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Tell Me About It: He boycotts trips to see her parents

Question: The dread holiday season is almost upon us, and I'm compelled to ask for advice: How do I deal with my husband's unwillingness to spend time with my family? We've been together 15 years. He has never really liked my parents. I've had issues with them, too - what child doesn't? - but they are my parents, and I love them. They live on the other side of the country, so I don't see them nearly as often as they would like, once a year at most.

Question:

The dread holiday season is almost upon us, and I'm compelled to ask for advice: How do I deal with my husband's unwillingness to spend time with my family? We've been together 15 years. He has never really liked my parents. I've had issues with them, too - what child doesn't? - but they are my parents, and I love them. They live on the other side of the country, so I don't see them nearly as often as they would like, once a year at most.

When they come here, he makes himself as unavailable as possible. When we go there, admittedly, he's miserable. They live a different lifestyle than us and tend to want to monopolize our time. (I haven't seen any of my friends who live in the area in a decade or more because all time gets devoted to the parents, typically.) So he's not without cause for finding the trips difficult.

But nobody is getting any younger, and I do want to see them. The last few trips I've made alone, simply making excuses for my husband. They want to see him, too, because he's part of the family to them. But he simply won't go. He doesn't want to "waste" our precious vacation time.

What do I do? Go for the holidays again alone? Lie so their feelings aren't hurt? I'm finding it hard not to be quite angry with him - this feels very selfish to me. Am I off-base?

Answer: Funny how much power can lie in a throwaway line.

Your long parenthetical is the crux of your letter. It changed my answer from a sympathetic one - where I feel your frustration and suggest ways to approach a compromise - to one where I fall solidly on his side.

You cave so thoroughly to parental demands on these visits that you've blown off seeing old friends for 10 years? While you're literally in the neighborhood?

That's a lot of wow in 26 words.

If you're that upset at seeing your parents alone, it's time to do something to acknowledge that your husband's time has value, instead of just expecting him to go as blobby as you do in your parents' presence. Promise him, and mean it, that if he goes with you, you and he will get off your parents' leash.

Given how long and extensively you've been capitulating, I suggest not trying to make such a promise this year. Instead, visit solo again, and treat it as a test run: Make plans with some of those old friends. Get yourself out the door to prove to yourself you can do it.

I'm addressing the husband issue because that's what you asked, but there's a deeper, better reason to meet old friends for a beer - namely, to reclaim yourself. Look again at your own words, my emphasis added: "I don't see my parents nearly as often as they would like." Also note that you settled roughly 3,000 miles from them. Throw in your oh-by-the-way-I-never-leave-their-sides-because-that's-what-they-want remark, and it's not too stretchy to infer that your "issues with them" aren't exactly resolved.

The 1-2 tactic you seem to be using - to go nonconfrontational in your parents' presence, and to make sure you're in their presence as little as possible - has its advantages, if used mindfully and sparingly. Were that the case here, though, you wouldn't be so agitated by your husband's refusal to hold up his end of the facade. It says you're performing not for your own peace of mind, but for their approval.

So, please, consider your husband's boycott not as a favor he's refusing to do for you, but instead as a choice you're making that he merely declines to endorse.

In doing that, you give yourself room to make your choice a conscious one this time: Either you keep subordinating yourself to Mother and Father, or you start asserting yourself as an adult and their equal, one with a spouse and friends and a lifestyle all your own.

Question: My fiance and I are flying cross-country to spend Christmas with my family. Last time we visited, the full-size mattress was too small for my fiance to sleep comfortably with me. I've been bringing this up to my mother in a variety of polite ways, and she has either ignored me or told me to "suck it up."

I've offered to pay for the upgrade to a queen bed myself, but she's still angry about it. This makes me not want to go through the hassle of visiting. How can I get through to her?

Answer: Hotel. Take your comfort into your own hands - where it belonged from the start.

tellme@washpost.com.

Chat with Carolyn Hax online at noon Fridays at www.washingtonpost.com.