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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to expect a girlfriend medal for attending a Fox Hunt with DPs family?!

326 replies

CosyTeaBags · 27/12/2013 13:13

Yesterday I attended a Fox hunt with my DPs family.

I have been vegetarian for 25 years. I work in conservation, and feel very strongly about animal rights. I'm a country girl, so I appreciate that sometimes predator control is necessary, but I HATE the idea of it being a sport. In my experience the real sheep farmers just go out and deal with foxes, they don't get dressed up in fancy clothes and toot horns all day. I used to hear the hunt go past my house as a child, I would stand in the garden and scream at them when I heard the horns. Suffice to say, I have strong feelings about this...

I'm also a working class socialist and feel a slightly disporportionate inverse snobbery against the whole fucking tally-ho red coated brigade. It just makes my blood run cold.

I've always been aware that DPs family are into fox hunting, it's been a subject we agree to disagree on, I would never discuss it with them - I respect their feelings and that's fine. DP however, is a bigger animal lover than I am. I always assumed he felt the same way I did.

Until yesterday. DP had arranged for us to join his family to follow the hunt. We discussed it weeks ago and I said I wasn't happy with it and didn't want to go. He said that was fine, and we would make arrangements to meet them afterwards for dinner. Fast forward to Christmas eve - I asked DP what the arrangements were for Boxing day and he told me we were meeting them first thing to follow the hunt. I went ballistic - I felt that he had totally disregarded our previous conversation and had no respect whatsoever for my feelings. His solution was that I could "Just sit in the house on your own while we go out" and that would be fine...

I was now in a position of being damned if I did and damned if I didn't - I could sit at home and look like a stroppy cow, or I could suck it up and go for the sake of being a good girlfriend.

I chose to go. I thought I shouldn't judge until I've seen it for myself. Fucking hell it was hard - as the riders rode out, all 70 of them I burts into tears and had to hide myself. I'm a pretty emotional person and it just overwhelmed me. It was just so alien to me to be standing there while everyone was cheering them off to go and chase foxes...

We then followed the hunt, and to be fair they didn't actually do anything bad, they were just out for a nice ride. I get that, I really do. But I'm also mortally afraid of horses - fucking terrified of the bastard things. My dog is quite frail, and he's not as quick on his feet as he used to be. MiL grabbed him and paraded him past all the massive horses and I was terrified that he might get kicked or trampled on.

We placed ourselves right in the path of the hunt and stood by as they all thundered past us. I was friggin terrified for myself and my dog. (and I admit it, I was judging all the people as well, they're just so not my type of people). MiL and family had no idea of my real feelings, they thought I was enjoying myself.

So far, so good daughter-in-law, right?. I was proud of myself for going through that for the sake of my DP and to make his DM happy.

But he didn't acknowledge this. He said a weak "thank you for coming" on the way home, but that was all. I sat and brooded all night, then exploded with him that he ought to have been bloody grateful that I went through that for him, that I fucking cried and was terrified and not once did he ask me if I was ok. He should have apologized, told me he loved me for doing that for him, told me how grateful he was. Instead I got a half-arsed "Oh but I said thank you..." and that was all.

This morning he has said all the right things, but AIBU to expect a bit more gratitude and praise?!?!

I don't want this to be a debate about fox hunting - there are other threads for that, and I really don't care what other people do. I'm just pissed off with DP (again) for his selfish attitude and need someone to tell me if I'm right or whether I should get over myself!!!

OP posts:
Mitchy1nge · 27/12/2013 22:24

what the fuck!

5OBalesofHay · 27/12/2013 22:56

E

5OBalesofHay · 27/12/2013 23:01

Did you get out hunting pixel and mitchy? I went for my first ever time. I was terrified. It was fantastic.

Mitchy1nge · 27/12/2013 23:06

well done! we tend to inconvenience hare Blush

terrifying, fantastic like all my favourite immoral and indecent activities!

I can probably make one more meet in the new year but I have to borrow a horse because mine can't cope with the excitement

Mitchy1nge · 27/12/2013 23:08

(don't want to get lynched though Hmm)

Pixel · 27/12/2013 23:12

Gawd no! I would die of terror. A gentle trot round the block is enough for me. Sometimes my mum walks with me with her terrier on a lead but we haven't met a urban fox yet Grin.

stopprocrastinating · 27/12/2013 23:28

My FIL shoots pheasants, and is pro-hunting. I dislike fox hunting, but don't mind pheasant shooting. Not a hobby I plan to take up myself, but I can justify that the pheasant is eaten, and they have a better life than farmed chicken.

I suck it up, as my DH loves his family, and would not like me being anti something they enjoy. I'd probably be vilified on this thread for compromising my morals.

RandyRudolf · 27/12/2013 23:34

The only thing worse than someone being disappointed in you is the feeling of disappointment you have in yourself when you have compromised all you believe in. It's worse because you have no one else to blame but yourself because it was you and only you who made the final decision. Rather than wanting a pat on the back from someone or their validation I would have my head in my hands feeling utter regret and vowing never to let myself be put in that position again and to find the strength not to be swayed by others in the future.

