Guest guest Posted February 13, 2008 Report Share Posted February 13, 2008 That's what we did for my sister. (She's 5 years younger than me. So by the time she got married, the entire family was clued into nada's insanity.) We were all expecting a huge scene with my nada the day of her wedding. She pulled all the FOG tactics for months prior to the wedding so we were all really edgy come the day of. However, everyone in the wedding party knew to be looking over our shoulders. We were expecting THE worst. We were all armed with cell phones to call 911 if we had to. Because of this my sister was truly insulated from anything nada could have done. Turns out, she showed up with a boy-toy date that was younger than my sister, played the silent martyr and sat WAY in the back. She tried to talk with my sister as she and her husband were leaving down the center aisle (yes, on the recessional, right after I present to you the new Mr and Mrs,...the nerve!) but my sister told her she'd talk with her some other time but not now. So nada left in a huff and didn't attend the reception. That was it. We also had to do the same thing at my nada's mother's funeral. But that's a whole other story. Bottom line is : the more people you have looking out for you the better. In my sister's case, nada was facing a huge army of very protective people. In my case, I got married out of state and I was NC at the time so it wasn't an issue for me. I never told her, never invited her to my wedding. That was tough but that was what I chose to do. Kindest regards, Mercy > I definitely recommend > assigning someone else the job of defending against 's mother on > that day, so that you can feel free to truly enjoy it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 13, 2008 Report Share Posted February 13, 2008 Hi , >She blames me that is " cold " and " distant " because he's trying >to stand up for himself. I am also a daughter-in-law, and I was told the same thing. Once when I requested that she stop dropping in unnanounced on Saturday morings she said, " I've never had a problem getting along with anyone in my life until I met you. " Then when I was pregnant with my first child and I told her that when she questioned every thing that I ate, did and thought I felt like she thought that I was not being a good mother to my unborn child, her response was: " He (my husband) was always there for me until he married you. Now it is like I lost my son. " Huh? She hasn't changed in 20 years. First she diverts attention from the issue at hand and she normally accompanies her words with a pout, or a slowly shaking head, perhaps a single single tear rolling down her cheek. Raging and cursing is not her style, for some reason, I sometimes wish it was. But enough of me venting. . . Until I found this web site I never encountered so many people who seem to understand what I am talking about. I have been fortunate that 2 of my three sister-in-laws " get it " . I am happy that the two of you are working on this together and that you aren't buying into her manipulations. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 14, 2008 Report Share Posted February 14, 2008 That took guts not to invite her, but I'm sure you had a wonderful wedding day because of it! -Kyla Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 14, 2008 Report Share Posted February 14, 2008 Hi , Dude, you are so asking the wrong group of people how to establish adult relationships with our parents... So what I've noticed with my mother (at least what I noticed last time we had any kind of relationship, which was almost 5 years ago) was that her memory was remarkably selective. She would be willing to push almost everything under the carpet and ignore what had happened in the past, at least on the surface. Can you do something small that won't be potentially dangerous, like go shopping, go for lunch, or go to a movie? I think that if you sit down and explain the whole boundaries and your point of view, she will feel threatened and react poorly. Then if she does act up, tell her the behavior is not appropriate and if necessary, leave. This is my fantasy BPD world, not sure how well it would work in real life, but that might be how I would try it. is ________________________________________________________________________________\ ____ Looking for last minute shopping deals? Find them fast with Yahoo! Search. http://tools.search.yahoo.com/newsearch/category.php?category=shopping Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 14, 2008 Report Share Posted February 14, 2008 is -- LOL! So true! Your scenario is a good one, though. That's how I would handle it. We should call people on their selective memory -- or leave. -Kyla Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 14, 2008 Report Share Posted February 14, 2008 Kyla, Well, my nada and I have spent the biggest part of my life NC. I'd like to think it took guts to not invite her to my wedding but she had been out of my life for so long that it would have been weird TO invite her. She never knew I was even engaged. My poor baby sister was the one who truly struggled with her wedding (sister lived with nada and nada wanted to control all-things-wedding but sister moved out and told her no) but by then my family was rallying around her to protect her. Kinda made me a bit jealous because when nada ran me out of town everyone believed her, not me. With me being the oldest, I was the first to catch all her insanity and everyone's advice to me was,.....yeah, you know it, 'she's your mother, you need to try and get along.' But, for what it's worth, every one of those people who used that horrible line came back to me at some point and apologized for putting me through another round of useless reconciliation attempts. Once nada's true colors were revealed when I was gone (and she pulled the same antics with my sister), it became painfully aware that her trials were not of my doing. Truly, what comes around goes around. Kindest regards, Mercy > > That took guts not to invite her, but I'm sure you had a wonderful > wedding day because of it! > > -Kyla > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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