Paying "rent" to the partner... how?

  • Erstellt am 2020-01-27 18:47:18

HilfeHilfe

2020-02-01 14:56:10
  • #1

cool mostly when it comes to money the daughter-in-law is a parasite if equity is provided. Grandchildren are of course raised according to grandma's principles
 

hampshire

2020-02-01 16:27:43
  • #2

That’s ideally how it should be. My wife dropped out of her studies and emigrated from GB to D to be with me. Her mother held a grudge against me for a long time because of that – and I find that quite understandable. So we had a difficult start. Later, things went well. We were never close – not least because of the great distance between us. My mother belongs to those people who wish others well and also have an idea of what “good” is. In some respects, my wife does not fit that at all. That doesn’t make the relationship bad but it does make it sometimes difficult. That’s why I find the term “difficult mother-in-law” such a wonderful expression.
 

haydee

2020-02-01 17:07:54
  • #3
A Briton? How does she see Brexit? I have the feeling the panic has subsided and the British are waiting for things to happen.
 

haydee

2020-02-01 17:11:13
  • #4
By the way, the start with my mother-in-law was also very bumpy
 

hampshire

2020-02-01 23:28:18
  • #5
The British were never panicked, that is not their culture. Many argued. With each other, the question divided. The drawn-out process annoyed everyone in the end. So also my wife, who regrets Brexit.
 

haydee

2020-02-01 23:53:54
  • #6


I know some who were panicked. The stoic calm was missing in my contacts. It has only started to set in a bit again in the last few months.
 
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