Long before she was married, my sister brought home a tall, successful lawyer ... who happened to arrive at my mother's dinner table with an unsettling, gun-shaped black bag. Because I'm very protective of my family (and because I'm obscenely paranoid), I considered hiding my assembled family upstairs before he got his rifle assembled, "The Professional"–style. But instead, the guy just put the bag down next to him and started chatting up my grandmother.
When the guy finally went for the bag hours later, it was worse than a sub-machine gun -- it was a magic kit. For the rest of the night, this dude did tricks; silk scarves poured from his shirt collar, and he occasionally showered us with coins. My mother and I were mortified; my grandmother, confused.
In all honesty, he was an all-around nice dude, but it was too late for him. My mom and I had decided that the relationship was over. We told my sister so, emphatically and often. She dumped him shortly thereafter, and I don't feel too terrible about it because it wasn't a love connection, as they say. But if it had been, you can bet I would not have suffered in silence about having to spend my Thanksgivings with Gob Bluth.
It's a horrible proposition, when we don't love the people the person we love loves. But the thing is, I'm pretty sure I've been on both sides of the "Dude, we hate that guy" fence. And I'm sure there's a rational way to deal with disliking your mother's boyfriend or your best friend's girl -- or being disliked yourself -- that don't involve cruel nicknames or waging elaborate prank wars.
Are you with me? Let's be diplomats.
Scenario 1: You Don't Like His Parents
The ways in which your significant other's parents can suck are so myriad the mind positively reels. Mom's icy, Dad's creepy. Mom's distant, Dad's too involved. They're passive-aggressive, or aggressive-aggressive. They're mean-spirited, they're evangelical, they're deeply invested in some terrible basic-cable show, and the fact that you've never seen it does nothing to deter them from going on and on about it.
Your Coping Mechanism
Although I normally advise my friends to be as honest as possible with their boyfriends, there's really no way to be openly negative about his parents without being totally evil. Limit your exposure, and be rational about the fact that we are not our parents, and that your boyfriend is not his father. Or his mother. Unless, of course, the person you're dating doesn't see that his mom is a full-on bear attack in social situations or that his father is a casual bigot, which could signify bigger problems to come for your relationship.
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Look, hardly anyone wants to be judged on their parents, let alone be equated with them, so all you can really ask is that you and the person you're dating are on the level with each other. If the parents are a Legitimate Problem, you need to make sure your significant other is OK with you limiting your exposure to them as much as rationality and decency permit. But if your boyfriend can't understand why you get offended when his mother does quote-fingers when she inquires about your "career," you're setting yourself up for as many fights in the year as there are holidays and family beach vacations.
Bizarro Opposite Scenario:
Your boyfriend doesn't get along with his parents -- but you do. Listen, you've all heard this before, ladies: Don't trust a man who doesn't get along with his mother (with the obvious exception that she's an imbalanced loon). If the parents are cool and their kid is just one of those people who can't stand being happy or approved of, they probably have deeper issues that aren't going to be fun for you to work out.
Scenario 2: You Can't Stand His Siblings
In a way, parents are supposed to be a little taxing. For starters, they're old as dirt and aren't hip and can at least be rationalized by dint of the generation gap. Bastard siblings, however, are much more difficult to deal with, especially if they live in the same place as your boyfriend.
For one thing, siblings have more shared history than you and he ever will, much of which involves old grudges, inside jokes and excuses being made by your partner over why his brother needs to stay with you for a month -- or why his sister is a classic One-Upper who always has a better, crazier, bigger version of the story you just told.
Your Coping Mechanism
If you're dating someone with a just-plain-brutal sibling, all you can really do is accept that you're not going to be close and pull a Neville Chamberlain appeasement situation: I'm never going to like you, but I'll allow you to be crazy and annoying at the margins of my life for the sake of your sibling.
Bizarro Opposite Scenario
Weird as it may be, hitting it off too well with your significant other's siblings can be dangerous ... and not just when that sibling is the gender you find attractive. (Don't even get me started on the potential for horror there.) But if your significant other is like most people, he's always going to be a little competitive with his siblings and need to feel that, at the end of the day, you're on his side. So, as tempting as it may be to be your brother-in-law's best drinking buddy, don't become his closest confidante.
Scenario 3: You Hate His Friends
You know that thing they say about how you can tell a lot about people by the company they keep? Yeah, well, it's true. If you're dating someone whose friends are all obnoxious or boring or rude, you'll want to exit stage right now. If he has lots of nice friends who all just happen to hate you, consider their quorum of dislike and perhaps check yourself for engaging in potentially unlikable behavior. And if you're dating someone with no friends, maybe check his icebox for hobo limbs.
