Just reading a parenthood debate in the New York Times where one of the bloggers used the term "insufferable mother-in-law" with reference to unwanted advice.
But why do those terms go together so often? Why is a MIL automatically insufferable?
I remember mine, a formidable woman whom I found interesting and admirable, but who definitely wasn't much given to dispensing warmth. And it did annoy me when my husband at the time spent time alone with her without me. I decided immediately when my son got engaged that I would be different. I would be warm, giving, kind, supportive. I would offer no unsolicited advice.
Of course, it’s done no good at all. The operative issues, whatever they are, seem far too strong.
I have, however, passed through to the other side of the mirror. Granny’s desire for alone time with her son, had nothing to do with a desire to “shut me out,” even if that’s what it accomplished. She just wanted to re-establish her emotional connection with him, the kind of emotional connection that society rewards when it’s between mothers and daughters and snickers over when sons are involved. Mothers are not seen as potentially damaging to daughters, for some weird reason. Only sons.
So it’s the MIL who gets the rap, when the DIL’s are blogging, and I have a question for them: When unwanted advice is handed out in your family, who’s the source? How often is the voice suggesting improvement coming from between your mother’s lips?
Now, really, compared to that waterfall, how often has your MIL suggested something? Anything?
And yet, she’s a person, too. I know that may seem an odd thing to feel compelled to add, but my own experience to date indicates that the existence of an MIL appears as a distortion in the field of reality for many DIL’s. For them, the MIL is mainly a bundle of the DIL’s responses, whatever they may be, with the MIL herself invisible behind them.
The truth is that your MIL has feelings, interests, even passions of her own. She’s been around a while on the planet and has accumulated a variety of experience with responses to it that are sometimes humorous, sometimes stupid, sometimes verging suspiciously close to wise. But mainly she is here and real. Erasing her because of a personal insecurity, or even from a sense of superiority, is cruel. She will be gone soon enough.
Besides, the two of you should be on the same side, really. She loves her son and so do you. You will love your children and she will, too. A stronger possible bond than these two things, I cannot imagine.
Saturday, March 13, 2010
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
New Blog
I'm starting a new blog and hope if any of you followers are still checking out this blog that you'll come see the new one: The Book in the Drawer, http://bookcracker.blogspot.com
I've migrated the posts from my old Bookcrackers blog to this one, as well.
The Book in the Drawer will be focusing on the tensions between my day job and the need to keep writing fiction. And especially I'll be chronicling the effort to have my novel, ABSENT, published.
So come see how it goes! I've missed everyone and hope to keep up better from now on.
I've migrated the posts from my old Bookcrackers blog to this one, as well.
The Book in the Drawer will be focusing on the tensions between my day job and the need to keep writing fiction. And especially I'll be chronicling the effort to have my novel, ABSENT, published.
So come see how it goes! I've missed everyone and hope to keep up better from now on.
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