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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to tell my mum to STOP interfering!

52 replies

annebancroftbag · 10/05/2018 11:19

She seems to think she’s helping, by offering solutions to problems that don’t exist, or aren’t her business. She’s always been like this but it’s worse lately, as the older she gets, the more she seems to think she’s entitled to say what she thinks. (This is not an ageist dig, my aunts and dad aren’t like this and they’re the same age)

What she doesn’t seem to get is how she ADDS to the mental load rather than alleviating it. This very morning she’s pushed my buttons with the simplest thing, I commented that DS had forgotten his lunch bag and I’d drop it off and she launched into a “well why don’t you put it where he can’t forget it, like hanging in the front door handle?” So I start to say that he had left it in the car, not the house so then “well why don’t you check he’s got everything before he gets out?/Why doesn’t he have school dinners? Why doesn’t he walk round to auntie Sandra’s at lunch, she would love to have him for lunch, shall I ring and talk to her?” Etc etc. It’s so so exhausting.

I’ve tried to talk to her about it but she doesn’t get how a lot of the time her questions and suggestions are really actually an insult to the intelligence, and she seems to start each phrase with “why don’t you” or “what you should do is...”

An elderly relative died recently, and she was talking to a cousin, and helpfully chimed in “why don’t you move in with Widowed Relative? There’s plenty of space!” Even though it’d mean the cousin completely uprooting her and her children’s lives, and is also none of her business!

She means well but how can I get through to her?

OP posts:
Sharonthetotallyinsane · 10/05/2018 12:30

My MiL verges on this from time to time. I just watch what I’m saying as once I’ve let slip a small thing, she’s all over it. She’s trying to be helpful, but I was just saying, not looking for a complicated solution.

hikikomore · 10/05/2018 12:38

She sounds just like my mum. Mine's worst when I'm driving her somewhere - she acts like something between a co-driver and driving instructor. And she's never learnt how to drive. At roundabouts it's "GO! - oh sorry I didn't think he was coming this way.... GO! GO! .. oh I thought you could go then". Once it was "Put your indicator on" just as I was about to. Grrrrrrrr. No solutions, just sympathy.

lilybetsy · 10/05/2018 12:40

my mother was like this and tbh I now tell her NOTHING abut my life. She hates it, I hate it too, but she couldn't stop interfering and offering 'suggestions' and making me feel like I was 8 years old.

Just tell her. If you don't stop I will need to see you less

annebancroftbag · 10/05/2018 12:42

Waaahhhh sockunicorn she does all that tooooo! OMG, 2 mums the same!!! Shock

We were NC for a bit, such was her interference but we are getting back on track slowly. She doesn’t really do boundaries so will just change things as she sees fit. She is a keen gardener and came over last week and moved all my garden furniture around because it “looked better.” She had put a lot of effort in (this is while I was out, I might add) and so I didn’t have the heart to say anything but I moved it all back because she’d moved the table into full sun, and the bird feeders away from in front of my office window. Hmm

It’s all with the best of intention I think.

OP posts:
annebancroftbag · 10/05/2018 12:44

Sockunicorn I’m picturing the response if I said “I don’t care” and turned away. Omg she would go nuclear!!!

OP posts:
AngkorWaat · 10/05/2018 12:44

I know the feeling! I just ignore any helpful advice now. My mum’s suddenly decided to get very anxious that I haven’t changed my gas and electricity supplier for a while, and keeps mentioning it, emailing me, etc...

I’m lucky if I get time to fit in a shower with a newborn and two kids right now, let alone sit down and do that shit.

annebancroftbag · 10/05/2018 12:46

Phew it’s kind of gratifying to know I am not suffering alone!Grin

OP posts:
YoThePussy · 10/05/2018 12:58

I have a not so D Aunt like this. Vaguely mentioned turning my central heating off recently and she suggested I rang my sister to come and do it for me or British Gas! When I brought my house she suggested my sister should look over the paperwork for me as I wouldn’t understand it. I commented that was what I was paying my solicitor to do and she went batshit. I went NC with her for a while because she did my head in completely and might do so again.

CookPassBabtridge · 10/05/2018 12:59

I don't have this but it sounds exhausting. I wonder why they are like this? Why are so many people so anxious?

Troubleandstrifebagforlife · 10/05/2018 13:02

Oh god I think I might do this!,
Must get a grip honestly didn’t realise how infuriating it must be!

RomeoBunny · 10/05/2018 13:08

My Mum does this. To the point that I recently realised she can't actually hold a conversation, she just throws 'solutions' at everything anyone says. Even when it's not a problem, they just want to talk. From anything to food to politics to flippin' leaves on trees. Anything.

What's wrong with a little "Oh that's nice, Bunny" or "Oh no! What a shame, what do you think you will do?"

She can't sit in silence either. Within 30 seconds she has to talk about something and it's usually gossip of some sort, or talking about how someone should do something differently (solutions!!)

She is also obsessed with constantly feeding my 11m old no matter how much I stress he has eaten Hmm

I love her to bits but it's infuriating. She is incredibly self centred and you wouldn't think it until you witness it in full force. She is only selfless with money, which is odd.

I've actually had to take a step back as her and my control freak father (who we're now realising may have had ODD his whole life) are overwhelming me.

Laiste · 10/05/2018 13:11

My family and i have recently moved in with my DM and i'm thinking it's the worst decision we've ever made.

She was trying to tell me how to fill a paddling pool for DD4 (4) at the weekend. I've had four kids - i've filled more paddling pools than she'd had hot dinners! I know how a bloody hose works and i know how to get water into a paddling pool FFS! AngryAngry

This was the final straw after a long morning of this kind of thing and for once i looked up at her sternly and said as calmly as i could - ''Please. I know what i'm doing. Leave me be''

What do i get? Passive aggressive 'poor little old me' routine from her today Hmm

Sorry OP. I've vented all over your thread BlushGrin

Laiste · 10/05/2018 13:14

until today that should say.

