Home→Forums→Relationships→Sister in law…I don't know what to do
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November 12, 2016 at 10:05 am #120172KeiraParticipant
I have an issue with me sister-in-law (to be)z it’s not an issue anyone else seems to see but me. It’s probably a good time to mention I suffer from chronic over thinking and anxiety.
I’ve been with my (now) fiancé for 4.5 years. He has an older sister around 5 years older. When we first starting dating he mentioned how nice his sister is and that we’d get on so well. Well, that never happened. It’s not that we’ve never not got on but we never ‘clicked’. I’m shy when meeting new people anyway but when it came to his sister and how he spoke to highly over her, when it came to meeting her i just froze. Didn’t know what to really say or how to act. So i painfully shy. I didn’t see any other way to break the shyness at the next meeting so it took a good 2 years or so to finally come out my shell. Even now 4.5 years gone and I’m still not fully there. I don’t know why. I doesn’t take me this long normally. Although in fairness to myself, she didn’t make a huge effort at first either (still doesn’t really). I remember one of the first times we were alone together, she sat on her phone the whole time. What was I suppose to say/do?
The funny thing is we have loads in common..or would have if I had kept up my hobbies from when I was younger, now. As she does them all. But I can’t bring myself to talk about them because I don’t do them anymore and my career and what I do now doesn’t reflect that either. It really bugs me because I know we *could* have got on great if 1.i wasn’t so shy at the beginning and 2. I had went a different way in my chosen career (a slight regret in having to deal with as well) and hobbies!
I don’t know what to do. How to make or relationship better if I could or how to move on and accept that we’ll never be best friends?
November 12, 2016 at 10:36 am #120181AnonymousGuestYour fiancé spoke highly of his older sister: “he mentioned how nice his sister is and that we’d get on so well.”
It is your fiancé experience and opinion of his sister that she is nice. It doesn’t mean that she is nice. Maybe she was nice to him, at times. In your experience, she was not nice to you, definitely when she was on the phone the whole time you were alone with her.
If I was you, I would accept that indeed, your fiancé is not the voice of authority about who is nice and who is not. He can only speak of his experience and opinion. As a matter of fact, he is less likely to know his sister than you would. People see their close family members less clearly than strangers do. I would no longer try to make his wrong prediction come true, that is, that the two of you will “get on so well.”
The two of you didn’t click not because you are shy, not after all this time, but because, she is not as nice and sociable and loving as your fiancé believes.
anita
November 14, 2016 at 5:23 am #120345MandyParticipantKeira, thank you for sharing your challenge. I so resonate with it. Before I got married, my husband said his female cousin was so nice and such a sensitive person. She was total bitc_ to me on my wedding day, very skilled at tearing in public and very mean on several other occassions. He also said his mother was so nice, but I learnt from lots of painful encounters that she was far from nice .. especially to me. Sadly, some people are masters at deception and in some cultures, daughter-in-laws and sister-in-laws pose a threat to their status quo. It took me a long time to stop bending over backwards and being a doormat, to try to have a good relationship with and be accepted by them. It has caused immense problems in my marriage, because my husband refused to see what was happening, even when it was blatantly obvious.
So I’ve learnt to have firm Boundaries, which probably saved me from going insane. I’ve realised that being a people-pleaser leaves me feeling unhappy, drained and nothing I do will ever be enough. I cannot be my best at anything under those circumstances. The lesson for me was that I put my needs and happiness first – not easy with my religion and family teaching that I must be selfless. I choose to be my best and true self, so whilst I am glad my husband’s experience was nice with his family, but thruthfully they were mean to me and therefore do not really care about his well being. Hence I now greet and am polite, but keep my distance from anyone who is mean and disrespects me. My boundaries have also attracted harsh criticism, but that’s because others expect you to do what serves them (keep the peace & be nice, so they don’t have to deal with the problem or mean behaviour) – they are not being selfless.
Loving anyone in a healthy way, requires Self-love. How we treat ourselves, teaches and demonstrates to others, how to treat us. If we disrespect and ignore our own needs, we give others permission to disrespect and ignore our needs. It feels very uncomfortable to be assertive, but it is vital for healthy relationships. Lol! People don’t like boundaries, but they respect you – that’s sooo much better than being in constant pain.Anita, your advice is a gift and taught me a new perspective. Thank you. No-one else has authority to dictate who is nice or not. I feel so much more empowered trusting my intuition (which has ALWAYS been correct) and using my own discernment.
MandyNovember 14, 2016 at 8:31 am #120356AnonymousGuest* Dear Mandy: you are welcome and thank you- your post above is excellent, says I!
anita -
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