Today I am welcoming a guest to The Dose of Reality. AnnMarie writes one of my favorite blogs Tidbits from the Queen of Chaos. Since I began reading and loving her blog, we have become online friends, and our friendship goes beyond reading and commenting on each other’s blog at this point. When I realized that she had a story to tell, but did not feel comfortable telling it on her own blog, I invited her to share it here.
All summer long, I have suffered from writer’s block. All of my thoughts are tangled up in the anxiety of thoughts that surround one thing: My mother-in-law is back in town. I know I am not the only one who has in-law issues and what better place to work through it than on The Dose of Reality. It doesn’t get more real than this. I can’t make this stuff up.
There were obvious differences from the beginning. A different language, different religion, different values. One thing the same: Love for L. He had never brought a girl home before. Never dated anyone long enough. Maybe she thought I was a passing phase. L is an only child. His father passed away when we were 23 (she remarried three years later and I will forever be grateful to her husband). Maybe those are the reasons.
It’s been 23 years. I feel suffocated. I feel dread. I feel angry. I feel in constant flight or fight mode and I’m sad that we each can’t be the kind of person both of us need. I wanted a mother-in-law who loved me for who I was. I wanted one who knew her place and stayed there. She wanted a daughter-in-law who put her first. She wants to be close. She says it in every single conversation. I wish I could let the years of hurt wash away and I could forget. I would have loved to have been close…to have another person in my life who I could love who would love me too. Someone who would play with my kids and just love them. I’m from a big family…we know how to let people in and love them. For some reason, even from the beginning, it’s been a struggle.
L lived an hour away from me so I would spend the night. I slept in the make-shift family room but it was always freezing. When I told L, he switched with me. His mom said the next morning, “I don’t want L to sleep in that room. It gets cold and I don’t want him to get sick.”
But it was fine if I got pneumonia.
“I picked L up from daycare and he ran to me all muddy to give me a hug and it was the funniest thing. I had to run from him so he wouldn’t ruin my fur coat.” She thought this was a hilarious story to share.
It probably did nothing for our relationship that I told her that was the worst story ever.
Upon hearing that L and I got engaged, she hugged me and said, “Well, at least we know each others’ faults.”
No, “Welcome to the family” or “Congratulations.” Who says that?
L and I were dancing in the kitchen a year before our wedding day. She came out and asked what we were doing. We said, “A year from now, we are going to be married.” She ran from the room crying, “It’s too soon. It’s too soon.”
We had been together for 7 years before we got married. In what world is that too soon?
When I had my oldest son she said, “I know the mistakes I made with L and I won’t make the same ones with N.”
I didn’t have kids so she could fix the mistakes she thinks she made with her own child. The relationship between a mother and a son and a grandmother and a grandson should by their very nature be different.
For years she would give me back gifts that I bought for her. When I asked her why, she replied, “I like things with designer labels in them.”
It didn’t matter that I was a stay at home mom with three kids (at the time) and designer labels are expensive.
After my daughter threw a fit, she looked at my daughter and said, “You get that from your mom. Your dad never did that.”
Again, who says that?
“We need to always be close.” This is said after every single conversation. Being close is something that happens over time and it is a give and take. It doesn’t happen just because someone says it. This is usually accompanied with, “We need to talk more. You need to call me more.” It’s also usually said when I finally do make the effort to call.
We spend the whole conversation talking about how I never call.
She has told the older kids that some things are just for them to know and they don’t have to share it with me. I think it is pretty ballsy of her to even say that to them. Some things said under those pretenses:
“Your mom doesn’t like to come here because she gets jealous of your dad’s and my relationship.”
“You need more culture in your lives.”
“For some reason, your mom doesn’t want us to see you guys.”
They of course do tell me because they know that we have NO secrets.
Some of the zingers that stand out over the years:
“You’d be so pretty if you wore some make-up.”
“You are in Boca now…enough with the T-shirts.”
Some instances that have caused major rifts in our relationship:
For our wedding, she picked out a white dress with a veil. I told L that as the mother of the groom she couldn’t wear white. She responded with, “So noooo one else can wear white. Juuuust you?”
She proceeded to buy the same dress as my mom when the lady showed her my mom’s and still tried to have a black veil made. As if she were in mourning, I guess. L talked her out of the veil.
