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    Home»Healthy Habits»What to Do If Your Mother-in-Law Doesn’t Like You
    Healthy Habits

    What to Do If Your Mother-in-Law Doesn’t Like You

    8okaybaby@gmail.comBy 8okaybaby@gmail.comJanuary 21, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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    What to Do If Your Mother-in-Law Doesn’t Like You
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    Not getting along with your mother-in-law is an archetypal kind of dilemma: a cliché movie trope, a hot topic in Reddit threads and mom-group chats, and, apparently, something even celebrities have to deal with.

    Over the weekend, Brooklyn Beckham took to Instagram to confirm a long-rumored feud within his family, in the process revealing a strained relationship between his wife, Nicola Peltz Beckham, and his parents, Victoria and David Beckham. “My wife has been consistently disrespected by my family, no matter how hard we’ve tried to come together as one,” he wrote in a series of Instagram stories, claiming that they called Nicola “not family,” that his father only agreed to see him “under the condition that Nicola wasn’t invited,” and that his mother allegedly hijacked the couple’s first dance at their wedding.

    While many in-law conflicts aren’t as dramatic (or headline-grabbing), the experience of navigating a fractured or tense relationship with a partner’s parent is surely relatable—whether it’s passive-aggressive comments, unsolicited advice, or a fundamental personality clash that no amount of “bonding” can fix. “It’s common because there’s a built-in loyalty conflict,” Lisa Chen, LMFT, a Los Angeles–based couples therapist, tells SELF. “Your partner is forming a new family unit, and some parents struggle with that loss of influence and lack of control.”

    So how do you thrive—or even just survive—alongside someone who’s a major part of your partner’s life…but also your source of tension? Here are a few key strategies, according to family and relationship therapists.

    1. Pre-plan boundaries with your partner before doing anything else.

    Before confronting your mother-in-law directly (or letting resentment build), talk through your frustrations with the person you’re actually in the relationship with. From there, you can work together to set boundaries and limits that feel reasonable and fair to you both, Nari Jeter, LMFT, licensed couples therapist in Florida and cohost of The Coupled Podcast, tells SELF. That might mean agreeing to time limits of two hours at family gatherings, capping visits to only once a week, or deciding certain topics (like finances, fertility, or parenting choices) are off the table. Being aligned with your SO will give you a strong foundation as a team and set you up for better success if, down the road, you do choose to confront her.

    2. Choose your battles.

    In a dynamic that’s already strained, awkward, or generally uncomfortable, it’s easy to feel irritated by nearly everything your MIL says or does—an offhand comment about your cooking, a judgmental remark about how you’re raising your kids, a casual comparison to someone else’s wife. While frustration, in these cases, is understandable, responding to every slight may not be worth your energy. (If anything, it’ll probably leave you drained and constantly on-edge.)

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