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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not want to always be thought of as lazy?

66 replies

NormaDesmondsEyebrows · 24/08/2017 10:42

I've just come back from a week away with my parents. I do usuallly keep contact to a minimum that I can handle as my mother has form, but this was a holiday for the kids.

The holiday was at our friends' villa with a pool. Dh and I were very clear before we went that I would be mainly relaxing while he did lots of swimming with the kids, playing pool, table tennis etc. I obviously joined in at times but this was what we BOTH wanted from the holiday.

I have terrible mental health and have reached a good balance over the past year by knowing my limits, getting plenty of down time (alone time included) and generally looking after myself. My mum claimed to be totally on board with this.

During the week I made sure I kept everything tidy, prepared meals and cleared up and paid more than our share for meals out etc.

Throughout the week there were a few snipes, mostly 'banter' about how good DH is to me (he is!) and what a princess I am. When I was cleaning etc I got 'oh that makes a change'. Mum regaled our friends with tales of my slatternly ways, that all I do is watch tv all day while DH slaves (not true!), that I'm lazy and would be better off getting a job (categorically not true). That my house is a constant mess (it's not, but my mother is totally anal about cleaning and tidying). By the end of the week our friends had started to join in, one night I said at dinner (late) that I was looking forward to bed and our host said quite pointedly that I needed to wash up first as mum had helped cook. I would have done anyway, so it stung a bit and I'm sure came from my mum needling.

On the flight out I sat with the younger kids and dh sat behind. On the way back he asked if he could sit with them so I sat across the aisle. Cue a tirade from my mum about how I've done no parenting all week and now I'm palming it off again.

All the way home her 'banter' morphed into out and out slagging, apparently I wasted two whole days because I was hungover. This is absolutely not the case, they were days following 'big' days, one a party and one a morning walking round a very busy market before walking into the village and having a long meal before walking back. Yes I was drinking, probably not as much as everyone else tbh, but I wasn't hungover. I was wiped out and so I had two restful days but I still participated, I just took time out in the afternoons to sit and read and sleep. Which is exactly what we'd explained I'd be doing to avoid a horrible crash.

There's more along the same lines but this has got very long already.

When we got home my lovely MiL had taken several loads of dirty washing to their house, washed it, ironed it, and brought it back (they were in feeding the cat) and I just lost the plot. MiL meant it kindly but it just tipped me over.

Is there any way I can stop people thinking I'm lazy? I have been called lazy my entire life by my mother in particular, but also my whole family and family friends, and despite my best efforts to prove I'm not, nothing ever changes.

OP posts:
ToneDeafHamster · 24/08/2017 11:56

You don't sound lazy to me. You have been through a lot. Your DH knows and understands, thats all that matters.

Your mother sounds like mine a bit, thinks she knows me but hasn't got a clue, as her version of me is based on my childhood (which was fraught and unpleasant), she has no clue who I am as an adult and used to make digs at me.

You need to keep yourself safe from such toxic people while you recover and get back on track. Don't feel bad about protecting yourself from her. Sadly, the people that are supposed to love and understand us the most are the ones that really don't and just cause pain at every turn.

TalkinBoutNuthin · 24/08/2017 11:57

Oh Norma, your 'D'M sounds horrendous. Seriously cut back how much involvement she has in your life. Don't let her into your house to see what you are doing, she doesn't WANT to see you as anything than she sees you. For some reason it makes her feel better to have this picture of you as hopeless and lazy. It won't change, so protect yourself from it.

If she asks why she can't come over, could you say 'Why, so you can criticise me some more? No thank you.'

The DH preparing dinner when people come over was something happening here too. I cooked every other meal, and when we had guests I would get everything else ready and DH would spend the day faffing around with dinner and he would praised sky high about how wonderful he was. Pissed me off to no end. So I put a stop to it when entertaining those type of people.

I told him he could spend as much time getting everything else ready as I did, and then we would BOTH do the cooking - no more spending hours prepping one bloody dinner while I ran around making sure the DC went to their sporting activities and were then entertained, the washing/ironing was done, the house was cleaned, the food was bought, etc, etc, etc...

Stopped the comments from idiots who make judgments on what is immediately in front of them and made me stop wanting to explode.

(In the end I put a stop to entertaining these type of judgmental people anyway, and my life got a whole lot more pleasant, but that's another thread!)

