Surely,
we understand the decisions. A husband tells his wife that he wants to cut all
ties with his family, especially his mother. His wife does not want to help precipitate a major family disruption. She wants a harmonious and inclusive
family environment. We understand her reasoning perfectly.
Husband
accepts her reasoning and continues to try to maintain good relations with his
mother. It is not working out well. Mother-in-law continues to abuse her son at every opportunity. So, the daughter-in-law writes to Carolyn Hax:
When I married my
wonderful husband, he asked if we could cut ties with his family. I thought he
was joking.
He grew up in a
verbally and emotionally abusive household — something I will never fully
understand, but definitely didn't grasp pre-marriage. While his mother was also
a victim (her father was the abuser), she is the one we have the most problems
with. I spent the first part of our marriage telling my husband he should be
more supportive of her because she was a victim and has clear untreated mental
illness. What I didn't understand was that she filled his childhood with
manipulation, passive-aggression, severe OCD and hoarding, and helicopter
parenting.
Now she continues to
unload her untreated anxiety on him. He tries to set boundaries, she ignores
them. Many people have suggested therapy, she refuses treatment. She blames
every problem she's ever had, including things that happened four decades ago,
which she still ruminates about constantly, on any- and everyone but herself.
Every 20-minute call leaves my husband drained and frustrated.
She wants to be around her grandchildren. How do
we let this woman into our life without feeling depleted? How do we set
boundaries with someone who ignores them?
—
Distraught Daughter-in-Law
Carolyn Hax offers a wise and correct observation.
This woman created the problem by refusing to accept her husband’s suggestion the first time.
She bears some considerable responsibility for the current state of affairs. Thus,
she owes him a large apology. Once he receives it, and once he knows that his
wife is with him, he will have an easier time standing up to his abusive
mother.
Surely, this is totally correct. And it is very important to
note that his inability to deal with his mother derives from his wife’s
disloyalty. Kudos to Hax:
You
laughed off your husband’s cry for help! And then sided with his tormentor
against him.
This
history must be addressed before you deal with the present. Why? You owe him a
massive apology. And because your husband needs strength to hold the line with
his mother — wherever he draws it, which we’ll get to — and healthy
relationships with the primary people in our lives are, for any of us, a
significant source of emotional strength.
As his
wife, you are likely the primary
person.
Maybe
you get it and have long since repaired the trust you damaged by siding against
him. My apologies, if so. But your letter doesn’t have that “WOW I messed up”
vibe, and his mother is still tormenting him — and that tells me there’s still
work to do on your marital trust. That means a full reckoning with your part in
his pain. Such as: “You asked sincerely to cut ties with your family and I
treated it as a joke. I’m so sorry. I left you to deal with her unsupported.”
Show him you get it and you’re safe to lean on now.
As a
full and fully comprehending partner, you can join him in learning about
boundaries: namely, that when properly set and held, they aren’t subject to
anyone’s disrespect. You decide what behavior you’ll accept from people,
and become unavailable to
those who behave otherwise. She gets blamey on the phone? He says, “Sorry to
interrupt, but I have to go,” and hangs up. She screams? He screens.
She
keeps hurting him? He cuts ties.
Ultimately, cutting all ties is the right thing to do.
I would only add one point. We understand that the new
husband accepted his wife’s suggestion because he wanted to ensure harmony
within his family. In a better world he would have politely refused from the
onset. After all, he had known his mother his entire life. His new wife did
not know her at all. He should not have suggested it, he should have explained
that he has no other choice but to cut ties with his mother. A loyal wife would
have acceded. It’s fair to say that the wife created the mess, but her husband
allowed her to do so. If he could not stand up to his wife, why would we expect
him to be able to stand up to his mother?
She keePs huRting him? He needs to ask pOLly for relAtionshiPS advicE.
ReplyDeleteGiven that the wife is asking Polly, I presumed the M-I-L was being hard on the wife.
ReplyDeleteAlso, how (HOW) did he get married without his wife getting to know and see how his mother treated him?
AND, their children need to be protected from their grandmother.
Yup. Sounds good Sam.
ReplyDeleteI can't believe it's not Freud is sleeping in.
ReplyDelete