OP, trust me....
There are those on the DIS who will always find some way to attack an OP like you and go for the jugular....
SIMPLY IGNORE AND DO NOT RESPOND!!!!!
Again, SIMPLY IGNORE AND DO NOT RESPOND!!!!!
There are plenty of us here who have been exactly where you are sitting and totally and completely understand.
I do want to jump back in here and reply to your recent update that you know his parents must love your DH, but that they don't 'like' him very much.
Let me take this a bit further for you, based on my experience with my DH and his father.... and years of learning from it, years of soul searching....
Yes, his parents do probably love him as their child.
You need to know, right now, that this is probably not about that.
Not at all.
In my case, (as I believe in most cases) this was all about my FIL and MIL's narcissism.
I have come to learn a lot, and this is just so classic.
If one is so narcissistic that they always have to be 'GOD' of their world, then it just does not work that anybody else... even their only child/son in our case... could ever be good enough to compare. It is all about the need for constant self-validation that one is perfect and more capable and worthy of constantly passing judgement, and having control over, others.... And that others should bow down before ones judgement. Even ones so-called beloved children.
Now, I am not claiming to be any expert.
And, one can not tell from a few posts on a chat-board.
But, I do have to say that what you have posted sounds 'textbook'.
A book that I have experienced, verbatim, word for word.
When I finally got to know my inlaws, about the time I became engaged and committed to DH (they had lived out of state), it didn't take long for me to begin to wonder how FIL could be 'God' in DH's eyes, but I kept seeing a 'jerk'.... Let me tell you that, indeed, It took a long, long, time for DH to begin to see the obvious reality.
FIL went to his deathbead without ever uttering a positive or conciliatory word.
What wasted time and toll on DH, and untold toll on our marriage, all those early years turned out to be. Misguidedly hoping to 'appease' DH's father and hold out any hope for approval or acceptance.
If there is one thing that I have learned about this personality type, experts all agree that this person, like my FIL, simply
can never, and therefore will never, change.
There is a different status-quo and method that needs to be applied in a relationship with this kind of person.
If, AND I AM SAYING 'IF', this is a similar situation with your DH and his father, I can only hope that my posts here will help you guys open your eyes a little earlier, and get to that new status-quo (a more 'healthy' way to manage the relationship) a bit faster, instead of later, after your husband's father becomes eldery/passes away.