Times-Call (Longmont)

Son-in-law values softball over family

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DEAR AMY » I have come to the conclusion that my son-in-law is a bum.

My daughter gives birth, nurses her babies, works a full-time job, cooks, cleans, and shuttles the kids where they need to go.

He quit a job without finding a new job first, and has now been unemployed for months.

I thought it was bad when his only responsibi­lity was his 9-to-5 job and he did nothing beyond that. Now he is unemployed, but now his only responsibi­lity is his six softball leagues and the various corn hole tournament­s he plays in during the evenings.

He watches TV all day long.

He is mildly verbally abusive to me and my daughter. His favorite phase is that things are “not in his job descriptio­n.”

Things like braces, cars and college were things I worked hard to provide my children with, but I guess he figures I will pay for his kids to have those things.

Or he doesn’t care at all.

It is ruining my relationsh­ip with my daughter and my grandchild­ren.

I still work and now am very resentful in regards to helping them with childcare and paying for extras like ballet classes, clothing and shoes, while he plays softball.

I guess I need therapy and a trust attorney to deal with these concerns.

Any advice?

— Miserable Grandma

DEAR MISERABLE » You could cope with this better if you understood and accepted that your daughter is making a series of choices. Her choice to martyr herself to a husband who sounds like a selfish deadbeat must seem puzzling to you, but your role here is not to fix her life.

In fact, unless your daughter comes to you with complaints, or for advice and financial gifts or bailouts, there is no need for you to weigh in at all. A complete lack of pressure or (expressed) judgment or shame from you might actually inspire her to take a long look at the reality of her life.

Your daughter has already establishe­d that she can run a household as a single parent. In fact, she sounds impressive.

She has options, and she can make changes if she wants her life to be different.

Don’t agree to anything if you are going to resent it and then make her “pay” in other ways.

You might offer to take the kids for an overnight on Fridays (a very helpful gesture), but otherwise let her know that unless it is a true emergency, she will have to make other arrangemen­ts for childcare.

Ballet lessons might make a nice special-occasion gift — but with unemployme­nt at a low 3.6 percent, if the children need shoes, then perhaps their able-bodied dad can figure out a way to provide.

Establish respectful and loving boundaries and focus on maintainin­g a positive relationsh­ip with the children.

Yes, therapy (for you) will help.

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