NannyRed · 24/08/2017 12:03

So you're lazy, it is allowed. You are extra lazy on holiday, most people are.

Why are you so concerned as to what your mum thinks?

Life seems to work well for you and DH, ignore what your mum thinks, everybody else does.

Jamboree05 · 24/08/2017 12:09

OP, thank you for sharing- I just want to give you the hug your mother should be giving you.

Firstly, well done for working through your MH to the point where you and DH are working well, and you are doing ok. That is AWESOME.

Secondly, have a conversation with your mother and lay everything out for her. Frankly, given what you've just disclosed about the last few years, she should already be with the programme but give her a chance and if then she still can't control her behaviour, minimise contact as much as possible.

This will be better for you in the long run anyway. Negativity is not what you need.

MovingOnUpMovingOnOut · 24/08/2017 12:12

I agree that some parents cast their children in a particular role (usually when they're about 13) and that is it. Forever. It's incredibly frustrating.

I also think women get a harder time about doing chores. It's the whole "oh he's just a marvellous dad" because he does half what his wife does schitck.

Tell her to fuck off.

liz70 · 24/08/2017 12:15

OP, as an adult daughter I think the time is long overdue for you to tell your mother to hush her snarky mouth, or keep away. You need to stand up to her, and not let her undermine you, either alone or in front of others. That's shitty behaviour from anyone, never mind your own mother. Don't let her get away with it any longer. Flowers

missmollyhadadolly · 24/08/2017 12:51

Those friends piling in don't sound much like 'friends'. Are they yours or her crones friends?

HumphreyCobblers · 24/08/2017 12:54

I agree with Hully. They were all horrible to you. Given your recent posts I am aghast that your friend could be so nasty too.

Don't justify your level of activity to anyone, here or in RL.

mrsRosaPimento · 24/08/2017 12:59

Never go on holiday with them again. I suspect the reason you have mental health problems is because of your mum's toxic behaviour. Consider going no contact to save your sanity. I can see why your mil tipped you over the edge, but was she trying to be nice?

NormaDesmondsEyebrows · 24/08/2017 13:07

They are old family friends, I grew up with their DD (who wasn't there).

OP posts:
NormaDesmondsEyebrows · 24/08/2017 13:08

Mil was definitely being nice and I'm very grateful. It was just the icing on a very fraught journey home really. Like, 'oh god even your mother thinks I'm a lazy cow, wail wail' to DH.

OP posts:
StealthPolarBear · 24/08/2017 13:19

Your problem is trying to justify yourself! Oh ad your mother of course :o the only people who need to be convinced are you and your dh.
I do agree about the stereotypes of adult children based on when they were teens. I'm disorganised. I was when I was a teen, now I am extra organised. Every time we leave my mum and dad's she'll say something along the lines of "have you forgotten anything... Oh you always forget something" despite the fact I don't and haven't for decades!
Otoh my mum is generally lovely and supportive e and always talks about how much I do and how organised I must be. It's just this one thing where in her mind I revert to type!

StealthPolarBear · 24/08/2017 13:20

Your mil, id like to think did the washing for you as a family.
Op it's really damned annoying I completely get it. But you need to rise above it and be the grown up, for the sake of your mental health.

littlemissangrypants · 24/08/2017 13:25

Have you tried a bullshit bingo? Cross off things as your mother says them and at the end of the day give yourself a treat.
Sometimes knowing what they will say and what things they will throw at you makes it sting less. For example my ex calls me a shit mum, a fat cow and a lot more. Every time we interact now I just cross one or more of my list and then give myself a treat for getting through it again. While it doesn't stop his words hurting it does show how predictable he is.

NormaDesmondsEyebrows · 24/08/2017 15:41

LOVE Bullshit Bingo and that is often how I've got through single days with her.

I think my powers of deflection had just worn thin by the end of the week.

OP posts:
tehmina23 · 24/08/2017 18:32

I take a lot of meds so have to rest a lot as they make me very sleepy- and I don't have kids to worry about either!

So I understand your need for regular rests & it's true that people who've never experienced this kind of fatigue can see it as you 'being lazy'.

Your DH sounds lovely and supportive as does MIL.

But the rest of your family especially your mum are clearly not & you should take a break from being around them and never never go away with them again!

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