... these women will always have power over him.
Until they feel some true consequences of their actions, sadly This. Will. Never. End.
He's already said he can't cut them off... that's fine.
What he can do is make them accountable for their words & make them responsible for how they use them.
Read this OP.
Where to Draw the Line: How to Set Healthy Boundaries Every Day
https://www.amazon.com/dp/0684868067/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_Pl84Bb0C9YY4G
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is our second therapist.
Our first one also told us that I need to not hold DH accountable for his family's behavior/actions. He cannot control them.
No, he can't. But he can control his own actions. And what he is doing is demonstrating that, actually, it is okay for him family to treat you this way, because there are, at most, temporary consequences. He'll get mad for a while, they'll be on their best behavior for a bit, and then it can all go back to normal. He tells them to be nice to you because you are "sensitive," which sort of tells them that their behavior is fine with him. And he expects you to be around these people, and make nice, because he doesn't want to have to impose any real consequences. Like leaving immediately when someone says something beyond the pale. Like not spending holidays with them because they are not kind to his wife.
Personally, I would refuse to spend any time with these people. He can decide whether he'd rather spend the holidays with me or them, but I'm not taking that level of garbage from them.
Anonymous wrote:This is our second therapist.
Our first one also told us that I need to not hold DH accountable for his family's behavior/actions. He cannot control them.