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Lisa Wolfe

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In Defense of Mothers-in-Law

Posted: 05/11/2012 3:58 pm

On this day of celebrating mothers for their love and hard work, how many of us are secretly (or not so secretly) dreading the brunch or dinner we're required to have with our mother-in-law?

Maybe not as many of us as you'd think.

Mention the mother-in-law and people still roll their eyes, imagining an old busybody who barges into our homes, stays too long, and criticizes everything from how we raise our kids, to how we cut our hair, to how we clean (or don't clean) the house. But is this fair? As times change, minds open, and other stereotypes loosen their grip, why do we continue to cling to the image of the mother-in-law as a pestering shrew?

"For good reason!" said Sheila Martin, a New York mother of three who made the mistake of asking her mother-in-law to feed the cat while the family was on vacation. When Martin's mother-in-law saw the answering machine blinking in the kitchen, she not only listened to all the phone messages, but returned each of the calls. "So people wouldn't know we were away," explained Sheila, who asked that her name be changed to prevent her relationship with her mother-in-law from becoming worse than it already is.

Spread the word you're collecting stories about mothers-in-law, and you still hear plenty of doozies: The mother-in-law who snuck into her son's closet and then criticized his wife for not ironing his clothes. The one who told her daughter-in-law -- who had converted to Judaism to marry her son -- that the challah she had spent all day baking tasted like cardboard.

Though some of the stories can really shock, as my own teenage sons get older, I find it easier to understand the mother-in-law's predicament. She loves her child madly and can still so clearly remember the days of being the center of her family's universe. At an age when she is starting to feel more invisible anyway, she must relinquish her most cherished role to someone who may not share her style or most basic values. No matter how strongly she may not like what she sees, she must keep her mouth shut.

But a growing number of women -- many motivated by the desire to spare their daughters-in-law the misery their own mothers-in-law inflicted on them -- seem to be rising to the challenge with sensitivity and even flair. The mother-in-law who leaves groceries with the doorman when her daughter is busy at work. The one who traveled across the country to help with the kids when her daughter-in-law was being treated for cancer.

The good news about the persistence of the evil stereotype is that mothers-in-law who fly in its face may as well have negotiated Middle East peace for the way they're praised. "My relationship with my mother-in-law was one of the joys of my life," said Lisa Adams, a writer whose mother-in-law, Barbara, was the one who traveled across the country to stay with the kids when Lisa was having chemotherapy. Lisa's treatment went well and she survived her cancer. But Barbara was killed in a car accident three years later. Today Lisa will not be rolling her eyes at the prospect of having lunch with her mother-in-law: she'll be missing her very much.

Do you have a great relationship with your mother-in-law? Take to Twitter to show your appreciation for her using the hashtag #LoveMyMIL

 
FOLLOW WEDDINGS
On this day of celebrating mothers for their love and hard work, how many of us are secretly (or not so secretly) dreading the brunch or dinner we're required to have with our mother-in-law? Maybe ...
On this day of celebrating mothers for their love and hard work, how many of us are secretly (or not so secretly) dreading the brunch or dinner we're required to have with our mother-in-law? Maybe ...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MrsLiv
04:30 PM on 05/15/2012
My relationship with my MIL is... interesting. When I met my husband we lived in another state, but after we married we moved to within an hour's drive of their house. I liked her much better when we lived in another state and saw them only a couple of times a year. She is a very moody woman who is often painfully critical. I usually just sit quietly while we're there, but I have cried after leaving her house. It sometimes takes everything I have not to say what I'm thinking, especially when she says those terrible things to my husband. I do care about her and appreciate the things she's done for us, but she won't be watching her future grandchildren on her own unless she gets on some medication to lessen her mood swings.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Saumya Shrivastava
Broke is only temporary; poor is a state of mind
01:43 AM on 05/15/2012
http://liveoncampus.com/wire/show/3379157
Headless bodies!! Here are the further details on the same.
The incident appears to be the latest salvo in an escalating war between Mexico's two dominant drug cartels. (May 13).
10:01 PM on 05/14/2012
I'm beyond lucky with my mother-in-law. I respect her as a person – she's kind, interesting, educated and really pleasant to be around. My father-in-law was a gem too. We just didn't get to keep him long enough!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Goddess Athena
Proud Liberal Floozy
04:52 PM on 05/14/2012
My first MIL was a bit difficult at first. My ex was an only child and she doted on him, so I think she was unsure of how I would affect their mother-son relationship. In the beginning she was a bit stand-offish and difficult to get to know or get close to. I made every effort to get along with her, but nothing clicked. Finally, when we were alone one day, I turned to her and said, "I'm lucky to have you for a mother-in-law. After all, you raised the man I love, and he had to get all those good qualities from someone." I think that reassured her that I respected and liked her. I never tried to interfere with their relationship, and rarely turned down an invitation or chance to get together.

