Relationships with in-laws can be
challenging, especially when it comes to long-held family traditions. Couples
face the decisions of where to spend holidays, what traditions of their own
they should start and many others. What is important to remember in these
situations is that each couple needs to develop their own identity. A new
marriage is a system of its own, separate from that of either family of origin.
New marriages survive best when all parties involved can see this.
In Genesis 2:24 we read that a man
is to leave his family and “cleave unto his wife.” This goes for women as well.
In a marriage, each person should put the welfare of their spouse ahead of all
others and the welfare of their family of creation ahead of their families of
origin. This is often hard as relationships that have been forged before
marriage that are hard to change. Luckily, putting your spouse first does not
mean abandoning your family of origin.
An example of this is seen in
family traditions. Growing up there was little breaking up of my parent’s
family’s holiday traditions. Christmas was especially challenging. We would
rush between houses of both grandparents multiple times each day, trying to
make everyone happy. There was little in the way of our own traditions for those
days. As I got married, my husband and I were faced with the decision of where
to spend Christmas. We decided that our own traditions were important and that
we couldn’t please everyone. In the end we had to make sure that our family was
taken care of. Like many couples, we decided to split holidays between families
and save time for our family to have time together as well.
This worked well for us because our
respective families responded well to this decision. They understood that the
other spouse’s family is important as well. There was never pressure or guilt
for us to be somewhere once we made a decision to be elsewhere. Other couples
are not as lucky as we were. Many parent-in-laws had such strong relationships
with their children that seeing anyone else get in the way of it, even the
spouse or their parents, is too much for them. In these cases it is important
that couples discuss these relationships together and make sure that they are
in agreement on what should happen. Dealing with the complicated relationships
that can come with a new marriage is easier if spouses can rely on each other
for support.