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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To have finally had enough of this shit?

235 replies

entitledmuch1 · 12/09/2017 02:37

Posting under a name change just in case. But I have finally had enough of my sister and her children and my mum.

In short, they are allowed to do what they like. If they don't they whine. It is so totally scripted. They ask for something. Any hint of a no gets a long whine or a grizzle until they get given what they want.

My mum dealt with us as children that no meant no and that is it. But her "cute" grand-kids are allowed the most appalling behaviour for no reason.

A huge bugbear of mine is respect for my property which is never shown. I have banned them as being guests in my home as my sisters children are in my bedroom, my study, my bathroom cupboards, my fridge, my food cupboards, the lot. They take what they want. One of them took, stood on and damaged the screen of my tablet in my study. My sister sits and watches it and when I finally deal with them myself and shout at the children to stop what they are doing in my home, she sternly tells me not to be mean to them and she will deal them...but she doesn't. So I banned her from coming to my house but I still get it at hers and on family gatherings at my parents.

The little one in particular (they are 3 and 5) is particularly disrespectful of my things. My phone is a target for him and he has been trying to get it for about a year. He knows I wont let him have it and he tries everything to get it. He sits next to me when I need to use my phone, asks what I am doing, are you playing games, I want to play, etc. I just ignore him and put it away when I've finished.

But what drives me crazy is a few times I have caught him taking my handbag and going into it for my phone. The screen is passcode locked so he wouldnt be able to use it but he may break it. I have gone as far as putting my bag high on a shelf and they have climbed on chairs to try and get it. So it isn't me being careless. At 3.5 and nearly 6 they are old enough to understand they are not allowed my handbag and to respect that. They aren't babies.

There are also prescription drugs in my handbag. They are in foil blisters so not in child proof bottles. I need to take them during the day so they need to be in my bag. I finally let rip at my sister last time I caught the 3 year old with my bag and said to teach her children to keep out of my handbag and respect peoples property. She said they were doing no harm. I said there are prescription drugs in there and would she like to risk a hospital trip just because her kids wont leave my bag alone. My sister actually said I shouldn't carry my pills in my bag.......!

So I am not supposed to carry my pills that I need during the day in my own bag and I am just supposed to allow them to go in my handbag?

It has got to the point where her children are deliberately goading me every time they see me about this issue.

They see their mother and grandmother letting them do what they like and telling me to give them the things of mine that they want. Their mother tells me in front of them to let them have it and when I say no, they get annoyed. But because their mother tells me in front of them oh let them have it, they see it as a game now I think, seeing when I'll give in.

It is EVERY time I see them. There are certain things of mine they want and they KNOW I will not allow them to have but they try every time as their mother encourages me to hand my stuff over. I have to watch my things like a hawk as I know they dont respect things and will take without asking.

It is a horrible thing to say but I actually now cant stand being around the children. I dont actually want to see them anymore. In a way in it not their fault but their mother won't see sense and their behaviour is terrible.

WIBU to back off and just stop going to see them at all?

OP posts:
upperlimit · 15/09/2017 12:36

I understand that you can pick up medicine out of your handbag and put them in the glove compartment.

upperlimit · 15/09/2017 12:38

And in contrast to my writing skills, my comprehension skills are just fine, thanks.

MrsKoala · 15/09/2017 12:38

I think this thread is actually a portal to a parenting website called 'sparetherod.com'. Where leaving dangerous medication about knowing children might get it is advised to prove a parenting point. Yeah that'l teach them. Perhaps it's like the Darwin awards where if they kill themselves they deserve it and that'll serve their Mum right.

Lovely.

MrsKoala · 15/09/2017 12:42

Oh ffs - i clearly said 'Too much' 'constantly' etc and say it once and then remove the object of frustration and don't engage with it anymore. I didn't at all say 'don't say no ever and immediately hand over the phone'. Confused

Coffeetasteslikeshit · 15/09/2017 15:16

Ffs, just leave the medicine in the car.

Exactly what I was thinking.

HelenaDove · 15/09/2017 16:05

"Ffs, just leave the medicine in the car"

People need to carry medications on them in a lot of cases. Things like epipens and GTN sprays are no good in the car. Because when you have an allergic reaction and/or cant breathe you are not going to be able to make it back to the bloody car.

upperlimit · 15/09/2017 16:14

The op has tablets. Not an epi-pen. Not a GTN spray. Not an inhaler. Tablets.

RhiannonOHara · 15/09/2017 16:21

upper, the OP NEEDS HER MEDICATION WITH HER. I don't mean to shout but wanted to be clear.

Plus, it's irrelevant really; why on earth should she have to inconvenience herself and squirrel stuff away because the children aren't being parented properly.

