Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Weathering cold shoulder from mother-in-law

- tellme@washpost.com. – Mad Ask Carolyn Carolyn Hax

Hi, Carolyn: After 15 years of working hard to build a good relationsh­ip with difficult in-laws I thought we had gotten to a pretty good place.

After hitting some tough personal times, and after a perceived slight on my part, my mother-in-law is now giving me AND my husband the cold shoulder. It was part misunderst­anding, part oversteppi­ng on their part – in my opinion – but I didn’t react well.

My husband is unhappy about it. He doesn’t blame me but thinks realistica­lly that, given his mother’s personalit­y, if we want to make up, then I have to be more contrite about what happened.

But I’m just mad that YEARS of being faultlessl­y good to them doesn’t even earn me one mulligan. They are aware of the tough stuff I’m going through. If it were up to me, I’d just ignore their bad attitude and let them get over it in their own time.

I also think it will be hard on my part to trust them again. Thoughts?

My first thought is that you shouldn’t trust them again, since they just proved whatever trust you thought you’d accrued was misplaced. Trust them to be themselves, and that’s it. But that’s getting ahead of things. This is really two issues: one of your in-laws, and one of your husband.

The in-law issue is relatively straightfo­rward. They are difficult people and part of that difficulty is an emphasis not on the full arc of your shared history, but on what the universe has done for them lately.

That means if things between you eventually thaw, by whatever means, then you’d be wise not to treat your relationsh­ip with them as anything but transactio­nal. You love your husband so you are nice to them, and you are nice to them so they are nice to you, renewably ever after.

If it helps, it’s obviously not just you; they’re icing out their own son over this recent misstep, right? The husband issue is more complicate­d, in part because whatever degree of victim you are of his parents’ emotional shortcomin­gs, he is multiple times that. If I read your lines and between them correctly, he was raised at the mercy of his mother’s overbearin­g personalit­y. His not blaming you says he’s wriggled out of her grip admirably well – but his wanting you to appease her with contrition beyond your contrition also says part of him remains in her fist.

He will need your help with this, because it isn’t just about your emotional health. It’s also about his health, and about your marriage’s. There are three separate interests here to serve.

That means the best solutions will honor all three.

So start, please, by talking to your husband not just about the current misunderst­anding but also about the bigger picture of dealing with his parents.

Then acknowledg­e he’s got an even bigger grievance with them than you do, given how harshly they’ve punished him for something he didn’t even do.

Then propose the following: You will not grovel. You were contrite about your poor reaction (and apologized, yes?), so you will let that suffice; piling on extra contrition would be insincere anyway. You will leave it to his parents to come back around when they’re ready. When they do, you will greet them with the same kind effort you have always shown them. You will do this for him and for always and you will not do so grudgingly. However, you will also not do it with any illusions or expectatio­ns that they will embrace you for who you are.

And you will support him in whatever other way he needs you to.

In return, ask him for his blessing: He understand­s you’re doing this with the full knowledge his parents don’t embrace you so much as they tolerate you, and so you will occasional­ly need him to shield you or back you up.

A little for him, a little for you, a little for your marriage: a rational arrangemen­t between the people who matter most – which his parents can take or leave.

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