Your Coping Mechanism
A lot of us live in cities or towns away from our families, but friends are inescapable. If you're dating someone whose friends are giant tools, you're looking at someone who is either loyal to the point of masochism or a tool-in-hiding. No one hangs out with racists or idiots or abusive boyfriends unless they, too, have a little bit of that in them, or not enough balls to stand up for the opposite.
Bizarro Opposite Scenario
His "friends" don't really like your significant other, and may even like you more. You know these friends -- the ones who seem to love their pal but casually undermine with comments like "I'm just surprised she landed you," or "You're great -- don't put up with his temper tantrums." This is a coded message. They're telling you they're only friends with the person you're dating because they knew him in high school or because he has a beach house. Run.
In Sum
Remember, in the end the most important thing is that you and your S.O. like each other. Other People can be dealt with, although often with exhausting delicacy. Consider this when deciding whether or not you're in a relationship for the long haul. And hey, if you can take your boyfriend's mom's obsession with "Twilight" and his brother's insistence that authentic spaghetti carbonara DOES have peas in it and his grad-school buddy who calls movies "films" -- it may actually be love.
[Redacted] Guy is the resident single guy writer at Lemondrop. He has written extensively on dating, love and the Wikipedia "talk" page for R. Kelly's "Trapped in the Closet."
Send him hate mail and love letters here, and follow him on Twitter.
Look, hardly anyone wants to be judged on their parents, let alone be equated with them, so all you can really ask is that you and the person you're dating are on the level with each other. If the parents are a Legitimate Problem, you need to make sure your significant other is OK with you limiting your exposure to them as much as rationality and decency permit. But if your boyfriend can't understand why you get offended when his mother does quote-fingers when she inquires about your "career," you're setting yourself up for as many fights in the year as there are holidays and family beach vacations.
Bizarro Opposite Scenario:
Your boyfriend doesn't get along with his parents -- but you do. Listen, you've all heard this before, ladies: Don't trust a man who doesn't get along with his mother (with the obvious exception that she's an imbalanced loon). If the parents are cool and their kid is just one of those people who can't stand being happy or approved of, they probably have deeper issues that aren't going to be fun for you to work out.
Scenario 2: You Can't Stand His Siblings
In a way, parents are supposed to be a little taxing. For starters, they're old as dirt and aren't hip and can at least be rationalized by dint of the generation gap. Bastard siblings, however, are much more difficult to deal with, especially if they live in the same place as your boyfriend.
For one thing, siblings have more shared history than you and he ever will, much of which involves old grudges, inside jokes and excuses being made by your partner over why his brother needs to stay with you for a month -- or why his sister is a classic One-Upper who always has a better, crazier, bigger version of the story you just told.
Your Coping Mechanism
If you're dating someone with a just-plain-brutal sibling, all you can really do is accept that you're not going to be close and pull a Neville Chamberlain appeasement situation: I'm never going to like you, but I'll allow you to be crazy and annoying at the margins of my life for the sake of your sibling.
Bizarro Opposite Scenario
Weird as it may be, hitting it off too well with your significant other's siblings can be dangerous ... and not just when that sibling is the gender you find attractive. (Don't even get me started on the potential for horror there.) But if your significant other is like most people, he's always going to be a little competitive with his siblings and need to feel that, at the end of the day, you're on his side. So, as tempting as it may be to be your brother-in-law's best drinking buddy, don't become his closest confidante.
Scenario 3: You Hate His Friends
You know that thing they say about how you can tell a lot about people by the company they keep? Yeah, well, it's true. If you're dating someone whose friends are all obnoxious or boring or rude, you'll want to exit stage right now. If he has lots of nice friends who all just happen to hate you, consider their quorum of dislike and perhaps check yourself for engaging in potentially unlikable behavior. And if you're dating someone with no friends, maybe check his icebox for hobo limbs.
Your Coping Mechanism
A lot of us live in cities or towns away from our families, but friends are inescapable. If you're dating someone whose friends are giant tools, you're looking at someone who is either loyal to the point of masochism or a tool-in-hiding. No one hangs out with racists or idiots or abusive boyfriends unless they, too, have a little bit of that in them, or not enough balls to stand up for the opposite.
Bizarro Opposite Scenario
His "friends" don't really like your significant other, and may even like you more. You know these friends -- the ones who seem to love their pal but casually undermine with comments like "I'm just surprised she landed you," or "You're great -- don't put up with his temper tantrums." This is a coded message. They're telling you they're only friends with the person you're dating because they knew him in high school or because he has a beach house. Run.
In Sum
Remember, in the end the most important thing is that you and your S.O. like each other. Other People can be dealt with, although often with exhausting delicacy. Consider this when deciding whether or not you're in a relationship for the long haul. And hey, if you can take your boyfriend's mom's obsession with "Twilight" and his brother's insistence that authentic spaghetti carbonara DOES have peas in it and his grad-school buddy who calls movies "films" -- it may actually be love.
