This week I had the opportunity to study further into what can help in-law relationships to go more smoothly, to help strengthen a couple or to potentially help break them apart. I admit that this topic was rather interesting for me because as I’ve gotten older, I’ve seen the different relationships that different married friends have with their respective in-laws and have wondered what were some of the things that contributed to the smooth sailing that some enjoy versus the turbulent waters that others are trying to navigate.
As part of my studies I read “Creating Healthy Ties with In-Laws and Extended Families”, an excerpt from Helping and Healing Our Families: Principles and Practices Inspired by “The Family: A Proclamation to the World”. During my reading, I decided that I want to be able to have a close relationship with my future in-laws and I want to take the necessary (healthy) steps in order to do so. The authors quoted Genesis 2:24 “Therefore shall a mean leave his father and mother, and shall cleave unto his wife.” This stresses the importance of the marriage bond becoming THE paramount relationship in the couple’s lives. But it also struck me that it doesn’t say that we are to stop having a relationship with our parents. My reasons for wanting a close relationship with my in-laws is actually quite simple. In the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, we teach that families are eternal meaning that we will have ties to our parents, spouse, siblings, children, etc. for the rest of time and all eternity. Based on this belief, I will be entering into marriage knowing that through my husband I will be tied to his parents forever. Considering that eternity is a rather long time, I want to establish a healthy relationship with his parents so that is something I can take joy in rather than dread.
One thing that it said in the chapter that I really enjoyed was the importance of establishing a firm couple identity. Two have become one and that one must stand together in all familial situations because to allow one set of parents or the other to come between the husband and wife can often spell the beginnings of a path that frequently leads to divorce. When I get married, I want my husband and I to establish new traditions of our own that can lay the foundation for our new family for holidays and such. I want both sets of in-laws to know that we still value their input and love them, but that we are each other’s top priority and will not allow them to denigrate or attempt to devalue our spouse.