When our first son was born, it was traumatic. He had to be in the NICU for a week and when we finally could bring him home, she called L and demanded he help her husband out of a jam on that day. Since it was the day his son was coming home from the hospital, he told her he couldn’t but was just the beginning of the tug of war between L having to choose between her needs and his family’s needs.
My mother-in-law and her husband moved to Florida for the winter months which has really been a blessing. When they came back that first year, she said, “The kids get to see your parents all winter, in the summer it is our time.”
I quickly told her that it wasn’t my parents fault that she doesn’t see the kids all winter so they aren’t going to be punished all summer. It’s been a constant battle with her wanting us to drop everything when they get back.
When I was going through IVF to get pregnant with Rocco and then when I was pregnant with him, she drove me crazy with the constant need to see the kids and not understanding that N was playing on a tournament team and then playing football. When Rocco died, she didn’t come in for the memorial. She just wasn’t there. Maybe she wanted to and L said no. She caused me so much anxiety and I was already at the brink of a breakdown that it’s possible. When G was born, she didn’t come in. By that time it was a relief.
She calls N her “Golden Boy” which would be fine, except I have three other children. Somehow I am not sure they appreciate their grandmother picking only one of them to favor.
Some of the differences between us:
She has admitted to being materialistic. I think she might be proud of the fact that she has nice things and can afford the finer things in life. That is great but we have four kids, two of whom have a chronic, life-threatening illness. I don’t need to hear about a country club that costs $45,000 a year when we are trying to raise money to find a cure for CF or we are paying hundreds of dollars a month in copays.
She is Bloomingdales and I am Target.
She is architectural tours and I am the zoo.
She is French food and I am Lou Malnati’s pizza.
I just wish she knew her audience when we are having a conversation.
Over the years, we’ve had many discussions, letters, fights trying to bring things out in the open and mend fences so to speak. Too many to count, really. I wish I could say they made any difference. I wish I could be less real (like why can’t I plaster a smile on my face and nod yes when she is talking to me?) or less affected by this. I wish there wasn’t the immediate thought of how to avoid.
I don’t like feeling ugly, and all of these feelings make me feel ugly, but the reality is that we are two people who didn’t ask to be thrown together and in any other circumstances would not be friends. Not everyone is going to get along with everyone. It just makes it so much worse because it happens to be with my husband’s mother and my kids’ grandmother.
They say that the in-law relationship is that of a dance and sadly, I think the time has come where I need to sit this one out.
Do you experience this kind of delicate dance with your family? How have you learned to navigate that relationship through the years? Tell me in the comments your best advice for managing difficult family relationships.
Thanks so much, Ashley! I wish things were different and it’s hard when something is hurting not to talk about it on a place where you talk about everything. It means a lot that you gave me this outlet. Love the intro because one of the best parts of blogging is our friendship.
I’m lucky to have a wonderful relationship with my in-laws. They treat me like a true daughter. But before I married Ben, I dated guys’ whose mother hated me.
That’s funny. The mothers of all the guys I dated loved me. Maybe there is something to that. You are lucky. I continue to wonder what it would have been like if L’s mom treated me like her daughter instead of the enemy.
These things are so tough to read and I’m so sorry that you have to struggle with this. I don’t have the best or closest relationship with my in-laws either, and I always wanted it too. These are not the things that should be struggles in life. But I’m glad that you are finding opportunities to get these words out and hope the release the tension, even a little bit.
Thanks, Tricia. It does help to get it out. Even to know that I am not the only one that struggles with this relationship.
Oh Annmarie! I am just BLOWN AWAY at the nerve of this woman with whom you have to deal with as a part of your family. I can’t even call her your MIL because that would make it too personal, as she seems completely detached, self-centered, narcissistic and completely socially misaligned. YOU POOR POOR WOMAN!!!! Ok, blood pressure up. It makes me SO angry that you have to suffer through all her criticism and selfish choices and behavoirs. Wearing white with a VEIL at your wedding? That is seriously DIAGNOSABLE!!!! Move! Move very very far away… it will be worth every stinking dime. (Still fuming!)
LOL, Chris. I’ve often said I want to move but she has enough money so that she’d either move near us or she’d come visit often. My family does not so I’d miss them too much.
