10 Responses to “Your Parents Are Coming To Visit For How Long? 8 Tips For Improving Your Relationship With In-Laws”

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  1. A HOTEL. I cannot stress the importance of making sure they stay in one and not your home.

  2. Laurie Laurie

    I would say that the In-laws and my hubs relationship with his mom have been the largest problem of our marriage. They still are in that they live 3 houses away and are now having health issues (FIL broke his pelvis today-fun) We probably broke every one of your helpful points.

    When we were first married, the hub couldn’t see the damage this triangle was having on our marriage. Now, 24 years latter, he resents them so much because he see the effect. He is also angry at himself for allowing the stuff to go on.

    With the in laws, I would love a do-over. I hate that I don’t have the relationship that you seem to have Corey. I missed out on that. I have to work hard to not have resentful feelings toward them. Sometimes I am more succesful than others. But it is what it is and that is sad. They live a pretty miserable life but it was the life they made.

  3. Sixteen years ago we moved to NE PA from NYC. About 3 years later my in-laws sold their NYC home and moved in with us.

    I am not making this up.

    My three bedroom house, home to my much-better-half, our dog and I, had my 2 in-laws and sister-in-law move in — with *their* dog.

    The in-laws were looking for a new home; fortunately they found one about 18 miles away – close enough but not too close.

    When my in-laws moved, my much-better-half’s cousin remarked to me ‘How long were they living you? A year?’ I replied – honestly – ‘No, only 4 months but *thank you*!’

    I genuinely liked my in-laws, and fortunately they moved out before that opinion changed.

  4. Laurie Laurie

    You’re a better man than I. Ok, I’m not a man at all but I like the saying. If that had happened to me, you’d have to just give me a gun. Somebody would be meeting their maker and I wouldn’t really care if it was me! :O

  5. It’s funny the role that in-laws play — they can offer so much perspective on one’s spouse, some context too. My man thinks the world of his mother, and she does do it all — cook dinner, run an amazingly successful business, own 7 rental-properties — but we’re not all perfect, and when he starts holding me to a standard that feels a bit like what he experienced of his mom, it helps to be able to say — hey, there are some downsides to all that energy/accomplishment. And then he can appreciate me for me.

  6. @Everyone- Thanks for the input. While in-laws may at times be a tough relationship to navigate, it’s worth it. Understanding them can help in understanding your spouse a bit more.

  7. I have the greatest in-laws. But one of the healthiest things we did the first year of our marriage was move out of state. As in, 2,000 miles across the country. It was tough, but sure did give us our independence and made for healthier relationships on both side of the house. When you marry the person, you sure do marry their family. There’s no getting around it.

  8. Corey,

    This is some good advice! Would it be okay with you if we shared some of it with those attending our Communication for the Holidays course, with credit to you of course?

  9. @Pace- Feel free to use whatever you’d like. Glad to have anything here spread around. Thanks.

  10. Laura Laura

    I’m having trouble understanding why in the last few years I’ve found my in-laws to be much more tolerable than my actual parents. How bizarre is that, right? My mother-in-law is all about togetherness and providing opportunities for everyone to enjoy time together, and my mother is more standoffish and wishes she could just have time with only me all the time (but we have done that too, and nothing is ever enough). Never thought this would be the problem.

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