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Your Extended Family

Written by Segololo from the blog Oh Moments on 07 May 2008
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As I read and replied to the article “In-laws or is it out-laws”  by Zolx I wondered what kind of in-law I currently am and how I will be to my children’s future partners. As I have previously said, when I spec’d my dream man I was adamant I do not want a meddling mother-in-law so I have very little experience. I, however, have experiences with my other in-laws that I would rather not discuss on this forum.

What I know for certain is “You have to change you to be able to adjust and be tolerant of any extended family members”. As the newbie, in this case, you are more likely to be prodded and poked than anyone. You have a lot in common with the family than you care to admit. You and them love your partner and only want the best for him/her. You and them are very protective of your partner. It is important to everyone to feel a part of your partner’s lives and sometimes no-one knows to what extent.

I think most in-laws hate the newbie because they feel the attention, care, love and everything they got from their sibling or child will now be dissected and most likely disappear. They feel that their special place has been forcefully taken Mugabe style; right under their noses. So to avoid such things happening they have to ensure the newbie is so unhappy s/he is forced to retaliate and push the “it’s them or me” tactic. AND we all know, in most – sometimes always, you lose the battle. AND this goes both ways, your family may also be exerting their own kind of pressure on your partner and you are blinded to it as your focus is on his family’s issues.

Anyways, I googled “dealing with in-laws” and Dr Phil was my first hit! () He insists the responsibility lies on the couple to deal with them.
Here’s his advise to the couple when managing their in-laws 

If you plan on sticking with your spouse, then you're also stuck with your in-laws. Here's Dr. Phil's advice for dealing with your new extended family. 

•   There can be no divided loyalties. When you get married and start your own family, that's where your primary loyalty needs to be. 

• Good fences make good neighbors. Your in-laws need to be your neighbors and there need to be really good fences up. Set boundaries about when they are and are not invited into your lives. 

• You've got a finite amount of physical and emotional energy. If you're in-laws are draining you, you may need to change the boundaries. Reassure them that you are not closing them out, you are simply focusing on yourselves. 

• Once you've set boundaries, talk to your parents about them. They're not as fragile as you may think. 

• The other woman in every man's life is his mother. If your husband starts in with: "Well my mother does it this way ..." then tell him to go over and sleep with her. 

• If a wife has a problem with her mother-in-law, it's the husband who needs to step in and help fix it. Likewise, if a husband doesn't see eye-to-eye with his in-laws, his wife needs to step in. The person with the primary relationship (the son or daughter, not the in-law) needs to be the messenger. 

• Negotiate with your own partner the role that you want your in-laws to have. Don't assume you're on the same page until you talk about it. 

• Try not to criticize your spouse for his/her relationship with his/her parents. It may only lead to more clinginess or complications. 

• You need to love your parents, and have a rich and active relationship with them, but any time that you turn away from your partner to resolve a relationship issue, that's a bad thing. If you have a problem in the marriage, you need to resolve it in the marriage. 

• Keep in mind that your parents only know what you tell them. If you go to them every time you're angry and frustrated and having problems in your marriage, they hear that, but they don't hear when you make up.

Here is his take on dealing with in-laws (nice or ugly ones)

1. Set Boundaries
o Sometimes extended family is its own social system and it's hard to extract yourself out of there. It's okay to love your family but you've got to love yourself, your husband, and your kids, too. 

o In large families, there is always a drama going on. What would happen if you held up a stop sign to your family and said, "Look, love ya,' but you've got to tell-it-walking. I don't want that in my home." There's a point when you've got to be mature enough to say, "I've got a finite amount of emotional energy and you people are draining me bad. And my family's paying for it." 

o You have to set boundaries on your marriage. Relationship boundaries swing in and out. They get violated by in-laws coming in and also violated by a spouse swinging the door out, pulling the in-laws in. Taking your problems to your in-laws gets them enmeshed in your life. Does your relationship have a bright-line boundary around it?

2. Talk to your in laws
o If you haven't talked to your in-law about what's bothering you, then you don't have the right to be complaining about the problem to others. 

o Once you've set your boundaries, talk to your parents about them. Parents are 
not as fragile as you think they are. 

o Share what you want from your relationships. Reassure the in-laws, "We're not closing you out, we're just wanting to focus on ourselves." 

3. Filters and Trust
o Getting defensive before in-laws visit? We get into fixed beliefs, setting up filters and seeing people in a certain way. You can be so set that no matter what your in-law does, you can't stop seeing them that way. (Your mother in-law could say "hi" and you'll think, "What...I'm not good enough for hello?") 

o Trust is not about them. Trust is about you. The extent that you trust them is purely a function of how strong you feel about yourself 

o Criticizing your spouse on their relationship with their family leads your spouse to cling to their family more. What you fear, you create — and they'll stay entangled because of your criticisms.

