I HEART MY IN-LAWS:
Falling in Love with His Family-One Passive-Aggressive, Over-Indulgent,
Grandkid-Craving, Streisand-Loving, Bible-Thumping In-Law at a Time
by
Dina Koutas Poch
Authors of the book
I Heart My In-Laws
Millions of dollars for people starting a business, going to collage, or purchasing a house. We will write the grant for you!
Click here for details.
____________________
Book Description
Girlfriends,
fiances, and wives rejoice! Here, at last, is a book you can turn to in
times of stress, panic, and family vacations to the smallest cottage ever
built on the island of Nantucket. Mirroring the natural progression of a
relationship and incorporating interviews from women just like you, this
hilarious, savvy guide will help you survive your first meeting with future
in-laws, from the holidays, weddings, and new babies, to the day they retire
to the house next door because its a great real estate investment. Discover
a wide array of sanity-retention techniques and tips on scoring major points
with each and every in-law. Learn how to sweet-talk his sister, mollify his
mother, and defuse potentially explosive situationslike when your pumpkin
pie gives Nana a bad case of hives. Stories range from the tragic my
father-in-law just pinched my ass and not in that sportsmanship kind of way,
to the triumphant Im now CEO of my grandfather-in-laws cement companyThanks
Pupup! Offering handy translation charts with curse words in Persian and
compliments in Cantonese, a list of gifts and how to interpret their hidden
meaning, tips for reclaiming the holidays one Bastille Day at a time, and
your very own set of Mother-in-Law MadLibs, I Heart My In-laws embodies the
old saying, Its funny because its true.
The
following is an excerpt from the book
I Heart My In-Laws
by
Dina Koutas Poch
____________________
Regional Guide to In-Laws
There are seven
territories of in-law personalities in this great country of ours. Each has
its own unique flavor.
1.
West Coast In-Laws
(California, Oregon, Washington)
Three words: Burning Man
Festival. Your in-laws live where Manifest Destiny carried them. They come
from a long line of gold hunters -- those in search of a truer, richer way
of life. Every single Napa Valley wine they uncork, or Starbucks coffee they
brew; or macrobiotic muffin they bake, they judge you for not living the way
they do. "Oh, West Coast people are more laid back." Really? They're
ultra-aggressive about lifestyle choices and the 40-hour workweek! How do
you deal with your West Coast in-laws?
-
Compliment their tan.
Their sunglasses. Their shapely mountain-bike sculpted legs. They'll eat
it up (those egotists!). And coo when they mention how they fly
seaplanes to their island house, and how the orca whales and "pristine
wilderness" are their backyard. Blah, blah, blah. Make sure to note how
very fresh the air is, even if it's making your allergies act up.
-
Read up on renewable
energy resources: wind power, solar energy, and corn-powered cars. Tell
them that you're already on the waiting list for one (a waiting list
made of recycled paper, no less).
How to
dress:
In flannel and Tevas with thick socks.
What not to do: Smoke
cigarettes. Joints, however, are cool.
2.
Rocky Mountain In-Laws
(Colorado, Montana, Idaho, Utah)
Your rugged in-laws know
a thing or two about machinery. They can plow. They can drive a tractor.
They can dig a deep hole with a backhoe (and I'm talking about Aunt Trudy on
dialysis here). They can also wrangle sheep on a mountain without the help
of a gay lover (no matter what that movie said). How do you impress in-laws
that live in winter for nine months a year and are known to wrestle bears
for sport?
-
If your weenie job as
an economics professor hasn't prepared you for life with these in-laws,
buying a picture book about tractors and trucks -- something a
five-year-old boy would drool over -- will help. At least you'll know
your trenchers from your dozers and your grapple log skidders from your
pipe layers.
-
Pick an alpine sport:
ice climbing, fly-fishing, kayaking, mountain climbing, trekking,
snowshoeing, skiing, or mountain biking, and excel at it. It doesn't
matter if you live in Florida, you need to train so you can join your
in-laws in death-defying "leisure sports" at high altitude (with no
bleeping oxygen!).
