The Norwalk Hour

Woman fed up with relative’s abuse

- Jeanne Phillips Write to Dear Abby at P.O. Box 96440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or dearabby.com

Dear Abby: I have a sister in-law, “Karen,” no one in my husband’s family likes. She’s rude and insulting and acts like she is better than everyone else. If anyone confronts her about her bad behavior, she claims she has anxiety and depression to make the person feel guilty.

My mother-in-law keeps saying we should “turn the other cheek,” but I can no longer sit back and accept her verbally abusing me and others with no consequenc­es. I know I need a plan so I won’t lose my temper and say something I’ll regret, but I’m not sure how to respond in a respectful way. Any ideas? Doesn’t Like Conflict

In Kentucky

Dear Doesn’t: Do nothing without first warning your in-laws that you have reached your limit. The next time your sister-in-law is rude and insulting, say calmly, “I don’t deserve to be spoken to that way. That’s it for me. I’m leaving.” Then do it. Your husband should back you up on this.

Dear Abby: I tell myself every year that I will not do this again but I do. My husband was married before, and had one daughter who now has two daughters of her own. She has always had the idea she was somehow deprived. I assure you, she was not. Her maternal grandparen­ts thought she hung the moon and showered her with everything. When her mother remarried, she insisted that my husband allow her new husband to adopt her.

Contact with my husband was reestablis­hed when she became of age. I do my best to acknowledg­e holidays, birthdays, etc., for all of them. The problem for me is there is never any reciprocat­ion, and I’m tired of it.

We have a cordial relationsh­ip and see them frequently. It’s as though she thinks we owe her something. I am the one who does everything; my husband couldn’t care less. How can I end the cycle? To add to it, my own nephew is the same way. Nary a word of acknowledg­ement unless he is forced to. I want to maintain cordial relationsh­ips, but I feel like it’s a one-way street.

At Odds In New York

Dear At Odds: Your stepdaught­er and your nephew are adults. I suggest you have a mature conversati­on with both of them and tell them how you feel — that you want to maintain a cordial relationsh­ip but it seems like a one-way street. Then turn the other cheek one more time and, if they don’t respond, end the cycle.

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