[Redacted] Guy is the resident single guy writer at Lemondrop. He has written extensively on dating, love and the Wikipedia "talk" page for R. Kelly's "Trapped in the Closet."
Send him hate mail and love letters here, and follow him on Twitter.













Comments:
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Tuesday 14 September
By cb
Aaaahhh but Rusty. You and other stories here posted are much different from what the writer wrote. They chased him away over magic tricks. Your situation and other comments is by far different than the nonsense this person wrote.
Reply
Tuesday 14 September
By Korie Patrick Frank
In complete honesty, I thought that this WHOLE article was complete nonsense. I disagree with the grammar involved...DUDE...and run-on sentence after another, but I was not happy with the attitude involved. My mother and I didn't like this magician, so my sister broke up with him. I'm not a magician myself, but I'd have to say that it is none of your business what I do to make your sister happy. If you are not a fan of my hobbies, than you should only express your opinion if asked, it is none of your business otherwise. Something as simple as..MAGIC....should not be a reason to dislike a person. I find it appalling that this collumn is written by a paid employee....I can't fathom the mind process involved. I recommend a carrear change...like a professional FACEBOOK poster.....Thank you for providing an idiotic outlook on this situation, reguardless of the fact that you chose (or was chosen) to write this pitiful article.
Reply
Wednesday 15 September
By Beenthere
Run for the hills if this is someone you are thinking of marrying! Find someone who you can have a good relationship with the in-laws. I married someone who had an unbearable family and in the end it only made life harder for me and my kids. I'm sure not all in-laws would mis-treat the kids which come from a union between their family member and someone they do not like but my ex-in-laws did. And my now ex-husband refused to see it but the kids never forgot and do not like any of them now and I don't blame them but it is sad.
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Tuesday 14 September
By Gigi
My father in law is a complete jerk who lives to get medical procedures. This man basically abandoned his family and when my husband wanted a relationship with him I said "fine" just don't expect me to have anything to do with him. It didn't take long for my husband to figure out on his own what a loser his dad is and what a BITCH his stepmother is. Now we don't have to have anything to do with them and it suits me just fine. There was no conflict between my husband and I since I let him find out on his own what his dad was. We moved a state away from the rest of his insane family and see them about once a year which is also his choice. Given time, most of the nutballs will out themselves and hopefully your spouse is wise enough to see it and run like hell!
Reply
Tuesday 14 September
By americano
If you do not get along with your b'friends parents it does not imporve with marriage! Move on!
Reply
Tuesday 14 September
By David
In all reality it may be "you: with the quirks and not your boyfriends parents or siblings !
Reply
Tuesday 14 September
By Eephus
If one of my siblings brought home a loser who writes articles like this on the web for a living, I'd certainly suggest that they could do a whole lot better.
Reply
Tuesday 14 September
By Douche
Maybe you should go away. Chances are they sense it and aren't too keen on you, either.
Reply
Wednesday 15 September
By Judyvee
I adore my boyfriend's mum n she loves me too.we get along well wit his siblings though we'r nt so close.but his family is as important to me as it is to him.
Reply
Saturday 02 October
By mrchasmaniac
I cracked up about the hobo limbs in the fridge.
Reply
Sunday 03 October
By amk
What do you do when you know you hate his friends, parents, brother and sister-in-law, and then you go and get pregnant, and you're now stuck with him and his crappy family for the rest of your life? My advice is: use your birth control wisely if you don't want this to happen to you. Now my child is stuck with all of them 50% of the time. Even at 6 years old, she is starting to hate going over there for holidays and Wednesday night dinners.
Reply
Monday 04 October
By Shannon
OMG! I have been married to my husband 5 yrs together a total of 8yrs!! My sister in laws are two faced and nasty to me for no reason, tried to confront them 1 says she just doesn't like me the other plays dumb. It has gotten soo crazy that they no longer give gifts for my kids birthday or x mas because they are apart of me!! Don't know what to do because no I avoid events I wanna go to just because I know that they are going to be there to avoid drama, which is making my husband stay home too and then we argue!! PLEASE HELP!!!
Reply
Tuesday 05 October
By in hell
In laws can be quite mean and ignorant sometimes. My sister in law once prepared food ( at a family party) for her two small children that included food that my son is highly allergic to . My son has been in the ER, twice for these issue and cannot eat or touch food with eggs/nuts in them. My husband had words wih his sister and she refused to respect my son's allergies and served the food anyway. We left the party. My mother in law defended my sister in law and said my husband was overeacting. We have been not been invited for dinner/Christmas at my in laws ever since!! (2 years ago). My children do not understand. I have tried to make peace on both sides and NO one will back down. I am ready to give up !!!!!!!!!! My children are now ignored at Christmas and Birthdays.
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