
Living With My Conservative In-Laws During Quarantine Has Been a Huge Mistake|Bible|Fox News
Living With My Conservative In-Laws During Quarantine Has Been a Huge Mistake|Bible|Fox News
Living With My Conservative In-Laws Has Been a Huge Mistake
When I first met my future in-laws, I thought they were good people. In my own twisted way, I still do, even though they stand for most things Iâm against.I probably would have never discovered our stark differences if weâd kept the casual distance I enjoyed in the first five years of knowing them. We saw each other at the occasional dinner and family function: conversations were kept friendly and social.Everything changed when my boyfriend and I found our dream home. As millennial parents of an eight-year-oldâhis son from a previous relationshipâwe prioritized getting a house over getting married. That move was the beginning of the many unpopular decisions I would make, as perceived by my in-laws.Because our lease couldnât be extended to work with the closing on the house, the reasonable thing seemed to be to stay with his parents until we were set to move into our new space. It would save us some money we would surely need, and it was only supposed to be for six weeks.Itâs been over a year.
Itâs been over a year.
Tip for Dealing With Conservative Family Members: Donât Live With Them
To be fair, I had some warnings on what a grueling undertaking this could be. My mother-in-law is a born-again Christian who wants nothing more than for her (uninterested) sons to bask in Christâs light with her. My father-in-law, a quiet atheist who will only mutter along with prayers on holidays, is an immigrant who has done everything to put his past behind him and embrace being an Americanâin every painfully conservative sense of the word.If you guessed that theyâre baby boomers, youâve guessed correctly. My boyfriend and I are millennials, and while our beliefs skew liberal, we are respectful of differing opinions. I had never taken my in-laws to task when they expressed views with which I disagreed. I figured Iâd be able to continue to bite my tongue through the short time we were living together. When short turned long and our child was exposed to some of their toxic opinions, my patience ran out fast.That said, I never went looking for a confrontation. Once we got past the pleasantries and I started seeing their true colors, I expressed my concerns to my boyfriend. He reminded me that this was why he left the home at as early an age as possible. He encouraged me to focus my energy on finding a new home so that we could get out.I never expected how volatile things would get.
I never expected how volatile things would get.
There Were Problems in the House Beforehand
I discovered that my mother-in-law was one of those people who expresses her displeasure at all facets of her life to anyone who will listen, but is willing to change absolutely nothing to make things better. My father-in-law had a temper that was placated by his wife, who loves to tell others that he, a man over 60, is an only child who isnât pleased when he doesnât get his way. Instead of pointing out the absurdity of that, she instructed everyone to just give him what he wants to avoid the fallout.The two minimally interacted outside of arguing and nagging, which is pretty stressful to be around. Sound only happened in extremes: tense silence or shrill screaming. The only thing they could agree on was picking on my boyfriend about anything that brought him the slightest bit of joy. They picked apart our parenting, telling us that we were far too strict. Simultaneously, they pressured us to add to our family, a topic weâd dismissed as none of their business many times before.I tried to stick to my mousy, compromising routine. It didnât last.
Dealing With Conservative In-Laws Is About Subtlety
On a weekend morning, when I was awoken by a spirited debate on how they put a gay person in every TV show to try to âchange people,â I let loose a few words that began my descent into becoming their least favorite person.âMaybe itâs because gay people are real and deserve representation? Theyâre not just a marketing device pulled out during Pride Month for the sake of diversity dollars,â I uttered. I was shot a look before they promptly tuned me out and continued their conversation.As much as I tried to tell myself their views were none of my business and this wasnât my house, I couldnât stand the ignorance our child was hearing. I was also worried about what subtle ways my mother-in-law was criticizing him. Of her eight grandchildren, she was satisfied with maybe two, girls she felt took after her. Hearing the way she would talk both about the kids and around the kids was enough to make me speak up on all sorts of things I was biting my tongue about.One day, my mother-in-law approached me on a day when no one else was home to tell me my liberal ideologies were upsetting her husband and that he outright disliked people who have been in the family for a longer time for lesser âoffenses.â Of course, his moral code is based on whatever talking heads on Fox News are saying, so this wasnât exactly heartbreaking for me. I informed her that I didnât exist to win popularity contests within her family and that her son shares my viewpoints and supports me in expressing them. She denies that fact to this day. Sheâs convinced herself that all her sons vote a straight Republican ticket, as they were raised to do.

Just When We Thought the Situation Couldnât Get Worse, COVID Happened
I wondered how Iâd found myself in this situation. At best, it was an All In the Family episode that wouldnât end. At worst, it was the Facebook comments section of any quasi-political article, filled with people with way too much time on their angry hands.Around the country, many people in multigenerational households experience the same thing. If it wasnât bad for all of us before, coronavirus lockdowns were enough to drive things to a real breaking point.I learned of the virus in late January and knew the potential havoc it could wreak. Thankfully, we were finishing up renovations on our new home. We had one foot out the door, and COVID-19 repeatedly bashed the door on that foot. When we explained to his parents what this could mean to them, in an age group that was vulnerable and with underlying conditions, they pretty much ignored us. Fox News was labeling this as a Democratic hoax and their followers, my in-laws included, happily obliged.Schools and businesses closed, but they both continued working while taking no precautions. It would take two people they personally knew dying from the virus before they started to consider that it might be serious. For every measure we took to protect them, they seemed to find a greater countermeasure that would stress us out regarding our own health and safety.During this time, they were more annoyed that one of their grandchildren was donning a pixie cut that âmade her look like an LGBTQ.â They also made sure to tell other members of the family that our drama about the disease was keeping everyone apart: Never mind statewide mandates, this was us trying to get attention for ourselves.
I Donât Like Living With My In-Laws, but That Doesnât Mean Theyâre Bad People
This story doesnât have an ending just yet. Just last month, I had to explain that not all people that were imprisoned are violent, or even guilty of a crime, to an eight-year-old after grandma told him all the bad guys were getting out of jail and coming into our neighborhood. I hear my landlord father-in-law lamenting people not paying the rent in a low-income neighborhood and how unfair it is to him.So how exactly do I find a silver lining in this? Honestly, I donât.Iâve found a perspective thatâs somewhere in the ballpark of positive for the sake of the man I love and his son. I donât believe my in-laws are malicious people. I think that theyâre clinging to an idea of a country, of a neighborhood, of a home and a family that no longer exists. Their fear of change has paralyzed them as time has marched on; their comfort relies on not being challenged in their belief systems. In her case, thatâs nonstop Hallmark movies and womenâs devotionals. In his, itâs food and Fox News.Their children are grown with families of their own, free to experience life and form differing opinions. As hard as they pull at the reins, they cannot stop that. They canât control who the eight grandchildren they love will grow up to be: proud of their immigrant ancestry, LGBTQ or something else entirely.Millennials are mocked for our attempts to break with generational trauma, to find ways of coping and letting go. Yet, we see how our boomers, climbing in age, see the world after carrying all that baggage. We know it isnât for us. It sounds dramatic to say the current political climate is ripping families apart, but when every area of life has been politicized, itâs the reality of the situation. Agreeing to disagree seems to be a thing of the past in this never-ending ideological story.
