Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Feeling at war with husband’s family

- CAROLYN HAX ▶ tellmewash­post.com

DEAR CAROLYN: My husband and I have been together eight years and married for two. His family has always had an issue with me because I am older with two children from a different relationsh­ip. They have never respected me, although I have never given them a reason not to and bent over backward to please them.

My husband’s sister and father have butted heads with me the most. She has come between my husband and me on several occasions. I caught her best friend sleeping with him about three years into our relationsh­ip — which of course I blame him for the most. When I found out, he left me for her. It lasted for months. About a year later we worked things out, got back together and got married. We have one son and another on the way.

While I was pregnant, my sister-in-law invited us to a party where her friend, the one who slept with my husband, would also be. My husband and I both refused to go and she threw a tantrum. I set her straight. I told her I would never feel comfortabl­e around this woman and I do not want her anywhere near my husband or my family ever. She said she was sorry and understood.

This Mother’s Day my in-laws and I planned a barbecue at their house. When I showed up, this girl was there. I left. My sister-inlaw never apologized. A few days went by and I texted the sisterin-law and I didn’t hold back how I felt. It wasn’t the nicest text and I do not feel bad about it.

Now I am at war with the family because I stood up for myself. I do not want my sister-in-law to be a part of my children’s life. She has no respect for me or my marriage and I do not want any more problems or for her to have a bad inf luence on my children.

My husband disagrees and wants her to be a big part of my kids’ lives. What do I do?

— R.

DEAR R.: You’re “at war” with the family not because “I stood up for myself,” but because you did by nasty text what mature people handle civilly and in person.

In doing so, you not only escalated a problem you’d previously managed, but also handed the family confirmati­on of whatever bad impression­s they’ve had of you over the years.

It’s important to stand up to bullying. No argument there.

It’s your methods that are so problemati­c — and possibly your readiness to see bullying where there might have been another explanatio­n? This is the sister’s best friend and your husband’s ex, so full erasure likely isn’t possible even if it were desirable.

To wit, some responses that hold the high ground:

1. Walk into barbecue, see the best friend, calmly say hello. If she doesn’t leave fairly soon, tell your husband or sister-in-law or the friend herself that you’re not comfortabl­e with her there.

2. If you’re still riled up after a few days, then text the sister, “Still thinking about this weekend. Are you free to meet?” Know beforehand what you’re asking and why.

3. Or, talk to your husband about what happened, how to handle it, who says what to the sister and when, and how you’ll respond next time — and make a plan you can stick to.

This isn’t to say calm-andcivil-robot is the only acceptable emotional gear. Sometimes you’re going to be the lady who realizes her [smirking] sisterin-law brought the [gosh-darn] [best friend] AGAIN to the party YOU organized, and who loses her [gosh-darn] [composure].

But when you’re pushed there, you hit a crossroads: You either serve your family, priorities and dignity, starting with a clear apology for losing your [goshdarn] [composure] and following up — your husband at your side — with a reiteratio­n of the larger point, whatever you jointly decide that is; or you double down on your tantrum and wreck it all, your kids’ home included.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States