Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

People-pleaser caught between hubby, parents

- Carolyn Hax Email Carolyn at tellme@wash post.com, follow her at facebook.com/ carolyn.hax or chat with her online at noon Eastern time each Friday at wash ingtonpost.com.

Adapted from a recent online discussion.

Dear Carolyn: I’m tired of feeling caught between my husband and my parents. They didn’t like him and outright told him they thought marrying him wasn’t the best path for me.

Friction increased when I moved to his hometown. I am the first of my sisters to marry and leave the area.

I recognize my family of origin is not the most functional. They are temperamen­tal, judgmental, and resort to emotional manipulati­on. Growing up, I just went with it; I’m a pleaser. However, husband doesn’t like to see me get hurt so he tries to head off proposed visits by arguing what horrible things they might do/ say (plausibly, based on past behavior).

But I think disappoint­ing my parents is more painful than opening myself up to being burned by them. I don’t think they’re toxic enough to cut out of our lives!

On principle he opposes giving in to them, I think. And they are actively not nice to him, so I have to balance how much I’m torturing him by pushing for visits. The latest example: They were upset they aren’t invited to our house – it’s been too cluttered for hosting for most of a year – so I caved after they went on about how hurt they were. – Between a Rock and a Hard Place

❚ “[D]isappointi­ng my parents is more painful”? Translatio­n: You’re not choosing toward your desire, but away from pain.

❚ Husband opposes on principle? Translatio­n: Your husband and parents have stubbornne­ss in common. Pleasing is your emotional comfort zone, so that figures. Your husband does sound more focused on your interests than his own – but still, it’s pressure, which you react to by scrambling to please, so it’s essentiall­y the same problem in a new form.

❚ Too much clutter to host? Translatio­n: This is the microcosm of your world. Your “no” is about clutter or your husband, your “yes” is about your parents … and there’s no you. No sign of what you actually want. Do you want your parents to visit? Yes/No. That’s the foundation of any decision. The rest is pleaser-y stuff.

Now, I could argue your husband deserves an in-law-free zone, because they’re nasty to him. And he does.

But the main issue here is your inability to tune out what others want and just hear your own voice.

Disabling this decision-making ability is what domineerin­g people do. First, they impose their will on others. All others. Some people are strong-willed enough to resist that, and some aren’t. When they find someone who struggles to resist them, domineerin­g people move in and take over, and push the selfhood of the people they commandeer into a corner somewhere.

It also feels bad, so when overwhelme­d people see an escape opportunit­y in the form of romantic partners who are strong enough to carry them both out of there, the overwhelme­d people often grab on for dear life.

But even if your husband exercises a more benevolent kind of force, you still don’t have room to be you. So please make that room – a good therapist can show you how.

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