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Wedding Woes

Pay them back the money and don't let them move in.

Dear Prudence,

My in-laws are both truly lovely people but they should have divorced 20 years ago when they became empty nesters and realized they had nothing in common. Instead, they are together and miserable. The overarching issue is that my FIL is what I would call a “benign/functional alcoholic.” He drinks too much in the evening (not all day), tells the same stories over and over, and falls asleep in the recliner nightly. He doesn’t drive drunk and isn’t belligerent or mean. He does fall occasionally and has had a few trips to the emergency room because of that. My MIL is over it, understandably. She says she can’t make new friends in their community for fear of embarrassment but she refuses to do things without him. He could care less about her, new friends, or his drinking. By his own admission, he just wants to eat, drink, and be merry until he sees his grave. Based on longevity in both their families, we are looking at another zero to 20 years.

The actual reason I am writing is because they are supposed to be moving into our in-law suite at the end of the year. This has been the plan for many years when they helped us with the down payment for this specific house for this reason. But right now I don’t want this dynamic between them infecting my household, my marriage, and my kids. My husband is very involved but we are both at a loss. We can’t take one without the other but I can’t have them fighting like this. What kind of ultimatum would work here?

—Stuck Between a Bottle and a Hard Place

Re: Pay them back the money and don't let them move in.

  • It's hard enough being an adult who visits two people who should have divorced long ago, let alone having them live with you. It will poison the household. It's not a good model for the kids. And you might be looking at 20 years of hell if (most likely) FIL falls and injures himself, has a stroke or another complication. You'll be a caregiver and they'll be in your house, and no one is going to do a 180 with their personalities at this point. Set up a payment plan and have the conversation. 


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  • I would look at selling the house and telling them that the original plan isn't going to work. You can't fix someone else's marriage.
  • Sounds like the LW and her husband knew this was a bad idea when they bought the house, so I don't have that much sympathy.

    I'm not saying they should have the parents move in.   But they can really only get out of this if they have the money or an acceptable payment plan to pay the parents back.

    And not just for the money used for the down payment.  INTEREST on that money, as well.  Because that is money that could have been in a retirement account building a bigger nest egg, but wasn't.

    They need to talk to the parents and figure out another plan.
    Wedding Countdown Ticker
  • Sounds like the LW and her husband knew this was a bad idea when they bought the house, so I don't have that much sympathy.

    I'm not saying they should have the parents move in.   But they can really only get out of this if they have the money or an acceptable payment plan to pay the parents back.

    And not just for the money used for the down payment.  INTEREST on that money, as well.  Because that is money that could have been in a retirement account building a bigger nest egg, but wasn't.

    They need to talk to the parents and figure out another plan.
    Yeah - there's no way I can see this really going well but the LW and H need to be on the same page.

    Signed, 
    I'm relieved H has said he's team never living with the parents.
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