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In Law And Out Of It Richa Jha

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SOMETHING happens to most normal men
in the presence of their in-laws. Ever since my parents came visiting us at our
tiny Mumbai apartment, the hubby has been behaving, to put it mildly, asininely.
Two days before they were to arrive, he got his tattered jeans cut
off into hot pants. ''But you can't wear this in front of them!'' I exclaimed,
but he shrugged it off saying, ''So what, your father also wears shorts when we
visit them. Plus, they have to accept me the way I am.'' Ah,
hmmm!
Anything You Can
Do
Needless to say, there is an unspoken tussle of
who-dunnit-with-greater-verve between the two men. So if my father says he likes
prawns, the young man will eat only squid. If the father-in-law boasts about
his six-K walk, the hubby will be seen joining all the health clubs in South
Mumbai that same day. If the old man sports a yellow shirt, son-in-law will
receive parcels of fuchsia and neon lycra tops from his friends!
(
Do you think it is more difficult for men to adjust to the
spouses family than it is for the
women?
)
And of course, there
are other hubby quirks that surface only when my folks are around. He's nursed
his rusting bike back into rideable condition, and now insists on biking up and
down to his office. In a way, it suits us both. He is able to spend that extra
hour away from the house, and for me, it is the only 'sensible' thing he has
done since his in-laws arrived.
In
The Middle
It is difficult for me to be fully at ease when the hubby
and my parents are together. Most husbands lack the expertise required to deal
with their wives in the presence of the in-laws. It's like the discomfort of not
knowing what to do with your hands at an interview. So they alternate their
interactions with the wives between fleeting patronising, lordly
acknowledgements and the mush-melony hopelessly smitten act.
In our
case, with the former charade, he wants my parents to note how well he has been
able to 'tame' me; no one's been able to point out that no parents like to see
their child bullied. With the latter, the hubby unwittingly falls into the trap
of competing head-on with the pop-in-law for the master-of-romance
title!
The only way out is to let them spend as little time together
as possible. Which is where his sudden urges to bike and hike feel like divine
interventions, the sudden illness of his closest friend's wife's brother seems
like God's way of telling me that there is a non-combative win-win solution to
every problem under the sun, and the most crucial meeting of his life (hence
this terrible delay) doesn't annoy me a bit.
But as with everything
else, the hubby goes slightly overboard with this too. Yesterday, he shaved
thrice, bathed five times, and visited the loo a few more times than that. The
trouble is, we have only one toilet in the house, and spending hours on end in
there searching for answers to existential quagmires ('Sophie's World' is what
he carries in there these days) is not a terribly polite thing to do. If he only
knew where to stop...
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From
The Expert: People! People!
"For most men, dealing with their
in-laws can be quite stressful," writes psychotherapist, relationships
consultant and author Dr Vijay Nagaswami, "simply because the norms have not
been as well defined as they have been for the 'saas-bahu' equation. A lot does
depend on how well his wife gets along with his mother and also what his parents
think of hers.
Often, he ends up asserting himself in unnecessary
situations and doing everything possible to keep them at arm's length. A pity
really! For he is reacting not to who they are but to the roles they play in his
life."
Take a cue: Help your hubby get to know your mom and dad as
people rather than just your
parents.
Lawfully
Yours
‘Toxic In-Laws: Loving Strategies for Protecting Your
Marriage' by Susan Forward and Donna Frazier (HarperCollins) is obviously only
for situations worse than the one detailed here. Is your in-law the Critic, who
can't wait to tell you what you're doing wrong; the Controller, who tries to run
your life; the Engulfer, who makes constant demands on your time; or the Master
of Chaos, whose numerous problems inevitably end up in your lap? Just don't
allow this book to make you imagine the worst about them the way numerous women
think about their m-i-ls after watching the 'saas-bahu' serials!
In
'Meet The Parents', Ben Stiller plays a guy visiting his to-be in-laws who is
put through the grind and to a lie detector test by Robert de Niro, the guy who
will be Dad-in-law, and who is using all his experience as an ex-CIA man to
check that this is not a rotten apple. Watch it; most probably, it will make
your experiences seem mild in comparison; if not, what can we say?
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