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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

In asking DH to speak to MIL.

158 replies

Milmingebag · 01/12/2014 14:14

Earlier this year I fell out with my MIL over her unreasonable behaviour. Had a thread on here and the verdict was unanimous that she was unreasonable. I confronted her via email and she denied/was political in her response and we have had a very light touch contact since.

I had a blistering argument with my DH yesterday because he is spineless over Christmas arrangements. Because she moaned about the food I cooked I have told him he is cooking if he is inviting her. I have asked him to make it clear to her that she can stay for three days but won't be hosted beyond that. He refused outright. Last year she stayed the entire time he had booked off of work (14 days). I think this is unreasonable.

Other niggles - she refuses to sleep anywhere else but the front room and this limits how we function as a family. She often wants to go to bed at 9pm because she is an early riser. I asked him to speak to her about this. He refused.

I have hosted her for various extensive stays (every Easter,Christmas etc) over thirteen years and suggested to my DH that she might like to do it herself this year. She has a big enough dining table and large enough house of her own. He refused saying she has never offered.

Last year she bought all her presents off Amazon and asked me to check them to make sure they had all arrived. I decided to wrap them all up, labelled from her as I thought it would save her a job. She was furious and said I had only wrapped them up to see what she had bought. When I pointed out she had asked me to check she then whiffed on about wanting to wrap them herself in her colour co- ordinated wrapping paper. This year she has stated that the adults won't be exchanging gifts. Aibu in thinking that when you are a guest at someone's house you don't dictate what you are going to do but ask if they agree.?She has long had an unusual thing about hating getting presents as she has guilt about receiving. To be honest it has really affected how I feel about present giving. It's gone from being a source of joy to one of anxiety. She sulks if anyone buys her even the smallest thing and has left other presents behind on purpose because she doesn't want/like them. She insists on thing being bought from her Wishlist.

I'm dreading Christmas this year. I wish I could just go off on my own for a few days. When I explained how I was feeling yesterday my DH twisted things saying I was asking him to choose between his wife and his mother and that he wouldn't leave her on her own at Christmas. That was obviously not what I was asking but for him to put some boundaries in place or I said he could always go down to hers and spend it with her just the two of them because after doing this for thirteen years I would quite like a Chrustmas that doesn't revolve around meeting his mother's needs.

AIBU? Any advice appreciated. x

OP posts:
CruCru · 05/12/2014 10:36

She wants to sleep in the front room because she wants to be in the way.

WhatchaMaCalllit · 05/12/2014 15:00

Think you're dealing with this admirably OP. Don't forget to come back and let us know whether your MIL kicks off about being put into the very comfortable guest room.
Happy Christmas Xmas Smile

NotQuiteSoOnEdge · 05/12/2014 21:07

You need to read 'Confessions of a Sociopath' by M. E. Thomas. Everything you just wrote down matches word for word the description of herself the writer put in the book, most notably the utter lack of empathy and the linked complete lack of any sense of guilt, remorse or understanding of the need to apologise.

I think it'll be illuminating for you.

QuietsBatmobileLostAWheel · 06/12/2014 17:03

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

DraggingDownDownDown · 08/12/2014 07:13

I'm wondering if you should just email her one more time. Just because you were "concerned " as she hadn't replied and reiterate the rules for your home. That way she can't say she didn't receive the last email.

grannytomine · 08/12/2014 09:28

Milmingebag, she sounds a nightmare so good luck with coping with it all. Can I just add one thing? I have a relative who has a thing about presents, I won't go into details but raises unpleasant memories from childhood that are quite traumatic. I don't know why your MIL doesn't want presents but is it really a big deal to respect that? If it genuinely is a problem to her can you not just go with that?

I know it is hard, I struggled with it but honestly it wasn't worth it.

Good luck

elelfrance · 05/01/2015 15:01

clearing out my flagged threads, and came accross this one - how did christmas with MIL go in the end up OP ?

MadamG · 05/01/2015 15:38

Oh yes op how did it go? Thinking of you over christmas

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