Live and learn from your actions and move on.

scottishmummy · 27/12/2013 23:41

Why do you need to suck up anything to please a man and his family
I do despair adult women falling over selves to please dp and family
A polite explanation that one doesn't share their enthusiasm is sufficient

I see on this thread only the women seem to be compromising and sucking it up

5OBalesofHay · 27/12/2013 23:53

Apparently I'm going side saddle next time. Will scream in terror. I

Mitchy1nge · 28/12/2013 00:03

can you ride side saddle? Shock

I would hunt 3x a week if I could afford it :(

Mitchy1nge · 28/12/2013 00:04

(but not sideways)

Pixel · 28/12/2013 00:05

Thought you were an expert on sideways jumping!

Mitchy1nge · 28/12/2013 00:06

Grin yes yes but not in THAT situation! Shock

Mitchy1nge · 28/12/2013 00:07

(I was too scared to jump a fallen tree the other day Blush, getting old?)

shabbiegurl · 28/12/2013 00:15

+1 Randy Rudolph's comment :

Quote: "The only thing worse than someone being disappointed in you is the feeling of disappointment you have in yourself when you have compromised all you believe in. It's worse because you have no one else to blame but yourself because it was you and only you who made the final decision. Rather than wanting a pat on the back from someone or their validation I would have my head in my hands feeling utter regret and vowing never to let myself be put in that position again and to find the strength not to be swayed by others in the future.

Live and learn from your actions and move on."

5OBalesofHay · 28/12/2013 00:28

Showed ladies hunters as a teenager so guess sideways will come back. It's a good excuse not to jump (although Quorn ladies seem quite mad!)

KiwiJude · 28/12/2013 00:49

I've not waded through all nine pages but either you need to man up and let your DP's family know exactly what your beliefs and feelings are on hunting, or continue to live the lie. Guess it depends on how strong your beliefs actually are.

theimposter · 28/12/2013 02:48

You sound really pigeonholing in your first post OP although from reading your responses after I felt less annoyed. I can't stand people who assume that because you are in to horses that you are posh and rich. I spend all my spare money on keeping mine and go without lots myself to have her including clothes and even food when money is tight. None of my friends who hunt are snobby or well off. I expect your DP was embarrassed about you making a fuss and it would have been best you walked your dog or entertained yourself elsewhere if being around horses isn't for you. I didn't join in with all my DP's party games with his family over Xmas as I find some of the games stupid and dull but I'm sure he doesn't like me any the less for stepping down...

catinboots · 28/12/2013 04:03

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by Mumsnet for breaking our Talk Guidelines. Replies may also be deleted.

JoanRanger · 28/12/2013 07:04

It
Was
Not
a
Fox Hunt
Foxhunting has been banned.

BUT it does sound like you have a phobia of horses and had a massive panic attack, which is no fun at all. Next time could you just let your in-laws know you have this severe phobia? Or have some counselling about it?

TobyLerone · 28/12/2013 07:18

it's about having compromised my principles for my DP and him not recognising it.

I would lose a maasive amount of respect for anyone who would compromise their supposedly-strong principles to please me. Even more so if they then wanted me to throw them some sort of parade for doing so.

You sound like hard work, OP.

DorisButtons · 28/12/2013 07:20

YAB wildly U.

It is in fact him who deserves a medal for extending a hand to the poor (i.e., working class socialist). You're clearly out of your league in this dating game. Leave the poshos to those of us who can ride and shoot. There's a dear.

LtEveDallas · 28/12/2013 07:59

Gawd, I get the 'trying to be something I'm not' for the boyfriends family OP. I did much the same for my ExH parents. Even ate fish that I detested after MIL commented that ExH's Ex "Wasn't such a fussy eater" (I'm not, I just don't like fish). Cow served it up for almost every meal after that - she bloody well knew what I was doing, bitch.

4 years of my life I wasted on that crappy family. 4 years of being something I'm not whenever I was in their company - and started turning into that person when I wasn't with them as well. It took about a year to get 'me' back after we split up.

With DH I was open and honest from the start, and yes, there were things I did, or beliefs I had, that he didn't like, but he was told to like it or lump it. I wouldn't have gone to a hunt (drag or otherwise), but I'd have been very open about it "It's not my thing, sorry. You go and have a good time and I'll have some time to myself instead". I'd have sent him off with a smile, welcomed him back with a kiss and if MIL (potential MIL) didn't like it, well tough!

There are things I'll compromise on, little things that don't matter that much to me, but not my beliefs. There are things that are fine for other people to do, but I don't need to get involved.

Hope this week has given you food for thought OP.

CosyTeaBags · 28/12/2013 09:27

Scottishmummy re your comment on compromise, DP did in fact come to church with me on Christmas Eve, something he really doesn't believe in but he compromised because I wanted him to be there to hear me sing. So yes, men do make compromises too - it's about give and take.

OP posts:
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