When she remarried, her new mother-in-law could be rather difficult, and often told my MIL that she should not have allowed her son to marry outside the faith (they are Jewish, I am Protestant.) One the one occasion that the subject was brought up in my presence, my MIL came to my defense, stating that she didn't care about my religion because what really mattered was that I loved her son and she loved me like a daughter, and the topic was not up for further discussion.

Did we have a perfect relationship? No, but it was good because we both tried to understand and respect each other.
02:58 PM on 05/14/2012
All of the glowing heartfelt comments made me wish my mother in law from hell could have been more loving. While she was a wonderfull mother to her 4 sons she made ALL of her daughter in laws life hell. The worst thing she did was allow her jealous/hatred of the "boys" wives to trickle down to the grandchildren. It's very difficult for me to hear my hubby say how much he misses his deceased mom, and my adult children had nothing to do with my in laws no matter how hard they tried. They could not forget how their dads mom treated their mother. I never complained or tried to make my hubby choice which one of us was more important, I knew my mother in law would never stop so I stopped playing her nasty game made life much easier. I never attended another family function on his side.
11:09 AM on 05/14/2012
my soon-to-be MIL is a sweet and wonderful woman, and i feel so blessed to be marrying not only my fiance but his whole family (future FIL is pretty great too). she has two sons, and i think it must be tough to only have grown male children... it seems like daughters tend to come back to you as they get older, but sons kind of go off on their own, more often growing distant. i sometimes feel a tad guilty for being the most important woman in my fiance's life now, when his mom is so wonderful and i know she has been there for him a lot longer and through far more difficult times (he went blind at age 4)... so i try to tell him often to call her and talk for a while or to ask for her advice whenever he's having trouble with anything. fortunately, i needn't worry - usually when i make this suggestion, his response is, "thanks, sweetie, that's a good idea. but i already did." :0)
10:25 PM on 05/23/2012
Wonderful story. Just a suggestion that you should also ask your MIL for advise now and then. She'll really love you for appreciating the wisdom of her age.
02:40 AM on 05/14/2012
my MIL is superb --- she raised an excellent son, my husband that is! no negative comments about her, i love her to death. even my husband tells me that my MIL loves me more than her daughters... well i think it all goes back to how we are as daughters-in-law. if we all just do what's expected of us and apply the basic rules of decency, warmth and compassion, i think we can all learn to live with our mothers-in-law.
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kbella
11:01 PM on 05/13/2012
My MIL is a kind and lovely person whom I love and admire. She did an amazing job raising the man that is my husband. She doesn't have a mean bone in her body, and she has always treated me with open arms. Granted, I do think she is one of those women whose own MIL was an absolute horror, so I think she is pretty sensitive to the fact that mothers-in-law can come off as intrusive.
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10:40 PM on 05/13/2012
Mine's an A-minus...loving, lively, sense of humor and non-judgmental for 30 years! she'd get a solid A if not for all those Matlock and Murder She Wrote episodes she watches when she visits.
Itsasmallworld
Your micro-brew is empty
10:25 PM on 05/13/2012
My mother in law is great. She is very thoughtful and she has taken my son from a previous marriage as her own grandson which is more than I could have asked for. The only thing is that the whole weekend is about her and what she wants to do. We all live 45 min away and we spend all day saturday at a tea she wants to go to and back Sunday for brunch and sitting around her house for hours. Is it wrong for me to want to have at least one of the days to do something I want to do with my family? Like go to a museum? Whenever I mention it I am told that she may not be around much longer...she is in her 70s and very young for her age. She never asks any of her dills or her daughter (we are all moms) what we all want to do.
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barondarby
Stupid should hurt
10:25 PM on 05/13/2012
I love my mother in law. She's beautiful, smart and talented and she raised a really great guy, actually, two great guys and a really wonderful gal. I guess I'm lucky. And hopefully my daughter-in-law loves me too cuz she's a pretty wonderful woman and my son is a lucky guy! Doubly lucky because HIS mother in law is great too~!
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justkeepswimming
10:01 PM on 05/13/2012
Just before I met my husband, his mother was in a terrible car accident that left her permanently disabled and neurologically impaired, on top of existing bipolar disorder. The first time she met me, she sang the Happy Birthday song - nowhere near my birthday - with the words "You look like a monkey, you smell like one too." After we were married, we lived near his hometown for 6 years to be there for the whole family as they adjusted to her condition. We took her for therapy swims, cooked and cleaned for her, whatever seemed like it would help, but she never had a kind word to say to me. I don't know whether she really doesn't like me or if it's just her condition, but I definitely like her much better now that we live 1000 miles away!
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09:47 PM on 05/13/2012
i was 21yrs old when i first met my future mil. one of the first things she said to me was, "i really liked his ex-girlfriend, she looked just like jennifer aniston." needless to say, we're not very good friends.
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luvs2eat
What fresh hell is this?
09:16 PM on 05/13/2012
My comments about my first MIL were not posted/accepted so you can imagine how I felt about her.

I miss my mom. I do not miss my first MIL.
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armywifee
From the Soviet Republic of Canuckistan
08:46 PM on 05/13/2012
I like my mother in law!