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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To send MIL a passive aggressive text

248 replies

Ruperta · 31/12/2014 09:47

Ok so bit of a back story and posted a few times previously. PILS are very involved in SIL family, essentially amazing GPs, provide childcare 2 days a week, often have them over night and take their son swimming every Saturday. They live 30 mins drive away which obviously is a reason for them being closer but there is a loooooonnnggg history of obvious favouritism to SIL family and children. SIL is lovely by the way and fair play I would gratefully take all help offered in the same way as she does.

In comparison we live further away (london) 2hrs on train, 4 hrs drive and we have a two children (1&3), the youngest the same age as SIL youngest. There has been lots of little episodes of things that have gradually grated me & my DH re:favouritism and lack of effort from MIL, many many many which are too petty to go into but last episode left a bit of a frosty atmosphere.

E.g they visited us twice last year, the second time we asked as a favour as we needed someone to look after children as I was a bridesmaid at the wedding. It was the first time me and DH had been out and DS2 was 10 months. They came down and basically used our house as a base, went out to meet old friends, arranged for family to come round on the day we were out at the wedding - I put my foot down and said that they agreed to look after children and they weren't to have friends round (they didn't ask us by the way, we found out the day before that 4 additional adults were coming round). Mil went sulky and didn't speak to me in my own house all weekend. So obviously things are quite frosty anyway. I was just annoyed as I thought they may want to spend a bit if time with GC.

Anyhoo so Xmas comes along, it was our 'turn' to spend Xmas with them (which I was slightly dreading) but when we asked them what their plans were they said 'we are going to SILs, what are you doing?' Absolutely no thought of spending time with us. Eventually a couple of weeks later SIL invited us but by then I arranged for my family to come round and there wouldn't 't have been any room at SILs for us anyway and we all seemed quite happy with plan.

Anyway (I hope your still with me) on Xmas day we facetime'd SIL (PILL had forgotten their ipad) and chatted to everyone but MIL didn't come to screen and say hello, benefit of the doubt she was probably busy I know. Then we tried face timing again over the next few days, they never rang us back. Eventually facetime'd again on Sunday but MIL had been out the night before and was unable to speak to us. So we haven't even spoken to her over Xmas.

I am so tempted to send her a passive aggressive text with pictures of the children over Xmas saying 'hope she had a lovely Xmas, we had a great time, it's a shame we weren't able to catch up properly over the Xmas period but thank you so much for the toys the children loved them. Hope you have a great new year'.

I just really want to highlight it to her and make it clear it's not really acceptable. They are such wonderful GPs to SILS children (they are having them overnight tonight) but she can't even be arsed to say merry Xmas to my kids. Relations are quite strained anyway, maybe I'll regret it but I'm really at the stage of thinking it is her loss if she can't be bothered to put the effort in.

FIL is lovely by the way but (as with the whole of the ILs family) he does exactly what she demands to get the easy life - I think that is why she doesn't get on so well with us as we don't do this and my DH (her son) apparently never has.

Sorry very long.

OP posts:
ApocalypseThen · 31/12/2014 10:21

It's rude to invite people to someone's house without the home owners knowledge or permission! Do people really do this?!

They didn't break in and do one of those mass Facebook invites, they had people they know round to their son's house while they were babysitting. I'd be very upset if I asked a family member to give up a weekend to mind my children and they didn't make themselves at home.

Pagwatch · 31/12/2014 10:21

I'm possibly rude. I have a low tolerance for spiteful, bitter, power playing dressed up as 'your house your rules hun'

Enjoyingmycoffee1981 · 31/12/2014 10:21

I just really want to highlight it to her and make it clear it's not really acceptable.

So your solution is to send a somewhat odd,massive aggressive text?

Grow up. Have a chat with her, say you were hurt not to talk to her over Christmas, say that you wanted the children to see her.

I can't stand this weird way of conducting relationships. My ours pissed off, so you send a text wishing her a happy new year, hoping that makes the issue clear to her. Odd.

winkywinkola · 31/12/2014 10:23

It is extremely poor manners to come and see or babysit your gcs and then invite other people over to a house that isn't your own.

