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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think MIL’s comments during my pregnancy are horribly inappropriate?

131 replies

IsThisYourSanderling · 14/08/2016 20:44

After three gruelling years of infertility, I’m due my first baby in six weeks’ time, and throughout my pregnancy MIL has been making comments about things going wrong. Today she noticed via Instagram that we’ve bought a cot, and texted to say that she thinks it’s wrong to buy big things in advance, in case something bad happens. She said the same when we were visiting her a month ago – that we were ‘brave’ to have bought things, because something might still happen. These hints about the possibility of a stillbirth feel horribly inappropriate and insensitive, especially as the due date is approaching. I got a bit upset about it this evening.

It goes further back too. She visited us when I was 13 weeks pregnant, and treated me to detailed stories of everyone she’s ever known who either had a stillbirth, a miscarriage, or themselves almost died in childbirth. It was barrel-scraping stuff – her neighbour’s cousin’s bridesmaid, that sort of thing. I did ask her to stop, but she smiled and carried on.

Before that, when we told her I was pregnant at about 6 weeks, her first response was to tell us not to get excited because my endometriosis means I have a ‘toxic womb’.

She has four healthy children and has never experienced a miscarriage (she told me it had never happened to her while regaling me with tales of others’ losses), so it’s not that she’s over-anxious based any losses of her own. She also has five healthy grandchildren. My own pregnancy has been healthy throughout, thankfully.

I just don’t get it. How normal is this sort of behaviour? Has anyone else experienced it, and did you just brush it off in the end?

OP posts:
Memoires · 17/08/2016 17:12

Congratulations!

My dh was like this. He wouldn't get anything prepared for our baby, wouldn't buy anything, wouldn't discuss anything to do with it. Of course, she was born healthy as anything. It was I who became ill!

oldlaundbooth · 17/08/2016 17:16

She sounds horrendous and in severe need of a total bollocking next time you see her.

oldlaundbooth · 17/08/2016 17:18

Or take the piss:'

'OOoooo, watch out, the Grand Maester of Doom and Gloom is here!! DUM DUM DUM!!! Ready for some negativity?? Hold onto your hats!!!'

alcohol free Wine

HandbagCrazy · 17/08/2016 17:33

I think you need to put your foot down and stop explaining your reasons to her.

I don't have DC (fertility problems) but when dsis was pregnant she had something similar with her SIL. They had discussed argued it many times and I remember being out and SIL made a comment about "if the baby makes it..." DSis said "that's horrible. If you carry on with shit like that then I'm leaving."
10 minutes later, SIL says "what a waste, buying a pram when the baby may never get to use it." And Dsis just stood up, got her bag and left. No words, no explanation, just bitch eyes at SIL and left.

If your dp doesn't see the harm / is afraid of making MIL angry, you'll need to do it. When she comes to visit, don't explain why, just talk to her as though staying at yours isn't an option. "Don't forget to check X hotel to make sure they can fit you in." Then stop talking! It's amazing how much crap you will say to fill an awkward silence. Just leave it and see what happens. If she mentions staying with you, a simple "that doesn't work for us. As I said, X hotel is only down the road." It would be madness on her part to keep pushing you.

I understand that doing this is hard, and it's only going to work if your DH is prepared to stand by you, even if he sometimes disagrees because she will go to him seperately and push against your boundaries. She knows him, she's spent years making him agree with her, she will try and get him on-side and approach you as the enemy but It's like with the DC you're now having - disagree behind the scenes but always present a united front.
If MIL is going to judge you / upset you anyway, you may as well get something out of it (ie less dealing with her and her not staying in your house)!

Ps Congratulations on your pregnancy Flowers

ClockBusCanada · 17/08/2016 18:34

My MIL was very similar to this, always had to tell us about any child or baby death in the media, told me throughout my pregnancy that a foetus could die at any time, when DD did get here told me it only took a second of taking my eyes off her for a fatal accident to happen, that my milk could poison her, that formula could be contaminated, asked other women on the PN ward to check if their babies were still breathing, loads of crazy shit. DH called her on it every time he caught her doing it, thankfully, and would say 'oh, is that the totally pointless voice of doom I hear?' if she started up. If I protested she would call me too young and foolish to understand (at age 38...), bleating in about not having the maturity to look after a baby and keep it safe - it was all about undermining my confidence and having a dig at me being a bit fick (I'm a more senior role in MIL's industry).

One thing I wish I'd done is take advantage of being full of drugs after giving birth and tell her to fuck off once and for all, then blame it on the medication. Agree with PPs that if she's going to be pissy with you, you might as well give her something to be pissy about, or at least get something out of it for you.

Good luck with it all Flowers

jollo · 17/08/2016 18:49

Google "narcissistic mothers" - she sounds like one. I wouldn't let her stay in my home and would lumit and supervise any time she spent with my precious babe. She sounds poisonous!

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