04-Apr-2003, 09:04 PM
quote:
Originally posted by William R
Getting back to SM, I didn`t reaslise that there could be two tarred with the same brush. The only things we missed were the broomstick, pointed hat, black cloak and black cat.
Hey! That's disrespectful to witches! [
] (Very tongue in cheek riposte..... but I know a couple of witches and they're not the evil people of fairy tales)I don't think my mother-in-law was quite on the scale of your step-mother, Bill, but she was an extremely difficult woman! Her first husband soon sought solace in the arms of others ( "the floozies") and her second husband (my husband's father) was an absolute saint for putting up with her. She was one of those people who is snobby 'without due cause', coming from an ordinary background herself. She always looked down on her sister-in-law just because she came from Liverpool, was horrified when a doctor complimented her on retaining her Derbyshire accent (she thought she'd eradicated it!) and took great offence when, attached to the Brit forces in Aden, she was treated as inferior by superior officers' wives..... even though she did the self-same to lower ranks' families herself. She had an irrational hatred of the Welsh. She disliked me (she told me many times a daughter-in-law should be shorter than the mother-in-law - make sense out of that one! Heck, it's hard to shorter than 5 foot!) and didn't like the fact I was better educated, but I didn't realise the extent of her dislike until after she died, when husband told me how hard she had tried to talk him out of marrying me!Husband ran away to sea at 17 to get away from her and only visited her at Christmas and her birthday. It was me who went round every week and took the grandchildren to see her. Boy, could she hold a grudge! She regularly mentioned her feelings of hurt at a comment someone had made during the war! (All the poor soul had said was that Joyce had passed on her cold - it was said in jest, the way you do at work.... "Aww, thanks for passing on your cold, Joyce!" kind of thing!) All the rest of her family had fallen out with her. Her funeral was a very small affair - just husband and I, our two kids and my parents - none of her family... and of course she had no friends left because she'd had rows with everyone who'd ever shown her any friendship. Sad really. But somehow it was always the other person who was at fault and Joyce would never apologise. She once locked herself in her room for a full year - father-in-law had to take her meals up to her. That was before my time, fortunately, but once when we were staying with her, we had to sit out in the garden the full day as she turfed us out of the house when she took offence at something I'd said - something so trivial I can't even remember what! If it hadn't been the Outer Hebrides we'd have packed up and come home. Fortunately it wasn't raining, so we sat it out until father-in-law came home and negotiated our re-entry to the house! That was around the time she turned day into night and only got up in time for "Coronation St" then went to bed at 5am.... but complained when her husband turned in for bed at 11pm, not taking into account that he had work in the morning!Like you, Bill, I could write a book! She could certainly out-mother-in-law all those mother-in-law jokes!
Originally posted by William R
Getting back to SM, I didn`t reaslise that there could be two tarred with the same brush. The only things we missed were the broomstick, pointed hat, black cloak and black cat.
Hey! That's disrespectful to witches! [
] (Very tongue in cheek riposte..... but I know a couple of witches and they're not the evil people of fairy tales)I don't think my mother-in-law was quite on the scale of your step-mother, Bill, but she was an extremely difficult woman! Her first husband soon sought solace in the arms of others ( "the floozies") and her second husband (my husband's father) was an absolute saint for putting up with her. She was one of those people who is snobby 'without due cause', coming from an ordinary background herself. She always looked down on her sister-in-law just because she came from Liverpool, was horrified when a doctor complimented her on retaining her Derbyshire accent (she thought she'd eradicated it!) and took great offence when, attached to the Brit forces in Aden, she was treated as inferior by superior officers' wives..... even though she did the self-same to lower ranks' families herself. She had an irrational hatred of the Welsh. She disliked me (she told me many times a daughter-in-law should be shorter than the mother-in-law - make sense out of that one! Heck, it's hard to shorter than 5 foot!) and didn't like the fact I was better educated, but I didn't realise the extent of her dislike until after she died, when husband told me how hard she had tried to talk him out of marrying me!Husband ran away to sea at 17 to get away from her and only visited her at Christmas and her birthday. It was me who went round every week and took the grandchildren to see her. Boy, could she hold a grudge! She regularly mentioned her feelings of hurt at a comment someone had made during the war! (All the poor soul had said was that Joyce had passed on her cold - it was said in jest, the way you do at work.... "Aww, thanks for passing on your cold, Joyce!" kind of thing!) All the rest of her family had fallen out with her. Her funeral was a very small affair - just husband and I, our two kids and my parents - none of her family... and of course she had no friends left because she'd had rows with everyone who'd ever shown her any friendship. Sad really. But somehow it was always the other person who was at fault and Joyce would never apologise. She once locked herself in her room for a full year - father-in-law had to take her meals up to her. That was before my time, fortunately, but once when we were staying with her, we had to sit out in the garden the full day as she turfed us out of the house when she took offence at something I'd said - something so trivial I can't even remember what! If it hadn't been the Outer Hebrides we'd have packed up and come home. Fortunately it wasn't raining, so we sat it out until father-in-law came home and negotiated our re-entry to the house! That was around the time she turned day into night and only got up in time for "Coronation St" then went to bed at 5am.... but complained when her husband turned in for bed at 11pm, not taking into account that he had work in the morning!Like you, Bill, I could write a book! She could certainly out-mother-in-law all those mother-in-law jokes!


] It is so sad when people make such a good job of making people dislike them. [