Dear Annie: My wife and I are both 54-year-old professionals. We grew up in the same small town, but didn't begin a romance until our 30th high-school reunion. We were in a long-distance relationship for four years and then married two years ago. Her children are grown. My 14-year-old son lives with us.
The problem is her parents. For some reason, they have decided they do not like me. I am not welcome in their home, nor will they come to our house. My wife is invited to every one of their family events, but my son and I are not. Her three siblings treat me the same way, as does her 28-year-old daughter. We all live in the same town, but I have no contact with any of them.
I have never treated any of my in-laws with anything other than the utmost courtesy and respect. I have tried engaging her parents and sister in dialogue, but no one will say a peep. I am convinced her parents are purposely stressing my wife in the hope that our marriage will fail.
I could deal with all of this if I felt my wife stood up for, supported and properly prioritized our family. I feel she should not attend functions if we all are not invited. I am hurt and humiliated when she goes without us — effectively saying it's OK for her family to treat us poorly.
I cannot fathom treating my children as her parents have treated us. I think their behavior is controlling, selfish and borderline abusive. Is it too much to expect my wife to stand up for her family? — Ignored Husband
Dear Ignored: Of course not. Your wife's family continues to treat you with disrespect because your wife permits it. She should have the decency to tell them you are a package deal and insist on your inclusion. They will never willingly adjust to your marriage if your wife doesn't demand they make the effort.
Dear Annie: I have a simple question. Our family received an unusual gift last Christmas from an aunt and uncle. Included in the card was a gift receipt, along with a rebate offer for the item and the regular receipt, which is needed to cash in the rebate.
My question is, who should benefit from the rebate? Should it be shared with my aunt and uncle? Returned? Kept? — Beyond My Reasoning in the Midwest
Dear Midwest: If the original receipt and rebate offer were included in the card from the givers, it means they intended for you to send in the paperwork and keep the proceeds. (If they had wanted the rebate, they would have sent in the receipt themselves.) Consider it part of the gift. Be sure to thank them.
- 20 best-selling books that flopped in the box...
- Dangerous silence: Why you need to talk to...
- Amy Donaldson: Sports is the antidote to the...
- Combating the negative impacts of reality TV...
- Deseret News Exclusive: Excerpt from Clayton...
- Studies try to find why poorer people are...
- Deseret Book top products for May 14-19
- Memorial Day is a time to remember those who...
- Dangerous silence: Why you need to talk...
26 - Studies try to find why poorer people...
26 - Combating the negative impacts of...
15 - Math, music can be taught together
12 - Gov't taking new steps to combat food...
6 - Amy Donaldson: Sports is the antidote...
4 - Provo girl severely abused as a child...
4 - Memorial Day is a time to remember...
3






DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments