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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

DH wants his mum and grandma in the waiting room during my labour

498 replies

moleymoleyOO · 25/09/2018 19:14

We are due to have our first child in November. We just went on a labour ward tour and the nurse recommended two birthing partners, one being female. I asked DH how he would feel about my mum being there and he said it would make it difficult for him with his mum.

He already asked if his mum and elderly grandma could wait in the waiting room during my labour (they live five minutes from the hospital) and I told him that it was too much pressure, we don't know how long it's going to take and we can ring them as soon as there's news. I also told him I waned to have a couple of hours with myself, him and the baby after the birth before visitors- a few hours! Not too much to ask surely?

Well tonight he has started on again about having MIL and GMIL in the hospital saying it won't affect me, I won't see them and they want to be there. My problem is we won't get any time to ourselves after the birth as if they've been pacing around the hospital we can't just ignore them once the baby is born. I just think he's being so unreasonable and unrealistic as to what labour and childbirth is actually like and it's also making me angry that MIL is pushing for this to happen when she is a stone's throw from the hospital anyway so won't need to be waiting there.

Friends of mine have had labours that have gone on for days and he knows that, and I would actually like to have a few hours cuddling my newborn before handing her over to family members for the inevitable photos. I now feel like I can't have my mum there but to be honest I think if I can't put my own needs first during childbirth then when can I?

AIBU to say no to them waiting in the hospital?

OP posts:
Annandale · 25/09/2018 19:52

Honestly? Ban him too.

This is your labour. It is an extraordinary, extreme, physical and emotional event with processes going on that still aren't completely understood scientifically. It is probably the single most demanding thing thar you will ever do. You need only people attending you who absolutely get that what you say goes, because noone else is doing this for you. Other analogies like surgery on his colon don't fit because the patient is passive during surgery - this is a huge job of work that only your body can do. It is absolutely bizarre that he doesn't get that. Popular culture focuses on weird crowds in the waiting room because dramas need dialogue, not because labouring women need a pack of people sitting a few hundred yards away.

My dh was pretty good in my labour and would no more have suggested this than he would have flown, but if im honest he was still a distraction during labour and i wish he hadn't been there really. I personalky would never have had my mum but i know lots do. I needed a midwife.

SirGawain · 25/09/2018 19:53

Needs to be just you and DH. I can't beleive the midwives would want extra people around who would just be in the way or creating added pressure.

flumpybear · 25/09/2018 19:53

Ok - seriously here - the whole reasons there is somebody at the hospital is tonfet you through the tough, shit parts of Labour - WHY are
They wanting to come? Get first glimpse? They're not supporting you, they're stressing you out - that's awful

Tell your DH that if they come sit in the waiting room then your mum gets to do a vasectomy on him - I mean fairs fair! She's supporting you making sure he's no longer getting you up the duff as much as they'll be 'supporting him' when you're in the most vulnerable position you'll also ever be In

Jog on is my response Angry

itswinetime · 25/09/2018 19:54

annandale.

I was just going to say this the thought my post tell him to wait with his mum and gran if he is that bothered and you have your mum op!

Mivery · 25/09/2018 19:54

YANBU. That being said, I get why MIL and GMIL want to be there and why DH feels like it isn't a big deal. That being said, if YOU think it's a big deal, that should be it. He should be trying to make you as comfortable as possible, YOU ARE CARRYING YOUR CHILD. Not him, not them, YOU. I wouldn't budge on this one personally.

brimfullofasha · 25/09/2018 19:56

Your mum is not there to view the baby, she's there to support you. Your MIL should respect that and your DH certainly shouldn't make you feel bad about this.

Sashkin · 25/09/2018 19:56

Call them in as soon as you get Braxton Hicks. Send them home when you get sent home an hour later. Do the same in a couple of hours. And again at 2am.

After a few false alarms they’ll be happy to wave you off and let you call them when there's some action.

TwistedStitch · 25/09/2018 19:57

I think having your Mum there is vital at this point- it sounds like your DH will be too focused on keeping his family updated to give you the proper support you need.

ShouldofWouldofCouldof · 25/09/2018 19:57

Put your foot down now. My MIL turned up at hospital 3 mins after we arrived and sat in the waiting room huffing and puffing about what was taking so long. I was in over 15hrs, she didnt leave. After baby was born I.dosed off n dp let her in to the room
For 5mins cos he felt sorry for her. She stank of stale bo and fags. I was not impressed.
I was even less impressed when she turned up on the ward the next morning with gmil in tow without warning, they just barged in as i was having my stitches checked (just yanked the curtain back with no warning.) Im sure the lady in the bed opposite appreciated that view.

