What's the difference between in-laws and outlaws?
Outlaws are wanted. Ba Dum Ching...
For the final post of my marriage blog, we're taking a look at in-laws and extended family. Ideally, these relationships would be supportive in encouraging us to become one with our spouse. Sadly, that is not always the case. There are also instances of spouses who struggle to let go of their parents and turn completely to their companion. I want to break down the responsibilities of both groups to help establish healthy boundaries.
Elder Marvin J. Ashton:
"Certainly a now married man should cleave unto his wife in faithfulness, protection, comfort, and total support, but in leaving father, mother, and other family members, it was never intended that they now be ignored, abandoned, shunned, or deserted. They are still family, a great source of strength. ...
Wise parents, whose children have left to start their own families, realize their family role still continues, not in a realm of domination, control, regulation, supervision, or imposition, but in love, concern, and encouragement."
Married couples: (Harper & Olsen, 2005)
- Create a marital identity: It might help for a couple to think of themselves inside an invisible fence. Within this fence, information and behavior are shared with each other that should not be shared with anyone else. Daughters should share more with their husbands than with their mothers. Husbands should place the wife first. Wives should place the husband first, even above their children. (This can include other people, too. Friends, coworkers, etc.)
Be careful about who you let inside your fence!
"Couples do well to immediately find their own home, separate and apart from that of the in-laws on either side. The home may be very modest and unpretentious, but it is an independent domicile. Your married life should become independent of her folks and his folks. You love them more than ever; you cherish their counsel; you appreciate their association; but you live your own lives, being governed by your decisions, by your own prayerful considerations after you have received the counsel from those who should give it. To cleave does not mean merely to occupy the same home; it means to adhere closely, to stick together."

We moved to Minnesota shortly after my husband graduated from college with two little babies in tow. We ended up being six hours from my family and 24 hours from his family. There were times that we missed our family and the help they could have given, especially as he traveled a lot and I was raising our young family, but in hindsight, it was the best thing we did for our marriage. It gave us the opportunity to rely on each other for everything. We still visited family for Christmas and Thanksgiving, but our relationship with each other grew strong.
Where children are concerned, I have told our children numerous times that their father comes first in my life. I will side with him every time because I am going to be with him for eternity and they are going to leave me after eighteen years (fingers crossed) and find a spouse of their own.
Parents:
There are three types of relationships parents tend to create with their married children:
- Enmeshment: Parents and children feel they always have to be together and to not be together is a personal affront. Loyalty issues are distorted. Children are made to feel that if they do not attend every family function then the parents will be hurt. Sometimes financial support is tied to how much participation is expected from the married couple. Parents discourage the married couple from taking a job that would move them far away.
- If you are in this type of relationship with your parents: Express love to the parents for all they do, explain your need to further strengthen your marital identity, and explain that this is not a withdrawal of love and that you will participate in family gatherings when possible.
- Triangulation: This happens when communication either builds a stronger relationship with the parent than with the spouse or the spouse is excluded altogether. Parents try to learn about everything happening in the marriage and "fix it".
- If you are in this type of relationship with your child: When your child comes to you with marital problems, encourage them to discuss the matter with their spouse or a marriage counselor.
- Closeness: Parents are secure in their relationships with their children and can be emotionally close without having to be physically close.
Accepting Differences:
"80% of couples in failed marriages had not gained the approval or support of parents to marry" (Harper & Olsen, 2005).
Sons and daughters-in-law are coming from their own unique backgrounds and family values. It can be very difficult to enter a family where there are strong differences and personality clashes. Even if someone marries into a welcoming family, there are unspoken rules and expectations that exist that take time to learn. However, differences can be anticipated and even looked forward to if one can maintain a positive outlook. These differences can offer broader perspectives and even create growth opportunities for family members. It can also be FUN!

I was a little nervous about marrying into my husband's family because I have heard horror stories of in-laws along with all of the jokes. However, I was extremely blessed to marry into a loving and welcoming family. One unspoken expectation in my husband's family is that you must play Pinochle! It's not really an expectation because many of the spouses who have married-in haven't learned how to play. However, I really wanted to be a part of my new family and that is what 90% of the people did at their family reunion. So I learned. It was a small gesture on my part to show that I accepted my new family and wanted to be a part of them. It also allowed me to spend a lot of time interacting with them that I wouldn't have had otherwise. Because of it, I have grown to love them and consider them my eternal family. Here's a shoutout to all of my brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles, and my father who adopted me into their family with open arms. It means more to me than you will ever know.
CONCLUSION
Thank you for reading my blog. I hope it has been informative and encouraged you to recommit to strengthening your marriage. I feel the final post this week brings us full circle in helping us to a) strengthen our own marriage so that we can b) teach our children by example the importance of marriage and how they can build strong marriages of their own c) as we give them our loving and appropriate support and help them maintain healthy boundaries.

Source:
Harper, J. M. & Olsen, S. F. (2005). "Creating Healthy Ties With In-Laws and Extended Families." In C. H. Hart, L.D. Newell, E. Walton, & D.C. Dollahite (Eds.), Helping and healing our families: Principles and practices inspired by "The Family: A Proclamation to the World" (pp. 327-334). Salt Lake City, UT: Deseret Book Company.