Okay- so if you can’t run away from her, far far away…then you are stuck with the painful process of praying for God to completely transform your heart. It may be the biggest challenge of your life, to accept her exactly where she is at and love her beyond your pain. You may have a defining journey in doing that, and in the end…you will win, because you tried. Just think of how your kids will learn from you! It’s hard to even write these words let alone think of the reality in doing this. I will shut up now.
My mom-in-law has a twin bed in her guest room. The bed is for her son. I’m directed to sleep on the floor at the foot of the bed. We both slept on the floor. Now we stay in a hotel when we visit. All in all, she’s not so wicked as yours.
That’s awful about the twin bed! I keep saying that I would go see them in Florida more often if we could stay in a hotel.
Hi AnnMarie! I just wanted to say.. first of all, she may have the country club and the money, and the mud-free fur… but OMG, YOU have the BRAIN, and the ‘couth’, and the ability to be a thoughtful-speaking human being who doesn’t apparently get some self gratification out of making people feel inferior.
But I also wanted to share, my mother-in-law showed up in a white dress, at my wedding, when the colors were all black for the wedding party (black was even for the mothers, I know that sounds ‘dark’ (lol), but that was my thing- all black with pops of color with the flowers). Anyway, so can you imagine how she stood out.. with just the TWO of us in white?? She had secretly switched her dress, later telling someone it was because she “didn’t look good in black.” Um, really? Wasn’t aware it was “your” day to look good.
Also, she even reprinted the wedding programs to have her and her husband’s names as the “we invite you to the ceremony of their son and the bride” ..basically taking credit as if the whole wedding had been put on by them. (It should be noted that MY parents paid for every HARD EARNED penny of it.)
Sooooo…. can you tell it probably wasn’t a pretty ride from that day on? At least it sounds like you are handling it well and you and your husband soldier through it. My marriage unfortunately only made it 7 years. Not blaming the mother-in-law.. it would be the 2 affairs that ultimately broke the “I’m in hell” camel’s back.
Sorry for the long comment, and so sorry you have to deal with one of the weird mother-in-laws out there who feel the need for competitions and put downs, but I just wanted you to know you’re not alone! I bet your children are PRECIOUS and you’re a blessed mom and that’s all that counts!!!
I love long comments so no worries!
My wedding was all black, too. Thanks for making me feel less alone about it. I know it’s not funny but the “I’m in Hell camel’s back,” made me laugh. Thanks for your sweet words. (The program thing is unbelievable.)
{Kathy} Whoa! That was an interesting post. MIL can be challenging-but they have always done one thing right-had the son that we love so dearly.
That’s what I tell myself when I am in the middle of the anxiety of it all.
I like the line “Some instances that have caused major rifts in our relationship:” I thought what you wrote before that would have been the cause of the major rifts, but no, it gets better (or worse I guess).
Ha! That made me laugh. That’s one thing that I guess I can count on. Just when I think I’ve heard the worst, she somehow tops it.
{Melinda} I’m the other blogger over at Mothering From Scratch (my partner commented above). Just wanted to say that my son has CF also … I so understand about the co-pays and the medical bills and the stress. My son is 12 and is doing very well, overall. But not a day goes by that his illness doesn’t weigh on my heart and mind. Just wanted to let you know I’ll pray for you and your sweet children today. 😉
That is the sweetest thing ever! I have a 14 year old and a 10 year old that have it and both are doing well but it takes a lot to keep them well. I know you get that. I will pray for you as well! It’s so nice to meet you.
{Melinda} Ditto! I don’t often meet moms with CF kids — in real life or the blogosphere. Glad your kiddos are doing so well. Just went and commented and subscribed to your blog. Hope to keep in touch!
AnnMarie - I’m so sorry that I have to post this anonymously, but I’m paranoid my MIL will do a Google search on my name and find this comment! Does that say anything about our relationship? LOL!
Though I will say that my MIL and I don’t have quite the “exciting” relationship you have with your MIL, we struggle because my husband is her favorite. Luckily for me, we live in a different state, so I don’t have to deal with her as much. But our relationship has put a strain on my marriage because my DH doesn’t want to “choose” between us. It came to a point where I told him that he already did by keeping silent about our disagreements and that I felt betrayed by the whole thing.