He also offers some questions to the mothers and father’s in-law to ask themselves when there is tension between them and their newbie…
o Are you over-involved? Are you injecting into this new family? Are you doing something that intrudes on your children hammering out of a relationship? 

o Are you a criticizing mother-in law? Do you know what kind of effect you're having on your in-law? It's not a matter of intention, it's a matter of perception. Share with them what's bothering you. 

o When you visit be a guest —it's their house, let them run it. If you're giving someone something they don't want, it's not a gift. 

o Are you having trouble letting go? Who are you other than a mother? Would you have it any other way than for your son to be married? 

o If the couple is fighting — let them handle it. Don't get pulled in by your children. A new couple needs to set boundaries on their relationship. Those boundaries swing in and out. They get violated by in-laws coming in and can be violated by a spouse swinging the door out, pulling you in.

Zolx, I didn’t want to take over your blog but wanted to offer advise to all those in need. Thank you, dear for the great blog.



7 Comments

zolx
07 May 2008 04:26

thanks for this segololo but its not always easy telling in-laws what you like and dont like, its always better if the son/husband does that (as it says somewhere in ur article). So i (wife) tell him (husband) what bothers me about his family and expect and sometimes ask that he passes that on and i expect him to hear me out or at least understand where i'm coming form. 
What i dont understand is how come my family NEVER has anything bad to say about my husband but his family ALWAYS think badly of me.

Lady D
07 May 2008 04:44

I feel what Dr Phil is saying but lets face it guys,it real black life it doesn't work.You van try as much as you like to make your in laws understand you but as long as their mind is made up,as long as they see you as somebody who's controlling their son's/brothers lefe,as long as they see you as someone who's eating their sons's/brother's money,then nothing wil change.They expect him to behave and leave the same way as he did be4 he met you ofwhich that is totally impossible.H eshould not turn his back on them now that he has you but there will be some changes to show gore he is no more single and that is something that the inlwas cant handle.

I personally believe there is no book or manual that can teach you how to raise a child or handle in laws,because with this issues we are tackling different characters.They can never have the same manual hence they behave differently.The only person to sort out this mess can be their son/daughter

bulie
07 May 2008 06:24

Thank you Segololo & Zolx for the advice coz i'm getting married soon so i needed guidance on how to handle in - laws when the get to me so i heard everything so Dankie baie.

Brown Shuga
07 May 2008 10:34

Tjo, it's hard enough having to deal with your own family's issues/moods, manje na ma inlaws?  One more negative about marriage...

Onna
07 May 2008 14:34

Ya ne inlaws  can be a nightmare,althou mine are not but the stories my friends tell will  leave even dr Phil  speechless.It sometimes even  goes  as  far  as  divorce,and  its  so  sad cause most times the inlaws will hate the next one and the next one. 
Most of the time the haters are mother in laws which makes me wander what she expected of her son when hes all grown up.Like what do you do if she just shows up at your house and she does not leave for a month.While she is there she makes sure she critics everything you do and she does not tell you but her son.Or every month she will think of some emergency that will need money eventhou  she got her monthly allowance already.She will "compliment' you on you new shoes which by the way look expensive,were they on sale makoti? Now this is enough to make you not want to visit her that often.Nothing  is  ever good  enough.
The thing is  mostly  us  females can really forsake  all  others  and  be  one  with  the  husband as we vowed on wedding day.Could it be because we are the ones who change our surname?or man just cant let go of their mothers? Its not like he should complitlly  turn  his back  on  his family,he just has to realise he is now commited to this new person for better or worse. 

Dimago
08 May 2008 05:15

I don't have inlaws yet, but my possible future in laws are already giving me a hard time. Maybe 'kind in-laws' should be one of the criterias we use to determine whether we marry the guy or not...

Segololo
08 May 2008 06:42

Dimago: Kind-in-laws are the worst, dear. Solele had the best in-laws in the world and then een dag, they sommer turned into nitemare-on-elm-street-in-laws.. Solele did the Dr Phil thing and there was a groot meeting about how "disrespectful" she is telling mamzakes what she likes and doesn't. Mr solele simply told the mamzakes and Solele that he loves them both, though differently and will not get involved. The ma was shocked because she beileived he would choose, and she would be the chosen. Now Solele only visists when Mr Solele is there and there is peace. Mamzakes can't visit their home unless Mr Solele is there. Boundaries have been set. 

My lesson in that experience is: all in-laws are the same, they can pretend and not for long. I think your future-in-laws are fine. You, at least, know where you stand already, they won't turn on you and get you into counselling. 

Shugs: It's not all bad - Just set boundaries... It works like a charm and let your better half know, they are his problem and you will not be around them without him there. they behave sssssooooo well when partner is there that usually partner assumes you are making things up because YOU don't like them!


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