We soon learned when my mother and brother came for Christmas - and stayed for nearly two weeks due to cancelled flights etc.
I had a toddler and young baby at the time, my mother was of little practical help and my brother zero...my other half felt like the butler and I the cook/housekeeper....Never again!
Because I was the only daughter with three brothers my mother had decided that ours was the house she would stay for Christmas - for every Christmas from then on (not only did my brothers get off the hook - but one insisted on staying with us as well). My mother never even considered staying with her sons....
She once said "Well I've done enough Christmases over the years - now it's your turn!" ...."Your" being me, her daughter, not any my three brothers!
So we successfully hatched a plan to break her assumptions.
We told her we liked going away for Christmas most of the time and invented friends in the country that we would be staying at. She then either went away for Christmas herself or had it with her local friends.
Every third Christmas or so we invited her to ours with one strict proviso...for no more than three days - no exceptions!
Over the years it has worked really well . She enjoys her "friends" Christmases as well as her Christmases abroad - and we do not end up wanting to strangle her!
I guess the moral is, no matter how well you get on with your in-laws, you must break the comfortable (for them) mantra of;
"Oh but I ALWAYS spend Christmas with you ! It's a family tradition"
Oh no you don't and oh no it's not!
Result!
We soon learned when my mother and brother came for Christmas - and stayed for nearly two weeks due to cancelled flights etc. :o
I had a toddler and young baby at the time, my mother was of little practical help and my brother zero...my other half felt like the butler and I the cook/housekeeper....Never again!
Because I was the only daughter with three brothers my mother had decided that ours was the house she would stay for Christmas - for every Christmas from then on (not only did my brothers get off the hook - but one insisted on staying with us as well). My mother never even considered staying with her sons....
She once said "Well I've done enough Christmases over the years - now it's your turn!" ...."Your" being me, her daughter, not any my three brothers! :evil:
So we successfully hatched a plan to break her assumptions.
We told her we liked going away for Christmas most of the time and invented friends in the country that we would be staying at. She then either went away for Christmas herself or had it with her local friends.
Every third Christmas or so we invited her to ours with one strict proviso...for no more than three days - no exceptions!
Over the years it has worked really well . She enjoys her "friends" Christmases as well as her Christmases abroad - and we do not end up wanting to strangle her!
I guess the moral is, no matter how well you get on with your in-laws, you must break the comfortable (for them) mantra of;
[b]"Oh but I ALWAYS spend Christmas with you ! It's a family tradition"[/b]
Oh no you don't and oh no it's not! :lol:
Result!