Question:
Our daughter dated this guy for a couple of years and we had major concerns about him. She was in high school at the time and he was a couple of years order. This was a major source of conflict between her and us during her last two years of high school. It was no secret to him that we disapproved and didn’t agree that she should be with him. They are now engaged and he will be a part of our family. We still disapprove, but the main issue now is that our daughter doesn’t want us involved in her wedding plans at all. She tells us that since we weren’t supportive, that she figured we wouldn’t want to help. We feel she’s punishing us. We’re not only worried about the wedding, but how to live with the fact that he’s now a part of our family.
Answer:
I certainly can understand your struggle with your daughter in high school, but now that she’s out on her own and starting her own family, the last thing she needs is your opinion. She already knows how you feel about her fiance, so driving that point home will only increase the acrimony and distance with her.
Marriage is already hard enough without the constant disapproval of in-laws. The best thing you can do is accept the fact that your days of managing your daughter are over and that it’s time to learn how to build a relationship with her and her soon-to-be husband.
Just because you didn’t approve of him for your then-high school daughter, it doesn’t mean that you can’t learn to accept him now that he’s going to be a part of your family. I’m not suggesting this will be an easy transition.
You may have feelings of resentment and frustration that they didn’t respect your guidance when she was in your home as a teenager. You may not want to give them the satisfaction of knowing that you could ever be okay with their union.
Please consider where your stubborn stance toward this relationship will lead you. Do you want to be right or do you want to have a relationship with them and their future children?
You might even consider sitting down with them and letting them know of the transition you’re working through. Let them know that you recognize how difficult their relationship has been for you as the parent, but that you now recognize how they need support instead of parenting. Show them they have a support system to help them build a strong future together.
If they are terrible for each other and have a rotten marriage, you can still love and support your daughter as she learns these difficult lessons. Our job as parents isn’t about protecting our children from all of their bad decisions. It’s letting them know they have love and support to take risks and learn from her mistakes.
Your daughter didn’t follow your rules and counsel as a teenager and now you worry about her future. You can’t continue to hold her hostage to the immature and disrespectful actions she took as a teenager. If there are real consequences coming her way as a result of her rebellion, you don’t need to do anything more than let her know she matters to you and you recognize she is living her life the way she wants to. You did your part in teaching her and all you can do is hope the lessons she learned in your home will support her in this next phase of her life.
You may be the only support she has now or in the future.
Elder Jeffrey R. Holland taught the following:
“When a battered, weary swimmer tries valiantly to get back to shore, after having fought strong winds and rough waves which he should never have challenged in the first place, those of us who might have had better judgment, or perhaps just better luck, ought not to row out to his side, beat him with our oars, and shove his head back underwater. That’s not what boats were made for. But some of us do that to each other.”
Continue to position yourself so you can be there for her no matter the outcome.
You can connect with Geoff Steurer at:
Website: www.geoffsteurer.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/GeoffSteurerMFT
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Twitter: @geoffsteurer
About the Author
Geoff Steurer is a licensed marriage and family therapist in private practice in St. George, Utah. He is the co-author of “Love You, Hate the Porn: Healing a Relationship Damaged by Virtual Infidelity”, host of the podcast, “From Crisis to Connection”, and creates online relationship courses. He earned degrees from Brigham Young University and Auburn University. He is married to Jody Young Steurer and they are the parents of four children.
*Jeffrey R Holland “A robe a ring and a fatted calf”
LauraOctober 21, 2024
Good advice. The time to weigh in on your child's dating choices is while the child is young and at home. The parents' job is to be surrportive and offer advice when asked. My husband and I married at age 50 (second marriage for him), yet his parents did everything they could to discourage him from pursuing our relationship, despite being told that he had received strong confirmation first that he should date me and then that he should marry me. The last few months before our wedding, they called him almost every day to complain about me and tell me he shouldn't marry me. Needless to say, I want nothing to do with them. We invited them to the wedding, but that was the last interaction I will have with them. There are repercussions for needless interference.
Corey D.October 20, 2024
This must be their oldest child or maybe their only child, I learned long ago you can't pick who your children are going to date or marry and especially after they get out of high school, while they are younger you might have some influence either discouraging or encouraging them in their dating but once they are older forget about it. I have seen some parents, usually the mother who have been heavy handed with their kids in regards to who their children wanted to marry or had chosen to date and it almost always had disastrous results.