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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU about DM and her neighbour’s adoption

60 replies

feesh · 17/05/2018 16:38

I can’t actually believe my mother sometimes.

I was chatting on Skype to her the other day, and she told me that her neighbour was adopting a 15 month old and was bringing them home that day, which is obviously hugely exciting news (I don’t actually know the neighbour, but I’m really happy for them regardless!).

Then DM said she was going round later with a present to meet the new baby.

I said, “But mum you can’t do that. I’m pretty sure —have read on Mumsnet— that adoptive families aren’t supposed to have visitors for 6 weeks.”

Anyway Skype started playing up, and all I could hear in the background was her going over and over ‘Why can’t I go and see them? What’s wrong with me visiting? I don’t understand why I can’t see them? What’s the reasoning behind not having visitors?”

When we got the call working again, she had moved on to something else, but I was so completely flummoxed by her not understanding that most new parents do not want visitors on their first day home with a new baby, that I said again, “Mum, you cannot go and see them, please don’t go round there, do you not understand that they need time to bond with the baby without anyone else being around?”

She said fine, I’ll just leave it on the doorstep then, I only wanted to meet the new baby.

Thing is, she totally would have gone around there anyway as she never listens to a word I say.

For some reason it’s really wound me up that she could be so utterly thoughtless and not able to understand why her presence might be best left for a few weeks.

So who IBU, me or her? Maybe I’ve got it completely wrong - I’d actually quite like to know if I have, so she can stop getting to me so much!

OP posts:
Seniorcitizen1 · 17/05/2018 18:06

Have the rules changed - when my sister was adopted at almost 2 years there was no rule but that was in 1978. If it has changed then stupid rule change

feesh · 17/05/2018 18:06

OK, thanks everyone. I'm glad you've talked some sense into me (genuinely!).

My Mum can be an overbearing, thick-skinned nightmare at times, so I guess my annoyance with her stems from that, and also from a passing comment I'd picked up somewhere on here about the no visitors thing, which I clearly misinterpreted.

I would be mightily pissed off if any neighbours turned up on my first days at home with my new babies, but hopefully all is well with the neighbours and their new baby and my mother!

OP posts:
WhoGetsHeard · 17/05/2018 18:17

She sounds nice.

I can understand the reasons for the 'no visitors for awhile' approach, and if your information is correct it's good that you made her aware and I hope she follows your advice.

But I don't see the need for the "what were you thinking?!!" attitude toward what is after all a kind and well meaning gesture on her part. I don't think most people are up to speed on best practice for attachment in the early days of adoption, they just know that someone is bringing home a baby/child, and want to be nice. It's hardly what I'd call unreasonable Confused.

Are you this hard on everyone, or just your mum?

Dontbuymesocks · 17/05/2018 18:22

Seniorcitizen1 - yes things have changed since 1970s! And it isn’t a stupid rule, look at the earlier link on funnelling.

LIZS · 17/05/2018 18:24

Never heard of that, and not true ime ! You should apologise to your dm.

G1ggleloop · 17/05/2018 18:31

I've heard of it. We didn't even have my parents to visit for almost a month (they stay over as live a long way away). That said I would have been thrilled to have gotten a card and/or present, even if it meant explaining they couldn't stay. We only got a card from my parents. Nothing like the heaving mantelpieces that I've seen when visiting friends with newborns.

InsomniacAnonymous · 17/05/2018 18:35

"Do social services provide a guide as to how to prevent people popping round?"

They tell you to install a barbed wire fence and CCTV.

clairedelalune · 17/05/2018 18:59

You are right, although 6-8 weeks is the upper limit. Certainly day one a definite no no; apart from anything else they are traumatised that day from the move away from everything they have known. I did have to fend off well meaning amd kind neighbors who understood completely when I explained.

optimuss · 18/05/2018 15:27

Funnelling is definitely important although 6 weeks is probably the longest time you'd go, and that is maybe for kids who are older or who have had extreme trauma. I think your mum definitely meant well, but maybe advise a week or two before popping over! Leaving a card and gift is lovely though

DragonMummy1418 · 18/05/2018 19:42

Yanbu but not because of adoption.
My DH would turn away anyone on our first day home with new baby, they wouldn't get past the front step.

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