I cannot think how anyone can regard this as acceptable. It's not. And then to sulk when you've been called up on your rudeness?

Yes the mil was doing the op a favour but a lot of gps I know would be very pleased as well. Plus she rarely sees the gcs so why would she need the company?

You simply just don't invite other people to houses that aren't your own without at the very least checking if it's okay.

Why couldn't the mil catch up with said friends on a day that the op wasn't at the wedding? Extend her visit a bit?

It seems to me your mil is childish and petty and couldn't care less a out your dcs.

The sooner you realise this and stop chasing after her the better. Let them or your dh do all the work.

You live where you live it's tough. It's tough for many families who have no help. You so sound a bit whingey about the help your sil gets. That's just tough. Nobody is entitled to help.

And I'mreally not sure why some poster's dislike of Facetimimg matters either. For families with distance between them, Skype or Face timing makes the distance seem less for many.

Anyway, what does your dh think about it all?

I would just not engage. Leave them to it. When they choose to visit or you visit them, I would be neutrally welcoming and chatty on non dangerous subjects.

Otherwise, detach detach detach.

limitedperiodonly · 31/12/2014 10:23

Maybe I'm obtuse, but I'd take that text as a sign you wanted to get in my good books. So don't send it because it might not have the effect you want.

I cannot believe how rude you were to your PILs when they came.

Pagwatch · 31/12/2014 10:23

Yes Apocalypse. And 'home owners permission' is a very telling way of describing 'her sons home'

clam · 31/12/2014 10:23

Poor mil.
I wouldn't be falling over myself to FaceTime with you after your appalling behaviour re: their favour to you.

And what's with all the "in my own house" nonsense? Who feels the need point that out?

EvilTendency1 · 31/12/2014 10:24

Wallaby

Er -- what's wrong with facetiming ? Confused FT and Skype are brilliant inventions especially for speaking to family who are a considerable distance from you.

I do it each week to family back home and I'm not 14 Hmm

DecaffCoffeeAndRollupsPlease · 31/12/2014 10:24

You want to send a PA text messages to your husband's mother? It sounds silly just as an idea. Either communicate with her at a mature adult level or don't contact her at all.

TheChandler · 31/12/2014 10:25

Differing standards of behaviour, isn't it? I find the inviting of people round, even other family, when staying at someone else's house, without letting them know about it first very rude. Manners dictate you ask.

I don't think your text is rude either. You come across as someone who stands up to rudeness by being fairly abrupt back, but not as rude. There are other people who will let someone walk all over them. That doesn't make you rude. I can't stand people who sulk, like your MIL, but not bothering to contact her grandchildren at Christmas is not indicative of a nice person.

I would send the text and then ignore them; let them make the next contact - but they're not going to do that, are they? They are punishing you for living in London.

Mintyy · 31/12/2014 10:25

Whoever was rude about the visitors and babysitting, it is an extremely poor show that your mil could not even be bothered to come to the laptop and speak to her other grandchildren once over Christmas. I can see why you are hurt, op. If she did that to make a point then it is pretty shabby of her.

outtolunchagain · 31/12/2014 10:26

I can't imagine how it's OK to invite 4 adults to a house that is not my own without asking the home owner , I am seriously amazed at how many people that that is an OK way to behave .

At that age my children would have been probably freaked out enough by me not being there , 2yrs old and 10 months old let alone another 4 adults that they didn't know in. Their home with no mummy or daddy .I am not sure I would have felt safe leaving them actually , and I am considered pretty relaxed.

MrsItsNoworNotatAll · 31/12/2014 10:26

I wouldn't be happy about babysitters inviting their friends to my home without my knowledge.

If that makes me sound precious about MY home then so be it - happy to be so!

I wouldn't send the text. The situation is what it is. Your mil clearly has a closer relationship with your Sil than you. It happens.

Fwiw I had a better relationship with my mil than my sil did but she sucked it up and wasn't bothered by it.

