AM 60 and still working so as not to be a burden to my three  children, who give me some pocket money. I was the  breadwinner/home-maker of the family when they were very young.
I’m  conservative and I love my family. I love to see everyone sitting down  for dinner at least once weekly, to enhance the family bond.
My  younger son, who lives with me, is married to an Indonesian woman who  would only come downstairs at about 1pm, when he wakes up for work. She  will not acknowledge the presence of others in the house if they do not  speak to her first. At times, she just walks past me as if I were a  piece of glass.
She had been staying with us well before she  married my son. I was not in favour of their marriage but gave in when  my son insisted. I even signed as a witness for their registration.
Apart  from sweeping the floor which I have swept and mopped before leaving  for work, she hardly does any housework. She only cooks dinner when she  feels like doing so. I do my husband’s and my own laundry, while my  daughter does hers and helps with the housework when asked.
I  speak and joke with my daughter-in-law when she wants to communicate,  even though I do not like her, for which I cannot give any reason. I  have never scolded her or shouted at her for not helping with the  housework. Most of the time she stays in her room when I am in the  house.
Once when I commented to my son that his wife was not  helping with the housework, he retorted that since my daughter did not  help, why should his wife do. He has been staying in the house for years  but has never helped with the financial upkeep, or to clean it.
The  first time we had a spat, my daughter-in-law left the house and only  returned after three months. One morning, she kept quiet when I asked  why she looked as if everybody had offended her. When asked further, she  exploded, saying that I did not like her and so forth. I countered that  I had never scolded or asked her to do anything and I had to accept the  fact she was married to my son.
She is behaving as if I am the  cause of her problems. My son condones his wife’s behavior. He has not  advised her to respect her elders, or told her her duty and  responsibilities in the house. I feel she is trying to tell me that she  is the one in control.
My son seldom speaks to me now, and  they’re planning to move out. It’s not that I cannot live without them;  what really hurts is that despite trying to build a happy family I am  being labelled a tyrant.
Tyrant
IT would be best  for all when your son moves out. Having them in the house is creating  too much tension and unhappiness.
Do not blame yourself or  worry that you are deemed a tyrant. You are a great mother who has  sacrificed much for your family. But perhaps your son and his wife feel  that your earlier objection to their marriage marks your disapproval and  dislike. This would have made them more sensitive to what you say and  do. 
Your son must love his wife very much and has been  trying very hard to protect her. However, he seems to lack maturity and  understanding of the situation.
While you have been trying  your best to accept your daughter-in-law, they prefer to stay at arm’s  length and keep from being too close and warm. From the bad start, she  might have felt unwanted and unwelcome in your home. She probably had  been badly advised to stay aloof to avoid quarrels and altercations. And  being so insecure about her position, she wouldn’t want to start her  married life being treated like the housemaid in her husband’s house.
Your son and his wife should appreciate your trying so hard to  hold the family together. They should also understand that you are only  human and there would have been moments when you could not hold back  your disappointment or disgruntlement. They could also have tried harder  to fit in instead of acting like strangers in your house. 
You  face a very common problem of trying to live with the daughter-in-law.  Each of you has a story to tell as both sides try to justify words and  actions. The best way is to simply accept your son’s decision to move  out and wish them well.
If they have bought a house, be  happy for them. Invite them back for the weekly family dinner, and be  warm and gracious to your daughter-in-law. Treat her like family, and do  not be overly polite. Hopefully, time will heal the rift. 
Thelma StarMag, Sunday May 9, 2010
This is a lesson for every mother/family to learn from a case who only know how to ‘feed’ their children but don’t know how to ‘teach/educate’ their young sons and daughters.
ReplyDeleteLove in wrong ways!
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