Jim Brown knew he was in trouble before his mother finished asking the
question. 'Am I a better cook than your wife?' she asked, calmly stirring a pot
on the stove in her kitchen. With his wife, Joy, standing next to him, Mr. Brown stammered and stuttered.
He prayed -- 'for a trap door to appear,' he says. Finally, he did the only
thing he could think to do: Tell the truth. 'I said that my wife is a better
cook,' the 50-year-old owner of a Duncanville, Texas, auto-repair shop
says. The fallout? 'Biblical,' he says. 'There was wailing. Gnashing of teeth.'
Even his wife got mad -- telling him that he had been insensitive to his
mother. Sadly, the scene wasn't new to the Browns, who had been married seven years.
The strain between his wife and his mother -- and his position, stuck in the
middle -- was taking a toll on all three relationships. His mom criticized his
wife for her parenting style and for not getting a job. His wife cried and
complained to him. He retreated from both
women. 'I am a guy and not that intuitive, and I didn't really understand either
one,' he says. 'My inclination was to go mow the grass.' Over the next couple
years, the Browns kept trying to make the triangle work -- until the conflict
reached a crisis point and then took an unexpected
turn. Few family relationships are more fraught than the ones between a
mother-in-law and her daughter-in-law, and the man caught between them. It has
been fodder for comedy in movies and on TV forever, yet each generation seems to
have to learn for itself how to make this triangle
work. Mothers really do worry more when sons marry than when daughters marry,
according to unpublished research conducted by Sylvia L. Mikucki-Enyart,
assistant professor of communication at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens
Point. She asked 89 mothers-in-law what they worried about most when a child
married. Overwhelmingly, when a son married these women reported more
uncertainty and insecurity. The insecurity centered on the son's relationship
with his parents and nuclear family. Will he visit or call less often? Will he
spend holidays with the family? The mothers also reported worrying about their son's well-being and whether
marriage and his wife would change him. Some of their specific concerns: 'He's
no longer reliable, due to his wife's interference.' 'His interests have changed
dramatically.' 'Is he eating enough? My daughter-in-law is a bad cook.' 'Is he
happy?' Dr. Mikucki-Enyart also studied 133 daughters-in-law, eliciting their
concerns about the women who raised their husbands. 'Is my mother-in-law getting
too involved in my life?' 'What is her ability to take financial care of
herself?' 'What does she say about me when I am not
around?' 'We expect a daughter-in-law not to like a mother-in-law and to expect her to
be meddlesome,' says Dr. Mikucki-Enyart. As a result, the two women may tread
carefully around each other from the start, reacting defensively and eventually
becoming distant. 'It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy,' she
says. In a way, both mother and wife are competing to nurture the man. Loading the
relationship even more is women's traditional role as what researchers call 'kin
keepers' who maintain the family social calendar, relationships and
traditions. There is uncertainty on both sides. Mothers- and daughters-in-law are
supposed to be family, yet they don't know each other well. What to call each
other? How much to share? There is no
script. The uncertainty itself can lead to jealousy, anger or sadness. The more
uncertainty there is, the more each woman is likely to keep the other at arm's
length. This can destabilize the marriage: When his mother and his wife are
battling, a man's self-preservation instinct tells him to
hide. How can families break the pattern? It's really up to the husband/son, Dr.
Mikucki-Enyart says. 'He needs to step up to the plate,' she says. 'He has to
make his wife his priority and let that be
known.' If his mother often drops by unannounced and this bothers his wife, the
husband needs to ask his mother to call first. He doesn't need to tell her that
it upsets his
wife. 'A mother is more likely to respond to her son's request than her
daughter-in-law's,' says Dr.
Mikucki-Enyart. Daughters-in-law can do their part by keeping their mother-in-law involved in
the family. Invite them to dinner. Send photos of the children. And pick your
battles. 'Don't make it a competition,' says Dr. Mikucki-Enyart. 'You both love this
man in completely different
ways.' The couple should always present a united front, she says. Remember that you
are a team. Don't throw each other under the bus. Parents expect that united
front, she says, even though it may be a little hard for them to get used to at
first. The tension between mother- and daughter-in-law started about a year into the
Browns' marriage, when Ms. Brown got pregnant and her mother-in-law suddenly
seemed to know everything. Ms. Brown tried to politely ignore her mother-in-law,
but every once in a while she would tell the older woman she was wrong. Her
mother-in-law would cry and storm off, and Ms. Brown would end up
apologizing. 'I felt like there was no winning, like we were in a crazy dance,' says Ms.
Brown, now 45 and a fifth-grade
teacher. So, mostly, Ms. Brown complained to her husband -- and, mostly, he did
nothing. 'It didn't occur to me to contradict my mom,' he
says. Making matters worse: Mr. Brown sometimes sometimes discussed problems in his
marriage with his mom. 'She would commiserate, I think, to feel close to me,' he
says. 'And it increased my feelings of being slighted by my
wife.' Mr. Brown retreated into work. He and his wife began living parallel lives,
and eventually he asked for a divorce. But after they told his mother the news,
she seemed to back off. Betty Wade, now 72, says she doesn't remember that her
relationship with her daughter-in-law was tense or a factor in the couple's
divorce discussion. 'Just because he got married didn't make him less my son,
but I knew he had to spend his attention on the other lady,' she
says. The space gave the couple a chance to work on their relationship. They sought
advice from counselors at their church and went to a marriage therapist. They
read self-help books and prayed together. And they stayed
married. 'It was a lot of blood, sweat and tears,' Mr. Brown says. 'But I had learned
to come to grips with the idea that I had to place my priorities with my wife
first.' 来源:原版英语网 |
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