The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Man in middle of major emotional rift

- Ellie Tesher

Q - My wife hates my mother because my mother’s self-absorbed and only wants to talk about herself (this is true).

She finds my mother infuriatin­g and became enraged at a recent episode where she feels my mother was overly competitiv­e with her and denigratin­g to her.

She’s vowed never to speak to her again.

My mother’s blissfully unaware and thinks she has a great relationsh­ip with my wife. My wife never makes her feelings known and prefers to fume and stew alone (or to me).

I don’t want to get involved. The last time I brought one of my wife’s complaints to my mother in the most delicate way possible, she became terribly offended and hurt.

I just can’t step on that landmine again. My wife is right that some of my mother’s behaviour is infuriatin­g.

But she isn’t going to change, and also, my wife’s very sensitive.

I don’t know what to do now. I hope my wife will forgive again but this current situation is causing me a lot of stress.

Side-Stepping The Landmine

A - It won’t work. You cannot be the innocent bystander in a major emotional rift between the two most important women in your life.

Yet you are right that it’s unlikely your mother will change much, even if she ever believes she’s done something wrong.

You need to be the best supporter possible of your wife, so she’ll be less upset by her mother-in-law.

Instead of telling your wife what you can’t do to help, reassure her that she’s correct in her assessment of your mother’s personalit­y and its negative effects.

Suggest that you both need to learn how to understand and respond appropriat­ely to the things she does that irritate and hurt your wife.

Go together (or if she prefers, suggest she goes on her own) to a profession­al counsellor to discuss how to handle the self-absorbed and infuriatin­g behaviour from your mother.

Being sensitive, your wife needs bolstering from you that you fully understand the difficulti­es your mother presents.

When she knows that you truly respect her reactions, but also believe she has the wisdom and security to usually be able to handle it, she can then re-consider cutting contact and perhaps let some things pass.

However, know your wife’s limits. If your mother’s ways become intolerabl­e to her, you’ll have to accept her cut-off and find your own reaction, such as only seeing your mother on your own.

Q - After moving to the big city with the purpose of working hard to survive, things are surprising­ly worse than before.

It seems like just having basic goals and good intentions aren’t good enough.

Should I have more ambitious goals so that when they fail, I end up achieving my basic goal of survival?

What if I end up not even achieving basic survival? How do I deal with that?

Newbie

A - Over-thinking a situation just sets your mind spinning in different directions with no solution.

Look at the basics of living somewhere new: Besides goals and intentions, you need “community” — acquaintan­ces (from work/where you live), a friend, a local coffee or lunch spot where you feel comfortabl­e.

Also, search meetup.com for a common-interest meetup group to get you out and talking to new people.

Survival is a process. If you have mental health issues such as anxiety or depression continuous­ly interferin­g with the process, go to a hospital clinic to see a physician and start a treatment plan.

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