It’s the old mother-in-law problem… in spades. A woman
recently got married. We wish her all the best. That is not the problem. The
problem is that during the wedding weekend her mother-in-law refused to talk to
her. As though that were not bad enough, said woman got sick during the wedding
and had to be taken to the hospital.
The blushing bride was seriously discommoded by all this.
She has accused her mother-in-law of ruining her big day. Said mother-in-law
has since apologized profusely, but that has not prevented the bride from still
bearing a grudge.
So, she writes to therapist Lori Gottlieb to get some advice
about how best to stop wallowing in her feelings.
Here is the letter:
I
recently got married, and have not been able to move past feelings of anger and
resentment toward my mother-in-law that surfaced during the wedding weekend.
Before
the wedding, she and I had a close and very positive relationship. But during
the weekend, she refused to talk to me and caused me great distress. To make
matters worse, she collapsed during the party, which cut our wedding short. An
ambulance had to take her to the hospital; my husband and I thought she was
going to die, and spent our wedding night crying and in complete shock. She was
discharged the next morning. The cause is still unclear, but she seems to be
doing fine.
I feel
like she ruined my experience of my wedding. After a couple of months, I
decided to talk with her about what happened, particularly how she treated me
before she got sick. She has since apologized for everything that happened, but
she says she has no memory of how she treated me. I desperately want to move
beyond this, but I can’t escape the feeling of having been robbed of what was
supposed to be one of the most special days of my life. I’m torn between
wanting to move on and being stuck in the trauma and sadness I now associate
with my wedding.
How can
I move on without repressing everything that has happened?
Anonymous
I might be missing something, but is it possible that the
woman actually got sick. After all, she was hospitalized. No one seems now to
know what the matter was, but that does not mean that nothing was the matter.
And it would not be unheard of for a woman who is coming down with an illness
to behave strangely, even to avoid the company of other people.
I raise this point because the bride and therapist Gottlieb
seem to believe that the mother-in-law was doing it on purpose, had gotten sick to
send a message and intended to ruin her son’s wedding. We note, and not merely
in passing, that the older woman was also making a mess of her son’s wedding.
The first issue is quite simple: was the mother-in-law’s
behavior intentional? If it was, we are dealing with one problem. If it wasn’t,
we are dealing with something very different.
The bride believes that the actions were intentional and
Gottlieb seems largely to agree. And yet we have no information about what
kept the woman in the hospital over night. Being discharged does not mean that nothing was wrong. It means that they don't know what was wrong.
For my part, when in doubt we do better to think that the
actions were not intended and that a woman who required hospitalization was not
making a scene to embarrass her son or to demonstrate her disapproval of the
marriage. Gottlieb seems to believe otherwise and obviously this colors her
approach to the case.
While Gottlieb notes that the bride has nothing to say about
her husband’s reaction, this might mean that he did not take his mother’s
behavior personally. And that he did not take it as a reflection of her
attitude toward her new daughter-in-law.
If the bride is the only one who believes that her mother-in-law
did it intentionally, then clearly she has done too much therapy.
For her part Gottlieb borrows a page from cognitive therapy
and recommends that the bride list the good parts of the wedding… the better to
attain to a balanced judgment. This is standard cognitive treatment. For the
most part it is valuable. Here, however, it does not appear to be the right
approach. The problem is not in her mind, but in the way her wedding was seen
by the assembled family and guests. To emphasize a point that no one seems to
understand these days, shame involves how other people see you, not how you
feel about yourself. If you attempt to deal with shame without doing anything
to change the way others see you, you will fail. I guarantee it. If it’s just
you and your shame, alone in the shower, you will lose.
The letter writer does not tell us anything at all about the
way other people reacted to her mother-in-law’s medical emergency. Because that
is the real question. If she could get over thinking that everything was about her,
perhaps she would see this.
One fails to understand why the assembled guests, seeing the
paramedics arrive to take mother-in-law to the emergency room, would have
assumed that said woman was commenting, through her illness, on the wedding.
For the most part, people assume that someone who got sick simply got sick. And
that it does not mean anything in particular. It's the normal default.
If there is any ambiguity, the bride can deal with it, not by
doing cognitive exercises or by feeling her feelings, but by calling the
guests, one by one, to explain that her mother-in-law has recovered from her
mystery illness, but that she will be placed under observation.
Above all else she needs a plan of action to ensure that
other people do not over-interpret the illness. Evidently, the task is made
more difficult by the fact that the bride is full-on over-interpreting the
event. One suspects that other people called her the next day to ask how her
mother-in-law was… and that this will have moved things in the right direction.
For the record, her mother-in-law did apologize to her,
because it’s the right thing to do, even when an action was unintentional. One
trusts that she has taken the time to convey her regrets to the guests that she knew personally.
Gottlieb wants the mother-in-law to consider whether her illness had anything
to do with her own internal conflicts, which is a way for therapists to drum up
business. It’s a bad piece of advice… for someone who might be suffering from
an undiagnosed illness should not be induced to think that it’s all in
her mind.
And Gottlieb is also off the mark when she suggests that her
mother-in-law’s illness might become “a hilarious story” that will be recounted
over and over again at birthday parties and picnics. So much for therapists’
superior capacity for empathy… for feeling anything for the woman who had to be
hospitalized during her son’s wedding.
If perchance the incident was a sign that the woman was
suffering from a more serious illness, one that had gone unrecognized, it is
wrong to believe that everyone should start thinking that she was clowning
around. If the woman humiliated herself at the wedding, for whatever reason,
what possibly can be gained by making her into a permanent family joke? Why
make her children’s grandmother into a laughing stock? And why continue to rub
it in her husband’s face?
4 comments:
Yes, it seems like it wouldn't be a big deal if not for the solipsistic bridezilla making it all about her. It may be that the MIL's internal conflicts caused her to feel ill, but the fact that she TRIED to calmly sit through her son's marriage to someone so self-centered shows a lot of tact - something the bride should learn.
Everybody is aware of the 'divorce rape' situation in our society. I think women likely have a hard time acknowledging the severe risk that a man takes by getting married. One of the few situations where they may be able to bring themselves to worry about it is when it is their own son taking the risk.
If the bride assigns malicious, manipulative psychological intent to illness, she’s already having a problem with the vow “in sickness and in health.”
/Esther
My mother told me, before my first wedding, that her job was to "wear beige and be quiet". She died before my second wedding, 30 years later. As had my first wife and her mother.
My mother told me, before my wedding, that her part was to wear beige and keep her mouth shut. All went well. Wife's mother was calm and easy-going, having done this 3 times before.
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