No noose is good news
If there’s a problem in your relationship, it’s best to address it sooner rather than later, before you accumulate years of resentments that hurt easily fixable issues.
That’s especially true if the problem has to do with your in-laws. According to Peter Pearson, a relationship coach and consultant in Menlo Park, California, most couples dealing with in-law issues are “delusionally optimistic”. They believe that after they get married, things will get better, and so they brush the issues under the proverbial rug. Except that most of the time, Pearson said, it does not get better. Sometimes, the tension gets worse.
The problems
Pearson outlined two types of in-law problems he sees. Either one person is jealous of how much time the other person spends with their family or one person’s parents don’t like the partner they’ve chosen. In the first instance, Pearson helps the person with the tight-knit family set some boundaries: How much time will they spend visiting their parents or talking with them on the phone? The ‘marginalised’ spouse must work on being more flexible.
For couples dealing with the second type of in-law problem, Pearson takes a somewhat harsher approach. The person whose parents don’t like their partner has to decide which camp they’re in. Should they stand by their partner or defend their family? It’s a tough choice to make.
If the person chooses their spouse over the family, that doesn’t necessarily mean they no longer show up at family functions. But when they do show up, they stand by their spouse (physically) the whole time to show that they’re a team.
Forging new bonds
Meanwhile, a study led by psychologist Terri Orbuch at the University of Michigan, cited in The Wall Street Journal, found that couples in which the husband was close to his wife’s parents were 20 per cent less likely to divorce over the next 16 years than average. When the wife was close to her husband’s parents, the couple’s risk of divorce was 20 per cent higher. Orbuch suspects that wives who feel close to their in-laws may have a hard time setting boundaries — and eventually, they may perceive the in-laws to be meddling. Couples postpone the discussion because it creates tension. But a problem like that rarely disappears without some effort.
If there’s a problem in your relationship, it’s best to address it sooner rather than later, before you accumulate years of resentments that hurt easily fixable issues.
That’s especially true if the problem has to do with your in-laws. According to Peter Pearson, a relationship coach and consultant in Menlo Park, California, most couples dealing with in-law issues are “delusionally optimistic”. They believe that after they get married, things will get better, and so they brush the issues under the proverbial rug. Except that most of the time, Pearson said, it does not get better. Sometimes, the tension gets worse.
The problems
Pearson outlined two types of in-law problems he sees. Either one person is jealous of how much time the other person spends with their family or one person’s parents don’t like the partner they’ve chosen. In the first instance, Pearson helps the person with the tight-knit family set some boundaries: How much time will they spend visiting their parents or talking with them on the phone? The ‘marginalised’ spouse must work on being more flexible.
For couples dealing with the second type of in-law problem, Pearson takes a somewhat harsher approach. The person whose parents don’t like their partner has to decide which camp they’re in. Should they stand by their partner or defend their family? It’s a tough choice to make.
If the person chooses their spouse over the family, that doesn’t necessarily mean they no longer show up at family functions. But when they do show up, they stand by their spouse (physically) the whole time to show that they’re a team.
Forging new bonds
Meanwhile, a study led by psychologist Terri Orbuch at the University of Michigan, cited in The Wall Street Journal, found that couples in which the husband was close to his wife’s parents were 20 per cent less likely to divorce over the next 16 years than average. When the wife was close to her husband’s parents, the couple’s risk of divorce was 20 per cent higher. Orbuch suspects that wives who feel close to their in-laws may have a hard time setting boundaries — and eventually, they may perceive the in-laws to be meddling. Couples postpone the discussion because it creates tension. But a problem like that rarely disappears without some effort.
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