How to
dress:
In jeans and a warm jacket, because you'll be outside shoveling hay.
What not to do: Mention how
your gay brother in Boston just got married and a drag queen performed the
ceremony.
3.
Southwestern In-Laws
(New
Mexico, Arizona, Nevada)
There are two kinds of
ex-hippie in-laws in the Southwest: those with boatloads of money and those
with a jar of pennies. Figure out which one your in-law is. The former has a
perfect golf swing, and the latter reliably has peyote.
When your Southwest
in-laws hug you, they practically blind -- the sun glints off their
turquoise jewelry and belt buckles, sending signals miles into the sky.
(Duh, that's how the aliens found Roswell.)
Your in-laws are into
spirituality with a capital S. Every inch of wall space is covered with
pottery depictions of Kokopelli and watercolor drawings of pueblos and adobe
homes in rust and muted orange hues. They subsist on roasted green chilies
and yerba mate. They also don't age. Is it the desert? The dry heat? Each
time you see them, they're younger. In fact, they're twenty-five years old
right now. It's terrifying.
How do you ingratiate
yourself with southwestern in-laws?
-
Go hot-air ballooning
with your in-laws! Everyone in the Southwest does it. How else do you
pass the time in l00-degree heat? Remember, hot-air balloons aren't just
for Dorothy & Co. They're for you, your in-laws, and nineteenth-century
explorers.
-
Vegas, baby! Anyone?
Slot machines? Showgirls? People-watching? Shark tank at Mandalay Bay?
(These are rhetorical questions. You don't have to answer them.) But you
may want to propose them to your in-laws, when they bust out the tarot
cards -- again. Hey, why don't you use those tarot cards to predict some
winning hands of blackjack? As they say in the movies, it's just crazy
enough to work, boss.
How to
dress:
A brightly patterned sundress and a necklace made of the largest beads known
to man.
What not to do: Say you prefer
modern art.
4.
Texan In-Laws
Your Texan in-laws are
smug about one thing: being Texan. We know you were once a republic! And
everything's bigger! Six flags, the Alamo, that 72-ounce steak, and
especially the hats. Fine! Texas is big, "American," flashy,
and the center of the world.
If your Texan in-laws
aren't gorgeously well-manicured people from Houston or Dallas, or cultured
Austinites, they're ranchers and they don't give a damn about you, "the
en-vi-ro-mentalists," and "the gov'nment." After all, the rest of the world
is just not Texas.
Of course, you'll meet a
second cousin-in-law that uses her panty hose to strain motor oil, but the
rest of the family isn't too proud of her. So how do you deal with the Texan
in-laws?
-
Accept that a lot of
people you'll meet in the Lone Star State will have nicknames like
Joe-Bob, Billy-Bob, Jim-Bob, Little John, Big John, etc. You'll be
expected to know about their souped-up truck and new gun rack in
intimate detail.
-
Respect the laws of
the Barcalounger. Your Texan in-laws don't have normal chairs; they need
something with a footrest. Succumb to the relaxation factor of holding
conversations while horizontal.
How to
dress:
A "Don't Mess with Texas" T-shirt with a Stetson hat, only because your
in-laws gave them to you upon your arrival.
What not to do: Forget to send
good wishes to your in-laws on Texan holidays like Texas Independence Day,
the start of Deer Hunting Season, the Opening Day of high school football
practice, and the day the new model year of Ford F-150s hits the market.
5.
Southern In-Laws
(Arkansas, Louisiana to Florida, and up to Kentucky and Virginia)
Your in-laws love NASCAR.
If they don't, their neighbors do. Your southern in-laws are either "refined
city folk" or "simple country folk," and they'll want you to know the
difference.
Your southern in-laws are
suspicious of you. It's not just you -- it's anyone outside their state.
Your in-laws have never been "North," and by that, they mean Delaware. It's
not that they don't want to go, just why would they? People have been in
their town for generations. It's home, which is why you should move there.
