In "Creating Healthy Ties with In-Laws and Extended Families" we read about exactly this, creating healthy ties with family members. I absolutely love the section about accepting differences in a family that's different than yours. This is a topic that's very common in my life, as my in-laws and my family are total opposite. My husband and I both struggle to get along with his parents sometimes (for reasons that I won't mention here), but I appreciated the tips that the article stated about accepting differences: demonstrating humor, exercising patience, overlooking small irritations, and looking for the positive.
In my relationship with my husbands family, demonstrating humor is something that we both do when we're not comfortable with something that his family does. Though, I do think that demonstrating humor can be a "mask" for your true feelings, it does sometimes help melt the ice and bring warmth into tense relationships.
Something that I struggle with in my relationship with my in-laws is exercising patience. Granted, majority of my inpatience I just vent to my husband, but it's still extremely stressful. When reading these aloud to my husband, he says that he thinks that he struggles to look for the positive in his family.
What else could help people deal with the stress of different family relationships?
We all need to remember that each individual in a family is a child of God, and we should treat them as so.
How does Heavenly Father treat us, His children? He gives us love.
I love this quote by Gordon B. Hinckley that says: "Love is the only force that can erase the differences between people." I may not always agree with my in-laws, but I still love them and care for them, and it has been a blessing to my husband and I to remember to love first.







