Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs June 23, 2014 | Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 469 |
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs June 23, 2014 | Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 5,716 |
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs June 23, 2014 | Registered: 13 years ago Posts: 866 |
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs June 24, 2014 | Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 12,457 |
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs June 24, 2014 | Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 469 |
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs June 24, 2014 | Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 3,003 |
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs June 25, 2014 | Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 469 |
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs June 25, 2014 | Registered: 20 years ago Posts: 9,324 |
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I will not, however, purchase any property with him until he tells them. He says that we can expect them to be very judgmental and they will hurt both of our feelings regarding this situation in the future.
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs June 26, 2014 | Registered: 16 years ago Posts: 6,607 |
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starbelly
He has explained to me that his parents, until recently, would sit him down and have these mini-interventions with him and try to convince him to get his ex back or get an annulment so that he can re-marry and father a bunch of kids. Apparently the pressure to get the annulment is overwhelming to him, and if they knew about me, they would apply even more.
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Additionally, he has told me that if we marry, his parents won’t attend the wedding because it would be a sin to do so because he’s still married in the eyes of God to his ex. He told me that if we visited them, we would never be able to sleep in the same room, even if we were married. Then he devised a plan where every other year for Christmas we go to see our respective families, and then on the off years we go on vacation together.
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My issue is that this would effectively eliminate me from ever participating in his family gatherings, which frankly look totally fun and awesome, and it prevents him from coming to see my parents, who I love and adore and am very close to. This is not who I am. I want my relationship to be out loud, so to speak.
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starbelly
He is currently at a big week-long family reunion that I was not invited to. I feel sad and upset that he didn’t even consider it. I noticed that his sister had friends down for the day on Sunday, and I feel left out. I can wrap my mind around him not wanting pressure from his uber-religious parents, but I still feel like I’m an outsider looking in. I’m not one to make demands in a relationship, especially when it’s long-distance, but this hurts me.
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs June 27, 2014 | Registered: 13 years ago Posts: 866 |
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Dorisan
Before you two take the step to own property, I strongly suggest counseling. You need a detached, professional third-party to help work out the situation and - importantly - to be a witness to any sort of compromises you are forced to work out. If your SO thinks that it can be worked out just between you two, it makes it easier for him to wriggle out of the agreement down the road. And he will try to do that. He's no superman. He will be subjected to pressures from his parents that will make him cave unless you can present to him the agreement (much-much better if it is in writing) that you agreed to together in front of a professional counselor/mediator.
Good luck on this. It sounds like you are in for a hard road ahead of you. He better prove to you that he is worth it.
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs June 28, 2014 | Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 4,176 |
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Dorisan
And what happens if your folks (heaven forbid) should go before his? You spend a holiday alone while he is off with his folks?
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs June 28, 2014 | Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 12,457 |
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law
I'm going to go ahead and assume that I am the only one here to whom that sounds just fabulous.
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs June 28, 2014 | Registered: 13 years ago Posts: 866 |
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs June 28, 2014 | Registered: 16 years ago Posts: 6,607 |
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law
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Dorisan
And what happens if your folks (heaven forbid) should go before his? You spend a holiday alone while he is off with his folks?
I'm going to go ahead and assume that I am the only one here to whom that sounds just fabulous.
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs June 30, 2014 | Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 469 |
Anonymous User
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs July 06, 2014 |
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs July 06, 2014 | Registered: 16 years ago Posts: 6,607 |
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lilin_unite
If he has a relationship with them, and you're being left behind and kept secret and that bugs you, I think he needs to grow up a little bit and learn to put his foot down with mommy and daddy. I like the suggestion up-thread -- if they get all pearl-clutching about it, stay in a hotel. You guys can sleep in whatever beds you want. His parents will just have to frickin' deal. That's part of being a grown-up -- not acting like a teenager slipping out to a party. He's an adult, and he needs to insist his parents respect him and you, if this is important to you (and I understand why it might be, losing holidays with him and being excluded from seeing his relatives that you do like).
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Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs July 06, 2014 | Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 4,176 |
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Dorisan
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lilin_unite
If he has a relationship with them, and you're being left behind and kept secret and that bugs you, I think he needs to grow up a little bit and learn to put his foot down with mommy and daddy. I like the suggestion up-thread -- if they get all pearl-clutching about it, stay in a hotel. You guys can sleep in whatever beds you want. His parents will just have to frickin' deal. That's part of being a grown-up -- not acting like a teenager slipping out to a party. He's an adult, and he needs to insist his parents respect him and you, if this is important to you (and I understand why it might be, losing holidays with him and being excluded from seeing his relatives that you do like).
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There's a board I've recently come across: Dealing With In-Laws Nation, or DWIL for short.
On one hand, that board is a clear illustration of how women make themselves weak when they become SAHMs. They have very little power to sway when they allow themselves (and their children) to become dependent on a man. I shake my head at reading so many of those stories. On the other hand, sometimes a concise bit of advice comes from the posters.
