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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to want to stick two fingers up at my extended family?

63 replies

Woofsaidtheladybird · 21/05/2012 11:25

Right. Long winded and boring, but I'm in a quandary.

It's my Aunt's (Dad's sister) 75th birthday party on Saturday, and we (myself, DH, DD3, DS5m) have been invited. It's being organised by my uncle (her brother) and my aunt (his wife) and the lunch is being hosted at my cousin's house (my uncle's son) about an hour's drive away.

When I was pregnant with DD in 2008 my Aunt disowned me and stopped talking to me. I'd been seeing DH (then DP) for 8 months, and was doing a PhD (which I had to eventually quit). We knew we were going to have a future and wanted children, but as I wasn't that young in the scheme of things, plus had had ovary problems, we decided to be more lax with contraception. Of course, I conceived straight away. My Mum told my Aunt and she said 'how disappointing'. We saw my Aunt on Boxing Day that year at my parents, and when DP went to shake her hand, she quite pointedly ignored his hand, and refused to speak to him for the rest of the lunch, and also myself. We were severely disappointed, as I'd always loved my Aunt very much - she is also my Godmother. She is also a Vicar, and we wanted her to do our wedding ceremony for us, the following October. After that day, we clearly decided not to, and as my parents were doing a lot of the wedding organising, she wasn't invited to our wedding either, which made me quite sad, but I felt it was the right thing to do. She has stopped sending me birthday cards, and Christmas cards are just addressed to 'woof and family'. I got a brief congrats card when DD was born, and also for DS. Nothing else for them, no little 'welcome' kind of presents, never anything for their birthdays or Christmas.

So. I have 2 older brothers. One is divorced - 2 children from first wife - left her to be with my current SIL, and they had a baby before marrying. My aunt doesn't ignore them, showers his boys with gifts, lavish hampers at Christmas, the works. My other brother and his wife (no children) we don't talk to (he rented my flat off me last year and was a complete arsehole and messed me about when I was heavily pregnant - refused entry to estate agents trying to sell it, left drugs around, promised to keep it tidy but didn't, didn't pay rent on time, left me out of pocket, you name it). For some bizarre reason my aunt idolises him. She was my brothers' guardians when they were at boarding school when we lived overseas when we were younger.

Anyway. Both brothers, I have discovered since yesterday, are going to the party. I saw the invite as a kind of olive branch, and had decided to go. I do NOT want to see my arsey brother at all (DH reckons his blood will boil if we see him, and he doesn't want him around our children as he's off his face half the time). I kind of want to see my Aunt and show off my lovely children, and show her and her partner what they are missing out on. (Btw, she has no children, she has lived with her female friend for the best part of 50 years - no-one knows what the relationship between them is, and no-one gives a hoot anyway) I do want to see my uncle and cousin, and other cousins going. My parents aren't going, as since the Boxing Day debacle, they haven't talked to my Aunt either.

WTF would you do? I'm tempted to say bugger off to all of them, but its faaaamily innit. I'm especially sad as it's DD's birthday today, and no-one from my family (apart from my parents and my uncle - mum's brother) have sent her a card ('nice' brother says his is in the post.) DH's family - great aunts, great-great aunts, random 2nd cousins twice removed - have all sent cards.

The issues that bug me are:

  • She's a vicar. Be nice, FFS!
  • Why ignore me, and not my brother, when we've both had babies outside marriage??!!
  • Why is my other twatty brother still existing, and bugging me so much?
  • If I go, I'm the youngest cousin and will be treated as such. I'm bloody forty in a few months.

Either way, I need to call my uncle today and tell him yay or nay.

Arse. I'm so angry thinking about it all. Angry. Have told DH I'm getting a MN opinion on it all..
Sorry its long!

OP posts:
2rebecca · 21/05/2012 21:59

It sounds as though she is put out that you didn't bother to tell her of the arrival of your kids. Maybe twatbrother's kids get presents because he told her of their existence.
If you want to try and mend bridges go, without your husband if necessary. If you can't be bothered with it all stay at home.
You wonder at her judgement if she is so pally with twatbrother though.
Agree it may have been that she was disappointed in you dropping your pHD and glittering career(as she may have seen it) just to become yet another mother and housewife.
She should have accepted that even though you weren't living the life she'd have chosen if she were you you were free to make your own choices.
I must admit though I'd be disappointed if my daughter dropped her phd to play house with some bloke and rear babies. I would try not to show it though.