Unescorted · 31/12/2014 10:27

I would have liked to be in on that conversation.... Hi MIL - haven't seen you for several months. Would you mind travelling down to London and look after the kids while me and your son go out? No you can't do anything else while you are here because you are my babysitter.

dragdownthemoon · 31/12/2014 10:27

What on earth is wrong with FaceTime?!

gamerchick · 31/12/2014 10:27

I think it's obvious you wanted them.to be doting grandparents like they are with the other grandbairns. You thought she should be completely devoted to your kids for the entire day and kneejerked when her plans didn't match the picture in your head

Thing is its never going to be like that..It's hard to have the same bond with kids you hardly see compared to the ones that you do.

You really shouldn't have banned family from coming to visit.. your kids would have probably had a good time with more adults paying them attention.

SunnyBaudelaire · 31/12/2014 10:27

yes but it is not 'babysitters inviting their friends' it is family invited other family members to their son's house...
lovely to be reduced to a 'babysitter' as a GParent I am sure!

Nomama · 31/12/2014 10:30

Homeowner!!

When at my sisters, housesitting, I treat the place as my own...

When at my parents, house swap holidaying, I take friends, family home...

When they come here they get a key, help yourself, mi casa and an all that.

Friends don't get the same treatment as they are, well, friends not family.

Since when did any woman get to treat her DHs family like invading strangers and ask, all innocently, AIBU?

Yes, you really are BVU.

Imagine your DH treating your mother like that!

Pah!

Chewbecca · 31/12/2014 10:30

They're not just any old adults though, they're family. Might be helpful if the OP specified who, are we talking about the children's Great Aunt/Uncle here for e.g.?

Also would be helpful to know what OP did in this situation, did she demand the GM called the visitors and cancel?
If so, maybe GM is waiting for an apology or has decided to cut contact because she is so outraged at her DiL's behaviour, the consequences being not contacting over Xmas.

Pagwatch · 31/12/2014 10:31

When my mother used to come here to look after my DC she would get other family that live nearby to come over. I came back once to about 8 people. She'd eaten everything in the fridge too Grin My DD loved it.

Coconutty · 31/12/2014 10:31

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

ShipwreckedAndMerrilyComatose · 31/12/2014 10:31

Having friends round depends on when. If it was in the evening, for instance, whilst the grandchildren were asleep, I would think it a lovely chance to catch up with old friends whilst visiting close by.

Generally though, I would stop wasting energy on this relationship as you cannot change what it is.

clam · 31/12/2014 10:31

They're not just 'babysitters' though, are they? They're grandparents, members of the family, in their son's home.
And seriously? A poster (on phone so can't scroll back to see who said it) "wouldn't feel safe" leaving her kids with grandparents if anyone else was going to visit?!

DreamingDiva13 · 31/12/2014 10:35

If I was at my mum's house and a friend wanted to pop in to see me, I would ask if that was okay by with my mum. It's common courtesy. If I was babysitting at a family members house and wanted someone to come sit with me I would ask if it was okay-again because it's common courtesy. I cannot imagine any situation where I would go to my in-laws and invite other members of my family or my friends around to their house without first checking it was okay with then. It is just so rude in my opinion and shows a lack of respect for their home being just that-theirs.

Damnautocorrect · 31/12/2014 10:35

Whilst I think you were rude about them having people over, I had EXACTLY the same about Christmas. Even down to 'what are you doing?'. It makes me so sad as the people missing out are them and my children. I feel so so sad that they don't want to know, and basically the reason for that is he has the wrong mum. I've mentioned a few things to OH, he doesn't say much (he agrees but doesn't do anything).
I've now backed away completely, I make no effort, it's down to oh and them if we see them now. It was just too painful for the constant knock backs. It's worked, I'm still massively pissed off and sad (I spent most of last night sobbing about it) but you can't force them to want to spend time with your kids. I'm amazed at how little they did see the kids (3 times, they live 10 mins away) last year, but it was totally down to them.