When you're south of the Mason-Dixon Line, do as those who live south of the
Mason-Dixon Line . . .
-
Learn the key players
in "the Confederacy." How many times have you met a southerner named
Jefferson Davis? Billions? Every street, building, and public school is
named after these folks: Stonewall Jackson, Robert E. Lee, Jeb Stuart,
Alexander Stephens, P. T. Beauregard, or Nathan Bedford Forrest. But
please never, ever mention the Destroyer-of-the-South, Yankee General
Sherman. He's still on their "list," 150 years later.
-
Talk the talk. Know
southern sport rivalries and which side you're on with the Tar Heels vs.
Blue Devils, LSU vs. Ole Miss, and Tennessee Volunteers vs. Kentucky
Wildcats.
How to
dress:
Something bright and feminine from your mother's closet.
What not to do: Don't call it
the "Civil War." It's the "War of Northern Aggression."
6.
Northeast Corridor In-Laws
(Ohio,
Pennsylvania, and up through Maine)
If you or anyone you're
related to went to a fancy school, now's the time to mention it. New
Englanders love to think "they know better" and that "they are smarter" and
that they "vote correctly." They can push up their dark-framed glasses and
snub you with their "Plymouth Rock" crap.
The crowded cities and
suburbs of Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., Cincinnati, New York, and Boston
mean one thing -- your in-laws are the diversity in America. They smother
you with affection because a hundred other relatives live down the street.
-
Join the rat race.
You must keep up with the Joneses -- the family that you can see from
the bay window in your in-laws' kitchen. Last week, the competition was
about the house gutters. They won. This week it's about you. Who has the
sweetest daughter-in-law?
-
Your northern in-laws
have summer homes in non-warm places like Nantucket. What's the point?
How to
dress:
Like you just fell out of the J. Crew catalog.
What not to do: Mention that
you didn't vote in the last election.
7.
Midwest In-Laws
(Indiana to Missouri, up to North Dakota and Michigan)
If a giant, two-headed
reptilian monster was heading toward your in-laws' subdivision, they would
smile and wave. Your in-laws are that friendly and nice. Sometimes it's
creepy. Like the time they offered a teenager a ride back to his college
campus -- it looked an awful lot like kidnapping.
Between the ice fishing,
apple-pie baking, and dining at Perkins Restaurant and Bakery (which they
nicknamed Pukins), your big-boned in-laws spend a lot of time driving (8
hours is short haul), using terms like "who gives a flying fig," and asking
"how ya doing?" followed by "okey, dokey!" So how do you get ahead with
them?
-
Dig into dishes that
involve massive amounts of melted cheese. Your in-laws will prepare
cheesy potatoes, cheesy broccoli, cheesy asparagus, and fried cheese
curds -- which sounds awful, but c'mon, let's admit it, a little melted
cheese makes everything better.
-
"Live simply, so that
others can simply live." If your in-laws aren't city dwellers, they're
farmers and they know how to birth a cow, mend a horse, or feed a pig.
If you know zilch about farms, don't fret. Praise the good bugs --
ladybugs, lacewings, hoverflies, and honeybees -- and chastise the
potentially bad bugs -- flea hoppers, lygus bugs, aphids, and mealy
bugs. Impress your in-laws by differentiating good stinkbugs (they're
green) from bad ones (they're brown).
How to
dress:
Something with an elastic waistband.
What not to do: Take
shortcuts. Using life's conveniences (leaf blower vs. rake, microwave vs.
Crock-Pot, etc.) only means you're not working hard enough!
I Heart My In-Laws
by
Dina Koutas Poch -
Published by Henry Holt
and Company, LLC; June 2007;$15.00US/$18.95CAN; 978-0-8050-8279-1
Copyright © 2007 Dina Koutas Poch
____________________
Authors
Dina Koutas Poch holds a B.A.
from Brown University and an M.F.A. from Columbia University. She is a
writer and filmmaker living in New York City with her husband. Her in-laws
live in Connecticut.
For more information,
please visit
http://iheartmyinlaws.com