One statement had me nodding my head sagely. Basically, a modern family is not a tribal relationship. Most of the issues parents and offspring have is an unconscious throwback to that archaic system. The parents see themselves as the elders; their actions ensure the survival of the tribe - which is an interconnected group of offspring and relations. The tribal members remain in a subservient position, following the rules and orders of the elders. In time, it is assumed that the elders will be replaced by their offspring, who then are allowed to order their tribal members around.
That might have been fine in the time of defenseless villages or nomadic society, but that behavior is no longer necessary in modern, western circles. Indeed, overall, that kind of mentality impedes progress. Look at current societies where tribal custom is still dictated and you generally observe little progress in regards to technology and social customs.
So, to the OP, your boyfriend needs to come swinging down out of that tree. He's allowed himself to remain bound to a very primitive situation. His life is not going to progress until he realizes that he is a peer to his parents, not a subservient tribal member. He is their equal, now, not someone dependent on them for survival.
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs July 06, 2014 | Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 4,176 |
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs July 06, 2014 | Registered: 16 years ago Posts: 6,607 |
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law
Oh, PS. I have a book written by a clinical psychologist and published by the APA that talks about the unhealthy modern family relationship dynamic
Anonymous User
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs July 06, 2014 |
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Dorisan
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law
Oh, PS. I have a book written by a clinical psychologist and published by the APA that talks about the unhealthy modern family relationship dynamic
If I got a chance for a life do-over, I think I would have studied anthropology, sociology .. some field on examining how people interact and connect. Figuring out why my family is so freaking dysfunctional lead me to a lot of fascinating reading on the internet. Also, researching my family history, going back and 'meeting' ancestors who have been dead for decades and centuries, has caused a number of epiphanies.
Mostly, I realized that after a certain age, you don't NEED your parents; you can make a great life without being overly close to your siblings. A number of my ancestors - male and female - left the family fold at a young age and did just fine. My great-grandfather left Switzerland when he was 17, eventually moving to Illinois and becoming a part of my maternal line. He never saw his parents again; was separated from his siblings and didn't see some of them again for several decades. By all the information I could find, he was on good terms with them, but had an ambition that could not be satisfied in his native country.
My gg-grandfather left Ohio when he was 17, moved to Illinois and made a good life for himself. It was likely that the death of his mother when he was young, the remarriage of his father a few years later, gave him the impetus to become independent, but he married, created a family unit and moved forward. My great-aunt, sister to my Swiss g-grandfather, came to America by herself in her teens and was self-sufficient for a number of years, working as a servant and other menial jobs until she married. She returned to Switzerland three times that I know of, but otherwise did the same as her brother: married and created a healthy, separate existence from her FOO.
I don't get these people who are wrapped up in their FOO (family of origin) and consider everyone else - even their mates - as outsiders. In the natural course of time, your parents are going to die. Barring disease or accident, you will lose your siblings in the hierarchy of age. Remaining bound to your parents and siblings over any other relationship is not a natural course of life. You don't move forward when you do that, you remain static and don't grow. It seems like a mutant existence, to me.
Now, remaining fond of your parents and siblings; enjoying spending time with them; that can be healthy and supportive. But putting their needs and opinions over that of your own mate is not natural and is certainly not healthy. It impedes the successful creation of another unit of family who will move forward in the natural course of life.
People like that shouldn't marry or make commitments. If they do find someone with whom they want to mate, they ought to be up-front "I think I love you, I want you to be my bed-mate, housemate and life-mate. But get one thing straight, you come second to my parents and siblings. Any contrary opinion you might have, I'm not going to give it much consideration. And don't go getting upset or arguing about it because I'm not going to change." But, of course, they'd never say such a thing, because they don't realize that their family configuration is not-normal. Or if they do, they are either too weak to make a change or don't believe that a separate, independent life could be as good as their enmeshed existence. And they expect their mate to just suck up the dysfunction. That is just fucking weird :crz
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs July 07, 2014 | Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 469 |
Re: Boyfriend's Parents are Religious Nut-Jobs July 09, 2014 | Registered: 14 years ago Posts: 4,176 |
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Dorisan
I don't get these people who are wrapped up in their FOO (family of origin) and consider everyone else - even their mates - as outsiders.
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Dorisan
Now, remaining fond of your parents and siblings; enjoying spending time with them; that can be healthy and supportive. But putting their needs and opinions over that of your own mate is not natural and is certainly not healthy. It impedes the successful creation of another unit of family who will move forward in the natural course of life.
People like that shouldn't marry or make commitments. If they do find someone with whom they want to mate, they ought to be up-front "I think I love you, I want you to be my bed-mate, housemate and life-mate. But get one thing straight, you come second to my parents and siblings. Any contrary opinion you might have, I'm not going to give it much consideration. And don't go getting upset or arguing about it because I'm not going to change." But, of course, they'd never say such a thing, because they don't realize that their family configuration is not-normal. Or if they do, they are either too weak to make a change or don't believe that a separate, independent life could be as good as their enmeshed existence. And they expect their mate to just suck up the dysfunction. That is just fucking weird :crz