I was 14 years old when my oldest sister, Stephanie, married. A few months later we were
looking forward to spending the Thanksgiving holiday with this new married couple when to 
Fast forward almost 35 years and now I am watching my own children marry, and experiencing the same emotions as they discuss which holidays they can spend with us this year, and how our family can get on a rotation to spend the holidays every other year. My hope is that with the six children I have, hopefully we can get everyone on the same rotation. As I’ve contemplated this new stage of life and the best way to handle our need to be together as a family vs. the the same needs that my children’s new in-laws may feel, the words of author P. Cotterill in the book Creating Healthy Ties with In-laws and Extended Families come to mind. “Parents can help by genuinely not pressuring their children to be to every family gathering.”
My younger brother has been married almost twenty years. And during that time his in-laws have demanded that they attend every Thanksgiving and every Christmas that they are in town. I’ve seen them stop by a family gathering for an hour, and then politely excuse themselves, gather their six children, and run off to the in-laws to spend the rest of the day. This has created an enormous amount of pressure to be expected to spend every holiday with their in-laws, and has caused resentment from both my brother and his wife.

President Spencer W. Kimball, a past leader of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has stated, “Couples do well to immediately find their own home, separate and apart from their in-laws of either side…Your married life should become independent of her folks and his folks."

Citations –
P. Cotterill, (1994) Friendly Relations? Mother’s and their daughter’s in law. (New York: Taylor and Francis.)
Kimball, S.W., “Oneness in Marriage,”( Ensign, Mar. 1977, 5.)
Kimball, S.W., “Oneness in Marriage,”( Ensign, Mar. 1977, 5.)