In-Law Interference: Parti
In-Law Interference: Parti
In-Law Interference: Parti
Part I | Part II
Parents and extended family are vital in that they provide the new
couple with stability and support. However, if boundaries are not
clearly defined, it can overwhelm a couple and erode their marital
bond. The collectivist cultures many immigrant families come from
have begun to clash with the individualist society we live in and
many families are not able to find peaceful co-existence in their
newly formed families. Discussions about problems with in-laws
and family interference in our community are met with two common
arguments: that “children” need to remember to obey their parents
and that parents just need to stop “meddling” and allow the new
couple space to grow and nurture the relationship. However, neither
of these arguments addresses the core issue that is causing in-laws
to interfere in today’s nuclear families.
Most immigrants, who arrived in the U.S., left behind villages and
generations of extended family. Starting a new life and beginning a
family in the U.S. has often occurred in isolation and without family
support. The isolation immigrant parents often feel in the U.S. has
manifested into a desperate need to hold onto their nuclear family.
Immigrant parents left behind their siblings and parents and now
hold strong to the only “family” they have in the U.S. – their own
children. Children may be seen as not only preserving a cultural
lineage but as an emotional bond that is lacking in the parents’
lives. Therefore, the strong emotional attachment a parent feels to
their child may be difficult to let go of once their child gets married.
Feelings of insecurity and fear are what are causing many parents
to meddle in their children’s marriages. Many parents have a fear of
losing their child when they get married and that they may no longer
be important in the child’s life. Their behaviors are not necessarily
coming with malicious intent; rather the parent’s unconscious
feelings of insecurity drives them to interfere as they try to cope with
“losing” their child to a spouse. In addition, parents of children who
are overly dependent on them for emotional or financial support may
have a harder time allowing their child to become independent
decision makers once they get married. There are some subtle
signs in the early stages of the marriage where the parents may
position themselves to hold onto the relationship with their child.
Parents may “test” their child’s loyalty to the family by making
demands, threats and even withholding support of the new couple.
Parents may also be critical of the spouse to see how their child will
react in order to determine where loyalties lie. Parents may be
insensitive to the couple’s need for physical and emotional privacy.
They may give unsolicited advice and give their approval or
disapproval of all decisions the couple makes. All of these behaviors
may be seen by the parents as showing their care and concern,
however the new couple may see it as interference and may not
know its causes or how to deal appropriately with their parents.
There will always be meddling parents and couples will not be able
to change that reality. However, by understanding the insecurities
often at the core of their meddling and by creating boundaries early
in the marriage, a couple can minimize the potential for conflict that
arises from in-laws who interfere. When couples establish
boundaries on how they will interact with in-laws, they will develop
healthier relationships with their spouse as well as with their
parents. The boundaries a couple can establish will be discussed in
part two of this article.
In-Law Interference
Munira Lekovic Ezzeldine
Part I | Part II
Marriage is the bringing together of two families. However, many
couples struggle with exactly how to mesh two families together