Anyway, he’s doing better about making “choices,” but I’ve also just swallowed the dang bile and plaster a smile on my face. It’s sickening, but I want a sort of peace. But this is easy only because we don’t live in the same city. Otherwise, it’d be World War 3! 😉 Good luck with your relationship with your MIL - whatever ends up happening, I hope you get some peace!
I know the feeling of having to do it anonymously. We’ve had the same discussion on how staying quiet is not helping. The only time I get peace is when we are in different states. Thanks for going out on a limb to let me know I am not alone.
Wow. You poor thing. You are a saint for not hating your husband by association. That would be totally unfair, but I think I’d be tempted to blame my husband for not placing her on a boat with cans of food (and no can opener) and sending her out to sea. “Grandma went on a cruise, kids”.
Ugh. What an awful woman.
Ok, that is hilarious and I might have to use that one.
Trust me, I’ve lost track with how many fights my husband and I have gotten into because of this. It got so bad after one of them (the one at my son’s baseball game) that I packed up the kids and drove to see a friend in St. Louis for the weekend. Since she drives him crazy now as well, we don’t fight as often. I think he has given up trying to make us like each other. Us being so busy helps.
What a horrible woman. I wouldn’t feel bad for not being closer people have to earn that type of relationship.
The part that makes me maddest is that she plays the victim and doesn’t take any responsibility so I am made out to be the bad guy.
I would literally never speak to someone like that, but then maybe that’s horrible of me to say. Also horrible: I feel incredibly grateful right now that my husband’s parents were both dead when I met him.
Not horrible. In-law relationships put a strain on a marriage when they aren’t good ones. Leo and I were on a break before we got married and one of the reasons I went out on a date with a guy was because his mother lived in another state.
Thank you for sharing your story here, and thanks, Ashley, for allowing her to do so. As a woman and a mother, it makes me sad to know you are having to deal with this type of “crap,” when your main focus (and the surly MIL) should be on all your children and especially the ones who have special needs and circumstances. She (the MIL) should be falling all over herself to help provide for her wonderful son and to ease the family stress by helping out physically and financially as gifts that would be so welcomed if they were presented with unconditional love. As a mother of a son, my goal is to be the best mother-in-law ever when the day comes that he chooses a bride. I hope to never, ever make that special woman feel the way you feel. I love my son, and I only pray he will find someone who is loving, dedicated, and sees all his great qualities - and I hope she will also see mine - I can’t imagine treating anyone the way you have been treated. Don’t put so much pressure on yourself - focus on your children and your husband AND yourself - then hopefully, all your nagging, complaining, condescending attitude, etc, will seem so much more trivial and not zap you of all the energy that should be reserved for your life and your family. Too bad this woman never really learned unconditional love - if she truly loved her son the way a mother is supposed to, she would be ecstatic that he has found a great wife and great mom for her grandkids. I will keep you in my thoughts and prayers, that you will find a way to obtain peace in your soul and not give this woman your energy!
Thank you so much for your kind words and support. I often say that I know I am going to be the best mother-in-law because I know what not to do and what to do.
While my relationship with my MIL is light-years better than the one you have to suffer through, it still has its moments. What is really weird is our relationship seemed to be fine until my brother-in-law married his second wife, then I was demoted, never to return to being seen as a member of the family. I have to give her credit though, she has never held it against our children. How strange….
That is strange. I’m sorry that you were demoted. That is all kinds of wrong. Why is it that what you’d think would be an important relationship is such a hard one to balance? Maybe because there is no control on the choosing? I don’t know. I just know that it is not easy.
I’m just speechless. It’s so much to take in and comprehend, and I became emotionally tired for you, just trying to put myself in your shoes. Apparently, this relationship is very valuable to you, otherwise, you would have let it go a long time ago. There comes a point of “live and let live”. Your MIL may never change, and just know that you are good enough for YOU, and YOUR family, and that’s really all that matters. Thanks so much for sharing.
It is exhausting and if I didn’t value the relationship with my husband, I would have given up a long time ago. For a long time I lived with the “I can’t change her, I can only change how I let her affect me” mentality but even then, it was just easier not to be around her.
I enjoyed your truthful writing style - I think a lot of people can relate to your point of view - thanks!