What pissed me off most was she didnt check and we had already discussed visiting times (my family in the morning his in the afternoon and they all agreed) and because she was there my Dad was refused entry because of the visiting rule (he was due to go away with work for 3 weeks and i wanted him to see the baby before he went)a nurse came and told us we had someone waiting in reception, and i pointed out that they had just turned up and my dad was dur to go away in an hour etc etc, to which she started shouting at me and then burst in to dramatic tears in the midddle of the ward. Nurse had to ask her to leave to which she caused a bigger scene and shouted at my dad in the middle of the corridor, it was horrendous and really embarrasing i have never forgiven her for this.

KarlDilkington · 25/09/2018 19:57

Oh OP.

KarlDilkington · 25/09/2018 19:58

Posted too soon.... oh OP, Does not bode well to be honest. Time to stick to your guns and remind everyone its you giving birth and therefore your choice who is there.

sexnotgender · 25/09/2018 19:58

Another voice of nope from me!

I was 36 hours from start to finish with my first. I'm the one pushing an actual human out of my body, I call the shots.

cherish123 · 25/09/2018 19:59

I think it would be excessive for grandparents (and great grandparents) to be in the waiting room, let alone the delivery room. It is also a bit excessive to have two people there when the baby is born. It's up to you but 1 is enough (even that can be annoying at times).

GabsAlot · 25/09/2018 19:59

who does he think he is its your choice but he doesnt agree oh how big of him

tbh theyre prob wont be waiting rooms or the cafe will be closed(heres hoping for middle of the night labour) so they wont be able to wait anywhere

QueenDoria · 25/09/2018 20:00

English hospitals don't even have waiting rooms, do they?

GunpowderGelatine · 25/09/2018 20:00

He is saying we can do what I want but it doesn't mean he has to agree with it-

He's not the patient, he doesn't get a say, and I'd be leaving him at home with that attitude

SummerGems · 25/09/2018 20:01

I wonder whether the idea of two birthing partners is because of the number of people who now hire doula’s and the like and still have their husbands with them at the birth...

Either way though, if you don’t want your MIL and GMIL there then no is a complete sentence.

As it happens my mum was at my ds’ birth because she drove us there and my labour progressed quickly (although there were complications towards the end,) and my dad came in just after I’d had him and then they went home. However, although I’d said initially that I didn’t want my mum there she was very non intrusive and you wouldn’t really even have known she was there, iyswim. I’m sure from her part she saw far more of me than she would otherwise have wanted to see. Grin

My ILs visited the next day so I managed to get all the visitors out of the way in one hit and while I was in hospital. But then mine/my eXH’s families are not that intrusive and so I didn’t mind them being there soon after the birth.

But all this insisting and saying how one being there is unfair on the other and so on is something you need to stamp on now. Get your MW to support you if need be.

hammeringinmyhead · 25/09/2018 20:01

TV has a lot to answer for. Have you done any antenatal classes? They make it very clear that oxytocin from people supporting you is a great help to labour while adrenaline if you are uncomfortable (e.g. worrying about a bored audience outside) can slow labour down.

I would just shrug and say he can disagree all he wants but they aren't coming in.

MaverickSnoopy · 25/09/2018 20:02

Your mum would be one of the birthing partners, to support you - not a visitor. It's perfectly fine to say that you don't want visitors until the following day.

Just because they are in the waiting room doesn't mean you have to cave to any pressure to see them. If they are going against your wishes, why should you feel obliged to welcome them in?! Seriously. In your shoes I would be putting my needs first.

DuchessofManchester · 25/09/2018 20:02

How well you get on with MIL? Has she actually said herself that she wants to be there, or has not so dh got it into his head it's only fair to have both grandmas there?

Would it be worth a quiet word with MIL explaining the situation and pushing forward the point you want privacy? She might have no idea this is what her son's planning and might be able to knock some sense into him!

JensenElephant · 25/09/2018 20:02

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

MortyVicar · 25/09/2018 20:03

he will tell them as soon as I'm in labour. Guaranteed.

I'm not claiming any particularly supernatural powers in saying I assumed that would be the case.

What's he like generally? Do his mother and grandmother's feelings always trump your whishes?

ihatebeans · 25/09/2018 20:04

Maybe speak to your MIL yourself? I wouldn't give in though, labour is hard enough without the added pressure of them being outside waiting. I went into hospital in the morning and didn't have my daughter until nearly midnight and then get rushed to theatre not long after therefore didn't even see her until the morning properly (not trying to scare you, sorry. All was fine) but not a chance I would of wanted them there and seeing my daughter before I got any time with her. I can't understand why they would want to sit there like that either, very strange.

Also, it's your choice who you want there during labour. I would tell him you need your mums support just as must as his and that's final. YANBU

Nikki0891 · 25/09/2018 20:04

You're the one giving birth, it's completely up to you and what you're comfortable with. Not sure why midwife would suggest two birthing partners??
My local hospital doesn't allow anyone on to the delivery suite that isn't a birthing partner and visitors are only allowed once you've gone on to the ward.

TinklyLittleLaugh · 25/09/2018 20:04

Is it a thing now to have your mum as a birthing partner? My mum would've been great: DH was about as much use as a chocolate teapot.

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