IN-LAWS
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Relationships are part of the very fabric of your character’s life. How well or poorly they get along with others oftentimes comes down to personality, so carefully consider the positive traits and negative traits of your story’s cast. Another factor that can pull characters together or create friction is motivation, so keep each individual’s goal—both at the scene and story level—in mind as you write.
DESCRIPTION:
RELATIONSHIP DYNAMICS:
Engaging in polite conversation
Complimenting each other (on house improvements, a garden, a choice of car, etc.)
Inquiring about the other person's family members, job, vacations, activities, etc.
Pitching in to help when asked (with childcare, helping with a move or repair, etc.)
Seeking to keep the peace by avoiding contentious topics
Offering advice, encouragement, and praise
Both parties seeking the other person's advice and opinions
Offering help without expectations or strings attached
Telling jokes or sharing funny stories
Discussing current events, politics, popular movies, books, or pop culture
Celebrating birthdays, anniversaries, graduations, and other family events together
Getting together regularly for weekly dinners, church services, etc.
Attending school and sporting events for each others' children
Either party prying into the other's business
Someone offering unsolicited or unwelcome advice
The character being judged by the in-laws and feeling they don't measure up
One person trying to drive a wedge between the character and the loved one in common (between a husband and wife, a mother and daughter, siblings, etc.)
Either party resorting to guilt trips: You never come to visit; Sarah's other grandparents always get her for Christmas and we never do; Why do you always stay at Bill's house and never ours?
Reminding the other person of their mistakes or bringing up a past embarrassment
Engaging in snide remarks, haughtiness, talking down to each other, and arguments
Either party pressuring other relatives to take sides
Someone asking for something inappropriate (requesting money, asking the person to lie for them, etc.)
Disagreeing about how children/grandchildren should be raised
Either party not respecting the other's rules
Either person Ignoring the other's boundaries
CHALLENGES THAT COULD THREATEN THE STATUS QUO:
Another new person entering the family and upsetting the dynamic
WOUNDS THAT COULD FACTOR INTO THE RELATIONSHIP:
POSSIBLE CONFLICT SCENARIOS:
CONFLICTING DESIRES THAT CAN IMPAIR THE RELATIONSHIP:
One person wanting the other to change their beliefs while the other is unwilling to do so
One party wanting to control the other
The in-laws wanting to have a say in everything and the character wishing for autonomy
In-laws wanting the couple to live nearby while the new family member wants space
The new family member pursuing a relationship with an in-law to fill a void in their own life while the in-law has no desire to grow closer
One party wanting to help the other when that person doesn't want help
CLASHING PERSONALITY TRAIT COMBINATIONS:
NEGATIVE OUTCOMES OF FRICTION:
Family feuds
Unwelcome family drama that ruins a special event, such as a wedding
Either party refusing to attend family events if the other person is there
Issues with an in-law causing problems in other important family relationships
Either person developing anxiety and/or struggling with their self-worth
FICTIONAL SCENARIOS THAT COULD TURN THESE CHARACTERS INTO ALLIES:
A crisis situation that result in everyone setting aside their differences to survive
Staging an intervention (for a drug issue, hoarding, etc.)
Both parties discovering something in common that brings them together (an interest or passion, a shared trauma that leads to deeper understanding and respect, etc.)
Showing a unified front when the family is targeted by an outside force
Learning that another person has been manipulating the relationship to keep the in-law and new family member at odds
A contentious character losing someone important and realizing they have a surrogate in their in-law
WAYS THIS RELATIONSHIP MAY LEAD TO POSITIVE GROWTH:
Either party recognizing the part they played in the dysfunctional relationship and seeking to improve
One party filling a relationship gap for the other—eg., a new son-in-law being embraced by in-laws who are estranged from their biological son
Natural maturity causing the two parties to grow individually and improve their relationship
Time or space away from each other allowing the parties to appreciate each other more