FrancisCrawford · 15/09/2017 16:22

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

LizB62A · 15/09/2017 16:41

To be honest, I wouldn't bother seeing them unless it's just you and the kids - your mum and sister are the real problem.
And get a cross-body bag so you don't need to put it down when you're with them (assuming all your meds will fit in)

HelenaDove · 15/09/2017 16:41

YY Francis And i cant see the OPs sister running her to A and E even if the OP does get ill through the sisters lazy parenting by having to keep her pills elsewhere.

Because as we can already see the OPs sister isnt exactly shit hot at taking responsibility for her own actions.

upperlimit if this carries on and they start behaving this way at school and going in other childrens and teachers bags and finding meds there what then? I was on morphine pills when i had gallstones years ago. When you have an attack of this you cannot move because the pain is excrutiating. i had them in my bag and i dont drive. So no car to store them in. They need to be taught NOT to go in peoples bags because one day something could happen.

upperlimit · 15/09/2017 17:40

There are some shades of grey here and solutions that do not require throwing a grenade into a family and cutting contact though.

Yes, the children should be taught not to rifle through handbags, is that achieved by cutting contact? No. Is the op in a position to fix this for the children? No.

But - presuming she cannot leave the drugs in her car or somewhere safe, for whatever reason she can wear a bumbag, as ugly as they may be, and hang on to her family relationships.

If a family pet were to get access to dangerous drugs because they hadn't been stored properly - taking into consideration the knowledge that they have form for nosing in handbags, there would be hell to pay.

kali110 · 15/09/2017 17:43

Ffs, just leave the medicine in the car.
I can take 4 different tablets during the day at different times, so not a chance would i be going to the car everytime Hmm
Neither should the op.
She has the medication with her for a reason.

upperlimit · 15/09/2017 17:48

So if you had nieces and nephews who regularly nosed in your handbag with access to dangerous drugs and risked coming to harm as a result, that would be worse than

a) going out to the car
b) wearing a bumbag
c) cutting contact

HelenaDove · 15/09/2017 17:51

If i had a sister that was treating me like this its not a family relationship i would want to keep quite frankly.

HelenaDove · 15/09/2017 17:54

d. the parent actually PARENTS the children THEY chose to have.

Why the fuck should someone with medical issues and/or is in pain be made to make compromises because a relative cant be bothered to parent the children THEY chose to have.

upperlimit · 15/09/2017 17:54

This place is nuts, proper nuts. The things people would advise cutting off family members for beggars belief.

We live in a society that is increasingly isolated, where people become vulnerable because of this isolation and we have a massive problem with chronic lonliness and a fucking shitstorm of consequences that follow but yeah, those kids are a pita, fuck wearing a bumbag or going out to the car, just sack the whole lot of them off. So. Much. Simpler.

HelenaDove · 15/09/2017 17:59

upperlimit its not a case of either or. I come from an Italian family (DM is from Naples) Children are often up late eating meals with adults. This is not a problem because they are taught not to do certain things. If my cousins touched things they wernt supposed to there were consequences for it.

upperlimit · 15/09/2017 18:00

So? This particular OP, with her particular family is being advised to cut contact for things which can be resolved without any drama.

FrancisCrawford · 15/09/2017 18:03

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

HelenaDove · 15/09/2017 18:04

For any resolution to happen the actual PARENT needs to get on board with it as well.

upperlimit · 15/09/2017 18:16

No, a resolution to the drug problem can be achieved without any intervention or compliance from the parent.

I imagine the bigger problem is a lack of mutual respect Francis. It would be best to focus on that rather than making the children the focus of the conversation. This can't be achieved by cutting contact or surprise dildos in handbags.

HelenaDove · 15/09/2017 18:18

Its not compliance ITS PARENTING.

thecatfromjapan · 15/09/2017 18:23

If it's really an issue of parenting (and I don't think it is) then I'm not sure it's right to interfere, frankly. Seriously. I always take outraged descriptions of other women''s parenting with a huge pinch of salt because a. most women are 'good enough mother' and b. there's a really strong cultural predisposition to 'see' women as 'not being good enough' as mothers.

If this thread is about deep-seated family dynamics, that's another matter.

Still, the OP's been offered many options, from the sensible to the really stupid (the idea of filling her bag with shit that will just cause problems I will put down to internet LOLZ and hope that no-one would consider that seriously in RL). I'm sure she's capable of deciding on a course of action that will bring happiness to her life.

upperlimit · 15/09/2017 18:24

I'm not saying that the op's sister doesn't have a parenting problem. I'm saying that cutting contact because of that problem or deliberately inflaming the situation isn't going to fix that. I'm saying rather a fugly bumbag than putting these children at risk and far better not to cut contact because of this situation.

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