bumbershoot
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2007
- Messages
- 69,750
but yet still get the point across.
First, figure out what point you want to make.
It's my SIL and she says things like:
"One of the things I love most about Molly (my DD) is how take charge she is and shows initiative. But, she's also a bad listener and has a problem with authority, so I'm not sure if it's really a good thing."
Molly heard everything her aunt said and asked me about it later on, like why her aunt said she was a bad listener. It's hard to explain to a 7 year old who loves her aunt why her aunt would say that, especially when it's not true.
"Your kids are great eaters. I just hope they don't grow up to become obese because they eat so much. Maybe you should feed them less."
Molly knows what obese means, so she asked me why her aunt said she's going to be fat when she grows up.
"It's fun being around your kids because they're so full of energy and enthusiasm. Of course, they are loud and out of control, so I think you should let them come over and spend more time with Hannah (her daughter). Hannah knows how to behave and not be crazy all the time."
FWIW, my kids do have a lot of energy and are always moving. They're not the sit still and watch nonstop TV kind of kids and they're always talking, they're hardly ever silent. My niece is not like that. She prefers total quiet and would rather watch TV all day than go outside or run and play. She's an extremely quiet little girl (age 5) and different than any other 5 year old I've ever met.
After 2 days of these types of nonstop comments, Molly asked me if her aunt was mad at her because she kept saying mean things that hurt Molly's feelings. Now, DD is not a super sensitive kid, usually things just roll off her back and she doesn't let them get to her. No put-downs and name calling are at the top of our house rules list, so Molly didn't understand why I was letting her aunt break the rules at our house.
SIL is not going to change and she doesn't see how unnecessary her comments are. How do I address her criticisms when they're uncalled for and she doesn't think she's doing anything wrong?
First, to me, those aren't backhanded compliments. Backhanded compliments are the ones I get..."Oh wow, you're so much nicer than I thought you would be..."..."you're so much sweeter in person than you are online"...THOSE are backhanded compliments.
What you've got from your SIL are compliments AND then too much discussion of negative things in front of the people she's talking about. She needs stop stop at the compliments. A good auntie is there to make you feel GOOD about yourself. She is not there to make you feel bad about yourself. A good aunt will be there forever. A bad aunt will be ignored and never spoken to again once you are grown up.
"Molly takes charge and has initiative..." interrupted with "oh thank you, Molly did you hear that? say thank you" and then MOVE that conversation along.
The "good eater" thing, well, that's not a compliment at all, to me, but that's b/c I have my own issues with it. I was the "good eater" because I was the peacekeeper, and I ate disgusting things just so dinner would be OVER. While watching my brother and two half brothers make dinner last hours and hours because their taste buds woudln't let them eat.
Now, as an adult, as an allergic adult, with 3 brothers who aren't allergic to anything they choose to eat, I see that they were protecting themselves, and the ones in the wrong were the parents. But back then I was just angry with them, and went so far as to eat my brother's potatoes while mom's back was turned, so that we could get up from that table.
As I got older, good eater meant that I wasn't thin, but I was healthy. And then it became an insult, and now, guess what, no one could call me thin, and I barely look healthy at all. (I can do an hour on the elliptical, i can do whatever you need me to do within reason, I just don't *look* it). Phrases like 'good eater', no matter what its followed by, can do damage. At least to kids like me.
So I wouldn't let that phrase be said. If used, I would ask what it meant. But I woudl do it out of hearing of poor little Molly and her siblings.
When one has a quiet kid (me and my brother would play outside, but screaming was never allowed, and we would also be content to read books for hours, so we were quiet too) you just don't know what it's like to have a non-quiet kid. SIL would have a very unhappy group of kids on her hands if they all spent time there and expected everyone to be quiet. You can't teach the enjoyment of sitting and reading a book to someone who doesn't want to do that. You can't teach the enjoyment of running around screaming to someone who doesn't want to do that.
So she's just being silly, and perhaps questions about "what would that accomplish", or "what if Hannah ended up being more boisterous after that?"
would cause it to stop.
Overall I just think that these conversations need to be stopped before they start. "Please pass the bean dip" is a good way to change a conversation, of course have something else to talk about "oh this bean dip is sooo good", or, if you have no bean dip, "huh, thought I had it, hey, run out to the store and get me these ingredients."
My MIL is flat out insulting to the people she "loves". When she first met me I had been losing weight. The second time, I was in loooove and we'd been dining out and I'd gained *maybe* 10 pounds, probably not that much. She said "I don't recognize you, you got so fat, oh my goodness, you got so fat!!!" Yeah, thanks woman.
Now that we have DS, she is NOT allowed to say that kind of thing. She walks the edge...she is always saying that DS looks like my brother. What she *means* is that they are both trim and athletic. She pretends like she's talking about their faces (they look nothing alike in the face). And she also means that he's thin, unlike his parents. But he doesn't get that yet.
If DH and DS are visiting her, if an insult starts up, DH leaves with DS immediately. If she EVER insults my son, the visits are DONE. Not just for that day. I will not allow her to poison my son the way she poisoned my husband. He is almost 40 and is still working through the things she said to him as a child.
But even mild statements like "she's a good eater", when not immediately defined (you eat so many vegetables, and you drink healthy beverages, and you have a palate that likes so many wonderful foods!) can be twisted in a nervous kid's mind, and can drip its own poison slowly over time (does she really mean I'm fat? she's worried about me getting fat does that mean I already am, oh man now I'm sad, I need a cupcake...).
So stop those conversations. IMO, do whatever it takes. No matter if you do or don't, if she keeps talking like this around them, she will be the forgotten aunt, once the kids are old enough...