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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Mil angst

152 replies

TooMuchRuddyChocolate · 04/09/2012 19:00

I am fully prepared to admit that iabu if that's what the majority think. Have name changed for this as super sensitive.

My mil drives me bonkers. We got on fine until dh and I got married. We still "get on fine" - she has NO idea that she annoys me. But since I became her daughter in law there are few boundaries and she sees me as being part of her immediate family. Which I can see is lovely, but I am way more reserved than her and we've only ever met about a dozen times do it feels weird.

Three examples of things that irritate me to distraction.

  1. She says "I'll come and stay in [month]. Let me know which weekend is best." Not "I'd love to see you, can I come and visit" Just this assumption that she can come whenever she likes for as long as she likes. It's so rude! None of my family would do this.
  1. I have a baby. Last time she saw him she spent the entire visit trying to get her to sit on her lap. It was ALL about my mil's feelings. If she'd been patient, dd would happily have gone to her. But she kept pushing it when dd was hungry and that wasn't going to work (she's bf!).
  1. She will buy dd a chocolate advent calendar. This annoys me because a) SHE'S A BABY b) I want to buy my daughter her first advent calendar c) she has completely different tastes/ideas to me - the advent calendar doesn't matter in the grand scheme of things, but it's indicative of a wider problem. (think cutesy teddy outfits made of polyester etc. I know I'm ungrateful, but eurgh)

Ok. Hit me. Out and out unreasonable or does anyone sympathise?

OP posts:
TooMuchRuddyChocolate · 04/09/2012 19:01

Argh - my baby is a girl. Sorry, think I said "him" at some stage! Only 1 baby...

OP posts:
NarkedRaspberry · 04/09/2012 19:04

Unreasonable but understandable Grin

Advent calendars for babies are great. For Mums Grin

If your DD needs feeding ask directly for your MIL to hand her back. If she refuses then YANBU.

LexieSinclair · 04/09/2012 19:05

In the nicest possible way, I think YABU. All she is really doing is is showing love to her grandchild and family.
There are some awful MIL stories on here, read some of them and it should make you feel better. Smile

LackingNameChangeInspiration · 04/09/2012 19:05

a bit bonkers... especially with 3. I mean you could say that about ANY gift "I wanted to buy DD her first dolly, I wanted to buy DD her first lego, I wanted to buy DD her first book" etc.. it is quite UR

and people who are a while removed from the infant stage really do forget when they do what (for example when they can eat chocolate!), my DS is only 3 and I've forgotten most of the baby info already!

For your DDs sake be glad that she is interested and wants to see her

addictedtotoast · 04/09/2012 19:06

Yanbu
But your mil will not know your boundaries unless you meke them clear. Assertive assertive assertive .....

flyoverthegoldenhill · 04/09/2012 19:07

she is rude !
keep the advent calendar for yourself and buy dd the one you want her to have
whats dh saying ?

LackingNameChangeInspiration · 04/09/2012 19:07

plus things like easter eggs and choc advent calenders were things that I typically associate with getting from grandparents and god parents etc, its not something that IMO most people would see as a special parent-child event!

she's just keen, its nice

NarkedRaspberry · 04/09/2012 19:09

'She has completely different tastes/ideas to me'

It's annoying, but as long as she's not eg buying massive toys that take over your house or usurping some of the big 'parent' purchases eg first bike then you can probably muddle through. If she comes to stay it means she's not living in the next street, so eg baby into polyester teddy outfit, snap a few pictures, sent them to MIL, outfit goes into the back of the cupboard.

NarkedRaspberry · 04/09/2012 19:11

send

PooPooOnMars · 04/09/2012 19:11

The visiting thing is annoying yes. In a way its good that she feels comfortable enough and close enough to you but i wouldn't like it either.

The lap sitting thing is irritating but sounds like that's just what she's like and nothing do with her relationship with you as such.

The advent calendar sounds like an overreaction. You say she has different tastes to you so what was wrong with the one she bought? You also say you want to buy your child's first advent calendar which i understand but that means she could never buy your child anything until you had bought one of them first.

First shoes matter. First school uniform. First haircut. First birthday cake maybe. First advent calendar? Not so much.

LucieMay · 04/09/2012 19:15

reading threads like these makes me dread ds having kids when he's grown up!

Alliwantisaroomsomewhere · 04/09/2012 19:17

Get a grip. What I would give to have a MIL or DM fuss over DS like that!

YABGrosslyU.

MrsKeithRichards · 04/09/2012 19:18

Same here Lucie!!

missymoomoomee · 04/09/2012 19:18

She is asking when it suits you for her to visit within a certain timeframe, she is trying to cuddle her grand-daughter and she is also buying her treats. Sounds like YABU to me.

TeWiDoesTheHulaInHawaii · 04/09/2012 19:18

I don't think she's being rude!

She's trying to be friendly and build a relationship with her grandaughter - maybe she's not doing it exactly the way you'd like, but none of what she's doing is harmful or mean.

YABU.

pictish · 04/09/2012 19:18

Agree with the others - she's a keen granny that's all - she wants to be part of your family, and so she should be!

Coming to stay - well, yes - she's a little presumptious, but I think she's just being familiar tbh. Like many people do with family. So long as she's not propsing a fortnight at a time or a visit every month, I think it's ok.

  1. yes she wants the baby to sit on her lap because she loves her and wants to cuddle her and be loved back. Wait till you have a grandchild and then we'll see.
  1. Advent calander - who cares? It's an advent calander!

OP - I know she's your baby and everything, but you are not the only person who loves her. Chill out.

LurkeyLurkerson · 04/09/2012 19:19

LucieMay reading threads likebthis makes me glad I disn't have a boy. I'd clearly never get it right Sad

NarkedRaspberry · 04/09/2012 19:20

I was waiting for those ^. You have the MIL thread double - 'This makes me terrified of when my DS has children' and 'I wish I had a MIL.'

catsrus · 04/09/2012 19:20

"it takes a village...." and other such cliches - but it is true. I think you'll find life a lot easier if you just step back, breathe deeply and let her have the relationship she wants with your dd.

My dcs adore my exMIL, and so do I now Wink. It took us a few years to find our equilibrium but she is a good friend and stayed a good friend after her ds left for the OW. You MIL clearly adores her gd as my dcs are adored by their gm - this is a very different relationship to a parent, a lot of the time we get to do the hard stuff and the gps get to do the lovely stuff - but if you get this right then your dd will want you to have that same, lovely, relationship with her dcs that she remembers having with her gm.

Think of it as earning brownie points to be redeemed in your old age Grin

LurkeyLurkerson · 04/09/2012 19:21

Gaah! Stupid typos!

MrsKeithRichards · 04/09/2012 19:22

Remember she is your husbands mother.

iknowwho · 04/09/2012 19:26

YABU!
She sounds like a nice MIL and mum and nan tbh.

ENormaSnob · 04/09/2012 19:27

Yabu

Booboostoo · 04/09/2012 19:28

YABU just for the calendar. Take a deep breath and eat the chocolates!

chandellina · 04/09/2012 19:30

Yabvu. Don't sweat the small stuff.