Dear Amy: My wife and I, both employed full time, are looking to buy our first home.
I have a very supportive family, but they are not able to offer any financial help. My wife's family would like to help us out financially, which is kind but unnecessary.
They called my wife to offer money, and she refused. It became an argument, and they responded by threatening to deposit money into an account in her name.
I know I feel more strongly about doing this without their help than my wife does. Her parents will not bring this up when I am around; they told her that they know how I feel, so they decided to talk to her alone.
Her parents mean well but have a pattern of ignoring "no" when they feel like it, and I have felt violated in their efforts to "help" several times before.
My wife and I agree when they have overstepped, but we haven't always agreed about what to do when it happens or how to change their behavior.
The idea of being ignored and the thought that these conversations are done intentionally without me being present makes me very angry. Any suggestions for if I can say anything directly, or how to keep calm about this?
Amy says: First of all, there is nothing wrong with graciously accepting a gift. Some prosperous parents are choosing to essentially spend down their inheritance during their lifetimes.