Dear Annie: I have been married for 12 years to a good man whom I love very much, but I dread nearly every holiday, birthday dinner and casual Sunday visit with his family. On the surface, my in-laws are charming, polished and the sort of people everyone else describes as “so nice.” But behind that polished exterior is a steady drip of cutting remarks aimed almost entirely at me.
My mother-in-law has a talent for delivering insults with a smile. She will look at a meal I brought and say, “Well, that’s certainly … rustic,” or ask whether I am “still doing that little job of yours,” even though I work full time and do quite well. My father-in-law joins in with jokes about how their son “used to eat better before marriage” or how I have “modern ideas” whenever I disagree with them about anything from parenting to politics to how often we should visit.