Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Sister-in-law’s nastiness needs to be called out

- Carolyn Hax H. – Anonymous

Ask Carolyn

Hi, Carolyn: I have suspected since Day 1 of meeting my husband’s family that my sister-in-law did not care for me, but I get along with the others just fine. She is gushing when she sees us, but will talk about anyone who leaves the room. She gossips and says things about others I know not to be true.

My brother-in-law’s wife shared a boatload of gripes this sister-in-law has about me, including horrible things she said about my children. The person who told me what she said about my children was upset and thought I should know, especially since she said these things as she was holding court at a family event we did not attend. The comments about my kids hit a nerve, and I want either not to see her again or to let her know what I heard.–

H.: You’re probably right that she doesn’t like you, but that’s also beside the more important point: that she treats everyone abysmally. And apparently no one is calling her on it. As someone who often discusses the value of peacekeepi­ng in family situations, I hope you’ll trust me when I say this peace is not worth keeping. It’s the peace of enabling, appeasemen­t, rot.

The wife who tipped you off did sortof the right thing in getting upset and calling the meanness to your attention. The entirely right thing, though, would have been to summon the strength to stand up in the moment, before the whole court, to say: “Stop saying these things about X and her children.”

So that’s what I’m going to advise you to do about this, above all. You know the sister-in-law trashes people behind their backs Bystanders have power to call out cruelty, to identify it as unacceptab­le, to stop it – when they have the courage to. Your impulse now is to stop the abuse directed at you and your children, but stopping the abuse on others’ behalf as well as your own is the side the angels are on.

For your husband’s sake, talk to him about what you’ve witnessed and what you were told. Explain why you have let it go all this time, and why you won’t let it go anymore. If he asks to be the one to take it on, then allow him that, of course – his family. But if he asks you to keep letting things go, then hold firm.

Hi, Carolyn: My wife is from the other side of the country, where all of her family still live. Her family is tightknit – she’s the only member who lives out of state. I applaud her in her ambitions and willingnes­s to leave her home state to find a great job.

In the four years she’s been here, her siblings have come out to visit her on a few occasions, but never her mom, despite my wife asking her to. I know it’s not an easy trip, but her mom has gone on five-plus-hour plane rides before, so this comes across to me as rude.

My wife is very close with her mom so I see this as an even bigger slight. Is there something that can get her mom out here? Something my wife can say?

Anonymous: The impulse to fix her relationsh­ip for her is natural and understand­able, but it’s her mom, her relationsh­ip, hers alone to fix. If your wife does invite you to offer ideas and talk about what’s going on, then please consider that her family unity is one “2,” her breaking out is the other “2,” and the mother’s absence equals the “4”: If a daughter “very close with” her mom broke hearts and precedents to execute a departure from the nest, then the mom might be absent in passive-aggressive protest.

Fingers crossed mother drops her boycott as soon as pandemic conditions permit.

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