GrendelsMum · 21/05/2012 22:15

I think that Hebiegebies and 2rebecca are onto something here.

What a sad story, that you've been estranged so long. You both sound like fascinating, really strong women, and it sounds like you've both made difficult choices in your lives.

Woofsaidtheladybird · 21/05/2012 22:23

Hmmm I didn't really 'drop my phd to play house and have babies with some bloke' - I think that comment is a little harsh. I pretty much have studied continuously since college as I had the belief that I wasn't really going to meet anyone so I'd better get a gallon of qualifications to at least get a decent job so I could support myself. I really thought I'd never have children due to ovary problems and also hip difficulties, so having my children isn't really 'playing house' - do you think?

OP posts:
Woofsaidtheladybird · 21/05/2012 22:26

Plus I didn't really 'announce' the arrival of my children - DD was in NICU after being born so my focus was on her, plus I had health problems and was still doing my Phd then. DS was born just before Xmas and I had a very rough time after he came along.

OP posts:
pigletpower · 21/05/2012 22:27

Why did your mean aunt disown you in the first place? Because you got pregnant out of wedlock? What the fuck has that got to do with her? Twatface her!

Woofsaidtheladybird · 21/05/2012 22:39

However, you're probably right that that adds to the miff-age.

Yes, pregnant outside marriage. At the age of 36. When we met with the vicar who DID do our wedding and I was heavily pregnant... HE was lovely. In fact he said marriage was wrong if we were just 'doing it for the baby', IYSWIM.

Oh and twat-brother is the one with no children. Lesser-twat-brother is the one with. Twat-brother comes out with stupid comments like 'of course, we have chosen a life without children, and prefer to spend our hard earned money on better things, like ourselves' blah blah yawn.

OP posts:
2rebecca · 22/05/2012 13:01

If you were 36 when you diched your phd and it was one of many qualifications you had then ditching it to have kids is more understandable. I was thinking you had stopped it in your 20s.
Maybe aunt and twat brother get on because neither of them have kids.

WhereYouLeftIt · 22/05/2012 18:48

"I think what I am going to do is write her a short letter and put it in her birthday card, send some flowers, but not go on Saturday ... take a mini break avec les enfants to Wales for a long weekend soon and go and visit her for lunch or something ... and maybe invite her to DS's christening later on in the year "
That sounds absolutely brilliant, Woof.

Woofsaidtheladybird · 22/05/2012 20:20

Thanks Where - the card has been sent! Flowers ordered! Have emailed cousin to send apols.

Twat-brother sent a birthday card for DD: 'congratulations on your 3rd birthday'. Knob.

Ahem. Thanks for your input everyone, certainly given me food for thought and possible ammo if/when I do see her. Smile

OP posts:
2rebecca · 22/05/2012 22:16

What was wrong with twat brother's card? Did he get the age wrong? You seem to be nit picking a bit with his cards to me. I think your approach to aunt sounds sensible and nice.

Woofsaidtheladybird · 22/05/2012 22:27

It just seemed odd to 'congratulate' someone on their birthday. And there was no other 'lots of love' etc on any of his cards. Ah well. Am probably nitpicking Wink

OP posts:
2rebecca · 22/05/2012 22:32

If he doesn't have kids though he probably didn't think of that and just wrote what he always writes in cards. He wrote congratulations in one of the others so I doubt he means it rudely and is just a bit over formal. Did it have a good picture? Age 3 that probably matters more than the words as I presume she can't read.

Woofsaidtheladybird · 22/05/2012 22:41

It was a spaniel. Mum had a corgi for her birthday, same style, so poss a dog pack of cards, IYSWIM...Hmm But formal, yes. Cards always used to be chatty etc. Anyway, no big issue. He's still a knob. He can be a whole other thread, but I don't want to waste more time on him than I have already..

OP posts:
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