- Oct 31, 2008
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A little over a year ago some serious problems came up with my wife's parents, and ever since then they have been on this roller coaster of "on again, off again" drama. They're "good" for a while, then they're "doing bad", new issues arise that restart the whole mess, and it's a perpetual cycle of chaos.
Her mom is constantly calling her and trying to pour out all of her feelings and emotions regarding her dad or she'll try to preoccupy herself with my wife's company; yet she isn't actually being proactive in fixing any of the problems (at least half of which reside with herself). Her mom's a "counselor" (I use the quotes because she has an associates degree and works for the state counseling people issued DUI's—I don't consider her a legitimate therapist in the same fashion as a private practice counselor who has greater education and experience), so she thinks she's equipped to "fix" herself and that it's appropriate and sufficient to do so. She knows all the psychological jargon to make herself feel as though she's conquering the problems and progressing, but she's not.
Their relationship defines insanity.
My question lies here: What would you do if your spouse was caught in the middle of this cycle, and perhaps one of their parents was constantly leaning on them for emotional support and help to the point that they were in tears almost every night because it was taking so much out of them yet there was no improvement? Yet despite your spouses best efforts to establish appropriate parent-child boundaries, their love for their parents ends up defeating those boundaries and drawing them back into the madness?
I know how I would like to respond but I would also like to hear some of your guys' thoughts on here.
Her mom is constantly calling her and trying to pour out all of her feelings and emotions regarding her dad or she'll try to preoccupy herself with my wife's company; yet she isn't actually being proactive in fixing any of the problems (at least half of which reside with herself). Her mom's a "counselor" (I use the quotes because she has an associates degree and works for the state counseling people issued DUI's—I don't consider her a legitimate therapist in the same fashion as a private practice counselor who has greater education and experience), so she thinks she's equipped to "fix" herself and that it's appropriate and sufficient to do so. She knows all the psychological jargon to make herself feel as though she's conquering the problems and progressing, but she's not.
Their relationship defines insanity.
My question lies here: What would you do if your spouse was caught in the middle of this cycle, and perhaps one of their parents was constantly leaning on them for emotional support and help to the point that they were in tears almost every night because it was taking so much out of them yet there was no improvement? Yet despite your spouses best efforts to establish appropriate parent-child boundaries, their love for their parents ends up defeating those boundaries and drawing them back into the madness?
I know how I would like to respond but I would also like to hear some of your guys' thoughts on here.