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AIBU?

to feel a white hot rage towards MiL?

36 replies

saffronwblue · 02/03/2013 02:56

Quick back story. MiL has always been difficult, self centred etc. Throughout my marriage of 15 years I have tried very hard and have been pleasant, polite, welcoming etc. Now she has Alzheimers. As you can imagine the Alzheimers has highlighted the most difficult parts of her personality. She is still living at home, on her insistence, but is getting very confused with day to day tasks.
Today DH and DD (11) were visiting he,r and MIL in DD's hearing referred to her as a "ghastly child." There was a carer in the room and MiL said to the carer "Oh, that is (DH)'s daughter - a ghastly child." DD is 11, has Aspergers and very low self esteem. I am just incandescant with rage that anyone, let alone a family member, would speak about her in such a way in her hearing. Have basically said to DH that she is no longer welcome in our house. DH of course says that she is ill, doesn't know what she is saying and would not have remembered the exchange one minute later. The thing is, she has always used a nasty patronising tole to talk about others and I do not think this is the illness, but the real person.
I told DD that her grandmother is ill and does not always make sense and that what she said was nonsense.
AIBU to feel such rage?

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CinnabarRed · 02/03/2013 08:48

BTW, depending on how far advanced her illness is, your MIL may struggle to come to your house anyway. So banning her might be unnecessarily provocative towards your DH (and I'm sure your DH wouldn't have deliberately exposed your DD to your MIL's comment by taking DD to visit MIL; it must have come as a nasty shock to him too).

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ByTheWay1 · 02/03/2013 08:52

I would keep your daughter away from her - your MIL is ill, but it does not mean you have to forgive or pander to every thing... just because she does not know she is doing it does not make it right - your daughter is the important one in this.

if she picked up a poker and hit her with it (as mine did - because she thought I was a little demon sent to drag her to hell?!? - I was 6!) would it be "part of her illness" and she would be welcome in your house..... or would she need to be separated from people (as mine was - thankfully) .

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post · 02/03/2013 08:53

Even maybe (as someone with a teenager on the spectrum) a chance for your DD to see someone else as the person who gets it wrong, who's inappropriate, who needs compassion?
My ds has found things like that quite empowering in th past, but you can judge whether it's appropriate for your dd.

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Corygal · 02/03/2013 08:56

Don't take DD on granny visits. It's clearly not working for either of them. Granny won't miss out & DD will prob be relieved. Explain MIL can't speak properly - or other way to get the message thru - if DD brings it up.

Most of all, support your DH - he'll have a hell of lot more than this to put up with. Alzheimers patients do get jaw-droppingly cruel - it may not be their fault, but it sure as hell isn't anyone else's. And, dementia disclaimer asides, it still wounds. With respect, in the future, he needs your support and love more than DD on this one.

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Fairydogmother · 02/03/2013 09:05

Your husband needs your support - not extra stress right now.

Do a bit of research into what this disease does to people and have some compassion. Explain to your child what's happening to your MIL and possibly keep them apart.

this woman may not be your blood but she's your husbands mom and you need to be aware of what an awful time he may be going through. Have a heart.

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saffronwblue · 02/03/2013 10:37

Thanks for your input everyone.You are right, it is not my place to ban her from our house. I do not lack compassion but much of our lives for the last few years have been built around MiL's needs and I feel compassion fatigue. Hearing what she said to DD today just triggered all my protective responses. She has been teary and anxious at school lately and really did not need to hear that unpleasant remark. I have talked about it with DH some more.

It is hard to let go of the past interactions that I have had with MiL. She has always been very belittling and passive aggressive. Her own daughters see her rarely, through clenched teeth and purely out of duty and it is in our house that she has been most welcome. I will continue to support DH through the course of this dreadful disease and I also think it is my job to protect my DC from the worst of it.

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SnotMeReally · 02/03/2013 10:44

It terrifies me that I one day might be ill in my old age and not know the people who love me, and say awful things to/about them. Thats why I try to build lots of happy memories now so they all KNOW I love them reagrdless of teh crap I may come out with when I am old and have dementia

my lovely nana is so confused - she lies about people stealing her stuff, forgets visits - so sobs that noone has been to see her for weeks, forgets who people are. Its hard to hold a conversation with her and I always come away sobbing

the best thing you can do is try to reassure DD while at the same time teaching her compassion for her GMs situation

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IJustWoreMyTrenchcoat · 02/03/2013 12:42

I do sympathise with the OP, my grandmother has Alzheimer's, which can make her difficult, stubborn etc. Yes, this is part of the disease, but she wasn't all sweetness and light before this. Lots of professionals have said to my mum this is just the disease talking, but they dont know what she was like before, she really was a nasty person who has made my mum's life hell from childhood. She has always been difficult, domineering, supremely selfish. She was never the sweet granny type!

However, as mrskeithrichards says above, now she has a disease and the past must be the past. I have seen and heard some truly horrible things from her growing up, but feel immense sympathy for her now. It is an awful thing. I would never wish it on anybody.

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Hissy · 02/03/2013 12:53

My Mum's MIL was a complete witch her entire life. Alzeimer's actually robbed her of all that and she was sweetness and light personified.

She didn't deserve the lasting memory she left, but it made things easier for her son and my DM.

OP, your MIL is ill, true, but your DD is living, and needs NOT to hear crap like that again. Don't take her there, and if you don't want to go, you don't have to.

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KatieMiddleton · 02/03/2013 13:35

I agree with the other posters. Mil won't have had a clue nor likely meant it.

If you start making sanctions it gives a significance to the incident which actually makes this something for your dd to feel upset by instead of seeing it for what it is, the ramblings of an ill woman.

I'm sorry you are all going through this - Alzheimer's is really hard and so is bullying :(

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akaemmafrost · 02/03/2013 14:54

I had a friend who worked extensively with the elderly as a carer. She was lovely. She told me once about a woman in her eighties that she worked with. This woman used to say the most awful things to my friend about my friends child and about her not being married to his father and so on. I used to say the "oh don't take it to heart she's so old". In the end my friend said to me "Emma, some people are just nasty and its not because they're old or in pain, they just are and I have done this work long enough to know the difference."

I think she was right.

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