- Newlywed Boundaries: Holidays and Children
By: Kristie McDonald
With holidays just around the
corner, many newlyweds will be struggling with not only whose
parents to visit first, but should they even visit at all.
Amidst the challenge of defining
themselves as a couple, newlyweds must do so against the oft-competing
demands to favor one set of in-laws over the other. It is important
for newlyweds to know that whomever they visit first will feel
special and can come to expect this kind of preferential
treatment forever after. To avoid this situation, some newlyweds
resort to the every other year rule, and set themselves
up to alternate who gets what holiday first between the in-laws.
Usually by year three, this kind of structure takes hold and
both sets of in-laws come expect it to be maintained for life.
|
The problem occurs when the new
couple comes to realize that in meeting the expectations of their
parents, their needs and wants have taken a back seat. Resentment
builds and the once happy couple is left in a quagmire, worrying
about whose parents to disappoint first when they try to change
the rules.
Change may be the result of normal
family development. The newlywed couple may be juggling children
of several prior marriages as well as their own. As such, they
seek to establish their own traditions amidst the practical tugs
and pulls of competing demands.
The need for change may also
come about with the introduction of the first pregnancy. One
or other grandparent-to-be may be laying claim to the care of
the child as if their own. This can quickly lead to the new-parent-to-be
to feel overwhelmed with their life being tugged out of control
amidst fears that they will lose the baby to the well-intentioned
but intrusive in-law. |
|
At other times, the need for change
may be the result of behavior of one or other in-law that reaches
a threshold of no longer tolerable. There may be problems of
alcohol, abuse or other forms of inappropriate behaviour that
the newlywed couple cannot condone. At times, both situations
collide and the thought of exposing a child to an intrusive in-law
with issues of drinking, personality problems or untoward behaviour
is so unacceptable, that the newlyweds are forced to reconsider
visitation arrangements altogether.
The challenge for the newlywed
couple is in establishing a boundary around themselves and then
determining who gets in and under what conditions.
Amidst the tugs and pulls and
at times, unfinished family business, it can take considerable
effort by the new couple to establish this boundary. These couples
need reminding about the reason all homes have doors. Doors afford
protection. They allow you to chose who gets in and who remains
out. For newlyweds to succeed, they must mutually establish their
door. Will it be a screen door, with little or no filter, a steel
trap or a swinging bar door? It is not that one is better than
the other, but situations will dictate one over the other. A
screen door wouldnt work on a submarine, yet in the dog
days of summer a steel trap wouldnt do either.
With holidays just around the
corner, newlyweds are encouraged to think ahead about the kind
of traditions they want for themselves as well as the protections
that may be necessary in some families. To maintain the marriage,
the integrity of your relationship comes first. That is not to
say you forget your extended kin, but make arrangements you truly
can live with. The arrangement you make can be with you for a
very long time. |