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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to expect my MIL to look after my DC for a couple of hours while we look after her elderly, frail sister?

87 replies

Semiurban · 23/02/2017 12:23

I’m feeling hurt and angry with my in-laws and DH. MIL has always been critical of me and undermines me. On our wedding day she came out after the church service and quizzed my closest friend about whether I would look after her DS properly. I’m a second wife. His first wife was treated similarly until they divorced. Now she can do no wrong.

Everything has to revolve around MIL. She is controlling and my DH can’t see it. He tells me she is sweet and kind, in the absence of all evidence to the contrary. Because of her propensity for drama and tears disrupting every family celebration and fun time, I have very little to do with her. I see her about twice a year. I have posted about her before when she invited us to come to her for lunch, only to tell us after we’d driven 100 miles that we were in a restaurant that didn’t allow dogs. She’d previously said I should bring the dog. She and my DCs and DH ate (for over two hours!) while I sat in the bar area with the dog. I was made to feel really awful for this and DH told me off for being too rigid and making a fuss. I didn’t fuss. I just sat.

To the current upset: MIL has an older sister in her 80s who is a widow and has no children. I’ll call her Aunty J. Aunty J and I have a warmer relationship and speak on the phone regularly. We remember each others birthdays and she seems genuinely interested in the DCs and supportive of us as a family. We are not massively close, but she was like a second mum to my DH when he was growing up and I have a lot of feelings of care and respect towards her.

Aunty J has been ill. She had a series of falls last year and a hip replacement and has osteoporosis. We live about 150 miles away. MIL, FIL, SIL and BIL are all a few miles from Aunty J. This week Aunty J told me she had fractured several vertebrae and is bed bound. She sounded very low and not her usual self. DH and I are worried about her. MIL hasn’t visited her in weeks, as she doesn’t want to impose. Her words.

I suggested that we visit this weekend, to see if Aunty J needs care, help with washing, sheets changed, food cooked, or if we need to get carers in, which I suspect we do. I would gladly bring her back to live with us for a while if she wanted that, but I am not sure she would want to do that.

My MIL and FIL live in a four bedroom house but whenever we visit we cannot stay with them, “because we are not equipped”. They invite us for lunch and then grumble about how much effort it is “to entertain”. My MIL does not cook, she heats ready meals. In the past she tried to feed my 18 month DD a packet of digestive biscuits because she hadn’t bought any food for her, even though DD ate most of whatever we would be eating, MIL told me biscuits would be more nourishing and cried when I took the biscuits away. If I challenge anything, she bursts into tears and accuses me of being aggressive. So whenever we visit, I now take my own food, activities for my DCs and am polite for a few hours, while feeling quite disappointed that this is their relationship with their grandparents. My ILs do not interact with the DC at all, except to sort of “coo” over them in an “ooh, isn’t she pretty/ clever” kind of way.

My FIL has never hugged, picked up or cuddled my DCs. He tried to shake DD (5) hand and she laughed at him and gave him a kiss. He tried to shoo her away when she wanted to cuddle him. It makes me tearful recollecting it.

So, this weekend we are driving on Saturday night as I am working on Saturday, putting the dog in kennels overnight, staying in a hotel that is expensive for us to do, and then seeing Aunty J the following morning. I asked MIL if she would help look after my two youngest (2 and 5) while we see what needs doing at Aunty J and MIL told me not to impose and that she didn't know them well enough to be left with them. I was upset and my Dh took her side and told me not to expect too much and that it is my decision “to impose”. DH told me I have to make another plan for the DCs. He also wants them to come with us so they have an opportunity to see his parents as apparently MIL is sad she doesn't get to see them more often.

I am worried that we have an elderly relative in her 80s who is immobile and in pain and just wanted to be met part way in an attempt to look after her. However, DH and I had a big argument last night and he says because his DM cherished him when he was a boy, I need to respect her. I said respect had to be earned. AIBU?

OP posts:
wictional · 23/02/2017 17:48

Have you directly asked your DH what he thinks about his DM whinging that she never gets to see/get to know her DGC but refusing to spend time with them?

I mean, surely he can see what utterly bizarre behaviour that is

RhiWrites · 23/02/2017 17:51

What kind of husband leaves his wife to sit in a bar with a dog for two hours while he feeds his face? At the very least he should have taken turns. I don't like the sound of him.

Rainbunny · 23/02/2017 18:02

I can't fathom why you haven't ripped your DH a new one for allowing his dm to treat you this way and more importantly for his own behaviour! No offense intended (sorry I hate that preface to a statement myself) but I think you're taking one for the team (team = womankind) by keeping him off the market! Sorry but I'm not surprised he's on his second marriage either... This sounds a bit harsher than I mean to be but really!

rollonthesummer · 23/02/2017 18:02

Omg-I just could not stay married to someone like that!

MrsMoastyToasty · 23/02/2017 18:06

I'd be going absolutely ballistic with DH and PI'LL. ..but then I'm quite confrontational.

Nanny0gg · 23/02/2017 18:08

No, I'm not thinking of stepping away from DH. I know that he ought to back me up. But, I only see MIL about twice a year now and I think we all have flaws.

I'm not saying you should leave him, but this is more than 'flaws'.

You are putting up with way too much from his family and by default, him. How dare he leave you sitting at the bar on your own with the dog? No decent man would do that.

meganorks · 23/02/2017 18:14

While I agree with everything others have said, in a more immediate soluton to this issue - could you all go and then you DH take the kids to his mum's if they are getting a bit much? Then everyone will be happy (maybe!). Aunt sees kids for a bit, MIL sees kids, you don't have to see MIL. Sounds like she would probably try and ruin this somehow, but maybe worth a try?

Semiurban · 23/02/2017 18:21

Thanks everyone. As I've said, I'll make a plan after speaking to AuntyJ this evening.

DH says his DM would like to see the children more, but his DF is very controlling. When they came to see us a few years ago when we lived in London, he wouldn't let her travel on the tube with me as it was dangerous. If she goes out without him, even to the local shops, he whinges that he could drop dead and she should be 'minding' him. He wouldn't allow her to come to see us on her own. When he comes with her, he paces around behind her and constantly turns all my electrical appliances off so fires don't start. He doesn't like to travel as he likes to sleep in his own bed. He's a very strange man. He mutters under his breath at MIL and tuts at her. I think she is intimidated by him.

I don't 'put up' with my DHs behaviour. I tell him it's unacceptable. I choose to stay with him. I wouldn't be his MILs carer. He knows that.

OP posts:
Sittinginthesun · 23/02/2017 18:28

Your ILs clearly have lots of issues, but you simply can't be responsible for everyone. Just remember, you are not responsible for their happiness, you should just do what seems right to you and don't worry about their reaction.

So, in this case, the obvious solution is to go to the Aunt's either on your own, or with the children if she'd prefer it.

If your ILs want to see the grandchildren, then it is up to them to make the effort.

If the restaurant thing happens again, I'd sit in the bar, with the dog, and the children, and enjoy your meal. Again, their decision whether to join you.

diddl · 23/02/2017 20:31

I think that I'd be keeping the kids away from the GPs.

Can't see that they'd be missing much by not seeing them!

ArcheryAnnie · 23/02/2017 23:03

I'm sorry, SemiUrban, i can see that there's a lot to deal with, and you are navigating your way through this. No wonder Auntie J stands out as a beacon of delight and sanity in that lot!

FIL sounds awful, and may well explain awful MIL, and DH's weirdly subservient behaviour with them.

FrancisCrawford · 23/02/2017 23:16

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

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