Today she has cheered up. But has decided i can't remember to lock a house up when i go out .......

QuimReaper · 10/05/2018 13:28

This kind of thing is SO frustrating.

I recently realised she can't actually hold a conversation, she just throws 'solutions' at everything anyone says

That's the nail on the head! What's so maddening is when it comes from a "kind" place and so you can't just full-on hate it.

Helpmeplan · 10/05/2018 13:32

My mum is exactly this. Soooo bad. Thankfully she lives 180 miles away. So I get to do what I want without her looking over my shoulder.

The thought of telling her anything fills me full of dread.

taratill · 10/05/2018 13:37

My mother is a step beyond this to be honest. She sulks if I don't follow her opinion. We've had a hard time lately as my son who is autistic has had to come out of school as it was making him really anxious.
My mother thinks he should be 'punished' for this by being made to work every second between the hours of 9-3pm. Drives me nuts. I actually went round to see her to say that her 'opinions' were stressing me out and go against medical advice. However she knows better on the basis that she has been a parent (of children without ASD who were fine at school).
She has backed off a bit now although she still refuses to see son during school hours.

Your mother is doing this because she cares about you. If it's driving you nuts the only option is to tell her to back off or stop telling her so much.

kaytee87 · 10/05/2018 13:40

My mum is a bit like this, god love her, she has anxiety

QuimReaper · 10/05/2018 13:40

As a teenager I worked in a bar, and so didn't knock off until the early hours, then afterwards we'd tend to wind down with a drink and then I'd get home at the crack of dawn. I was basically nocturnal. One morning I greeted my Dad at the front door getting in super early and casually mentioned that I'd had a run-in with an armful of cider bottles I was gathering, and chipped my front tooth. Then I went to bed. This was then passed on to my mother who unilaterally phoned the dentist, then marched into my room and dragged me out of bed to send me down there, loudly insisting that I was "in agony" when I wasn't anything of the sort, and completely refusing to listen when I explained this Confused It was a minuscule, millimetre-sized chip out of the corner of my front tooth, and the dentist was baffled as to what he was supposed to do about it and why it was such an emergency. He just sort of vaguely filed off a non-existent "sharp edge" and sent me home, whilst I apologised for my mother's behaviour. It was properly deranged, I still feel my blood pressure rise when I remember it.

(A few weeks later by a total fluke I did the exact same thing to my other front tooth. Funnily enough I didn't mention it to anyone and it hasn't caused me any distress over the past 11-odd years.)

QuimReaper · 10/05/2018 13:41

I realise that ^ isn't advice as such, but it's that thing of "concern" begetting utterly intolerable behaviour...

MiniAlphaBravo · 10/05/2018 13:42

My mums like this exactly too. So annoying. Constantly tried to do housework for me if she’s round - I know she means well! - but she will stick on 5 loads of washing which I know I don’t have time to hand up, bring up, flo, put away etc. tells us exactly what we must do re diy, doesn’t get that we can’t afford it at the moment. Tells us what to do with spare time. Gives advice on things she’s literally never done even if not asked eg going camping. Never been in her life yet tells me what to do even though I didn’t ask! I do tell her but she gets all offended and it causes arguments.

OverTheHedgeHammy · 10/05/2018 13:45

My DM does this when I go to visit her on the other side of the world. She started to give me hoards of unwanted and rather unhelpful advice regarding my then 2 year old.

After an incessant barrage on day one of the visit I responded with "DS is 2 years old now. I have successfully kept him alive and flourishing for 2 years. I do know what I am doing. I may not do it YOUR way, but that doesn't mean that I'm doing it WRONG. Leave me alone".

Well, the nuclear explosion that that set off..... but it was worth it Grin.

I just respond with "not your place Mother" each and every time now (she really HATES being called MOTHER)

catinapoolofsunshine · 10/05/2018 13:48

My mum used to be like this and still does given half a chance. Tbh I just stopped telling her anything. So now she talks to me endlessly about people who I don't know doing stuff I'm not interested in.

It's weird because my dad doesn't do either thing despite being older and in poorer health than my mum.

It's a personality trait, I'm not sure there is any way around it that doesn't beget something equally annoying.

catinapoolofsunshine · 10/05/2018 13:53

Mines never done stuff like the housework for me - I think that's a separate trait. It's all talk, and wanting to rope her friends and extended family in unnecessarily and against everyone's will. She doesn't do she tries to organise other people into excessively complicated doing of things.

She likes to be a spider in the middle of a web of connections, pulling on the threads she's spun to make the flies dance with one another. Also she adores being thanked.

RemainOptimistic · 10/05/2018 14:23

OP her going nuclear is totally on her. Don't be bullied into silence any longer. Moving your garden around is batshit behaviour! Call her out. "DM what made you move my garden furniture? It belongs to me. I would appreciate if you left it alone in future."

And repeat every single time. As soon as poss for each incident. Immediately an off colour remark is made. Short and to the point. Don't get drawn into a discussion. If she tries to kick off you can say "Let's not waste time talking about this any more." Then massive topic change ideally with a question so her train of thought gets derailed before she has a chance to work up a good head of rage!!

I do this with my DM and think of it like dog training. Immediate correction, no emotional reaction, move on Blush

RemainOptimistic · 10/05/2018 14:50

@catinapoolofsunshine

My DM also does this. Makes me want to strangle her. Reporting to all and sundry how terrible and desperate the situation is!

Heaven forbid she is given tasks for herself to do, she messes them up to a childish level of farce. Think burning dinner by turning on the grill instead of the oven Hmm