Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 weeks doesn’t seem to long for an annual visit. Can your DH take his mom and the kids to go sightseeing for like 4 days somewhere in that time while you work, to break it up? Or you go away for something important for a couple of days? The mom might enjoy sometime with her son without you there, too. (No offense, I’m sure I will want some time with my son when he’s grown, too, even if he marries my favorite person in the world!)
Is he supposed to burn all of his annual leave on his mom's visit?
Anonymous wrote:When we are with my ILs, I feel great about things and have a great attitude through day 4, then on day 5 it's like someone waved a wand and I am sulky, resentful, sensitive, and desperately want to be away from them. It's like everything they do and say drives me nuts. I smile and don't show my feelings, but it is like clockwork how this happens every single visit with them. I cannot imagine doing 3 weeks, but OP, I think you have to.
I try to focus on their good qualities, on what good grandparents they are (although they feel entitled to stuff my kids with candy and coke), and I try to go for walks or naps every day if we are on vacation with them. My MIL is passive aggressive and obsessed with her appearance and her weight and it is so very tiring.
Anonymous wrote:Been through this, exactly. I worked longer hours and had some "appointments" with friends (since you will have childcare and a great excuse to go out). And yes, I suffered and I complained. In the long run you will be proud of yourself for having found a way to cope and to share the grandchildren. In the short run you'll go nuts... sorry.
Gotcha!
Anonymous wrote:Op here - problem has been solved. MIL died 5 years ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You married someone whose parents live In Europe, YOU KNEW THAT WHEN YOU GOT MARRIED! So he sees his mother a grand total of 24 days per year and he wants to make it 29 and you see bitching about it?!?
Wow. That’s a lot of days !
My parents just come for a long weekend here or there and then maybe we go for 5-7 day hometown visit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 weeks doesn’t seem to long for an annual visit. Can your DH take his mom and the kids to go sightseeing for like 4 days somewhere in that time while you work, to break it up? Or you go away for something important for a couple of days? The mom might enjoy sometime with her son without you there, too. (No offense, I’m sure I will want some time with my son when he’s grown, too, even if he marries my favorite person in the world!)
Is he supposed to burn all of his annual leave on his mom's visit?
What’s the big deal? Why wouldn’t he want to?
Really? You think it's not a big deal for someone with a wife and kids to use up all of their leave from work to hang out with their mom? Screw family vacations! Forget staying home on snow days! As long as MIL is happy...
Hey OP, your inlaws found DCUM!
Anonymous wrote:You married someone whose parents live In Europe, YOU KNEW THAT WHEN YOU GOT MARRIED! So he sees his mother a grand total of 24 days per year and he wants to make it 29 and you see bitching about it?!?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 weeks doesn’t seem to long for an annual visit. Can your DH take his mom and the kids to go sightseeing for like 4 days somewhere in that time while you work, to break it up? Or you go away for something important for a couple of days? The mom might enjoy sometime with her son without you there, too. (No offense, I’m sure I will want some time with my son when he’s grown, too, even if he marries my favorite person in the world!)
Is he supposed to burn all of his annual leave on his mom's visit?
What’s the big deal? Why wouldn’t he want to?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 weeks doesn’t seem to long for an annual visit. Can your DH take his mom and the kids to go sightseeing for like 4 days somewhere in that time while you work, to break it up? Or you go away for something important for a couple of days? The mom might enjoy sometime with her son without you there, too. (No offense, I’m sure I will want some time with my son when he’s grown, too, even if he marries my favorite person in the world!)
Is he supposed to burn all of his annual leave on his mom's visit?
Anonymous wrote:MIL can travel somewhere else in the middle of it
Husband can insist, on this, or some other boundary. If he doesn't, you have a marriage problem, not a MIL problem.