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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Christmas, pregnancy and in-laws

125 replies

TitusAndromedom · 11/11/2018 11:09

I am pregnant, due on Christmas Day, and we have three year old twin boys as well. We spend every Christmas with my MIL, SIL and other members of DH’s family, always going to MIL’s house. I’m not British, so my parents are in my home country. As a result, it’s never been a point of discussion about whose family we will spend Christmas with. My DH also feels very strongly that his family should see our children regularly, at least once a week ideally. This has been difficult for me because it’s very different from how I grew up (my extended family weren’t local, so we only saw them once or twice a year), but I have tried to be accommodating and now just tend to let him take the boys while I have a couple of hours to myself.

Anyway, due to being pregnant this year, I suggested to my husband that we stay home on Christmas Day and have a quiet, relaxed meal just the four of us, and then invite his family to come for dessert, presents, visiting etc afterwards. I thought it would be a good compromise: I can be home where I’m relaxed and comfortable, but everyone in the family can still see each other. My DH seemed happy with the suggestion and presented it to his mum, who was fine with it. However, it turns out that he didn’t listen to me properly and thought I was suggesting that we have his mum, sister and uncle for the whole Christmas meal and basically all afternoon. He is now saying that is what he wants to do and doesn’t want to change the plans.

I know there will be some people who cooked a Christmas meal for twenty while 40 weeks pregnant with triplets, but that just isn’t what I want this year. I thought that I had found a good compromise that would keep everyone happy with a little less stress, but my DH seems to think this is unreasonable. He also says this will not go down well with his mum. I’m not asking for every year to change, just for this year to do things a little bit differently so there is less pressure on us (me) to organise a full, elaborate Christmas. I now feel quite hurt that he is unwilling to see this from my perspective and that he thinks neither he nor his mum would be happy to be accommodating just this once.

To avoid drip feeding, this kind of argument regarding his need to accommodate his mum and sister having unfettered access to our children is a common one. I had felt really grateful when I thought that he understood my desire for a compromise this year at Christmas, and am disappointed to discover that the only reason he was happy with the suggestion was that he didn’t actually listen to me properly.

OP posts:
YouTheCat · 11/11/2018 11:29

Does he even realise that you could be in hospital, giving birth? Would he expect you to be basting the meat in between contractions?

If he isn't willing to compromise then just say none of it will be happening. You will be at home either heavily pregnant, eating pringles, or you will be bonding with your newborn also eating pringles . Do not offer any further compromise. What is going to do? Physically force you into a car? Tie you to the oven? Just flat out refuse. Him and his mother are being knobs.

19lottie82 · 11/11/2018 11:29

If I were you, I would phone his Mum and say apologies for the confusion, obviously the 25th is my due date so there’s no way this will work, what a doofus he is! LOL! Grin

But if I haven’t popped by then you’re more than welcome to pop round for an hour or two in the evening!

ThanosSavedMe · 11/11/2018 11:30

So what do they think will happen if you are in hospital on Christmas day giving birth? Surely they can’t be that stupid?

Time to let those hormones go wild and tell the whole family very clearly and loudly that your dh got it wrong. You will not be hosting, neither will you be leaving the house unless it’s to go the hospital to give birth.

Harrykanesrightsock · 11/11/2018 11:30

Please stand up for yourself on this. Insist on your compromise. There is a big chance you may have had baby or indeed be in labour Christmas Day. Your DH is being utterly unreasonable and his mother is ridiculous to not define his offer. Madness.

Maelstrop · 11/11/2018 11:33

Your in-laws are ridiculous for accepting any kind of invitation to be at your house! Totally selfish. I'd also be looking at this 'unfettered access' they have to your children, unless you're happy with it. They're your children, you decide, not them.

TheCraicDealer · 11/11/2018 11:35

My reaction would be to laugh in his face and make it very clear I will be sitting on the sofa or in bed (if not in hospital) and will be facilitating this event in no way, shape or form.

I would have thought that most families would understand with an impending birth some members wouldn't be able to make fixed plans for around that time, but nothing surprises me on here any more.

TitusAndromedom · 11/11/2018 11:37

Oh, thank you all. I’m actually crying a bit at your responses. He’s a genuinely wonderful husband and father who absolutely pulls his own weight around the house and with childcare, but his mum seems to be a blind spot where I always end up looking like the bad guy. That’s why I had thought the compromise would be a happy medium. He works away a lot and I manage fine on my own, but I think maybe it just seems like I’m very capable and can cope no matter what crops up, but this feels like a step too far. He’s going away for two weeks, arriving back when I’m 37+3, and of course I’ll just have to get on with things while he’s away, so maybe he thinks one day is no different.

OP posts:
Returnofthesmileybar · 11/11/2018 11:37

I honestly can't eben believe people are saying let it go ahead and him do the cooking to be honest. I think your husband is a prize prick who should probably take his mother to the hospital with you and get them to cut his own umbilical cord while you are there!

You have been more than fair. This would really make me think my husband or his didn't give a fuck about me, I'd be very upset.

Returnofthesmileybar · 11/11/2018 11:39

He is genuinely a wonderful husband and father is he fuck 😂

TitusAndromedom · 11/11/2018 11:41

Return, I know people say that all the time, but he genuinely is. And if I said l, fine, host your family but you’re doing everything, he would probably be fine with that. But it’s just more stress and expectation than I want to cope with on the day.

OP posts:
GemmeFatale · 11/11/2018 11:42

Do you have a really rather scary midwife? One who can’t explain clearly to your husband you are going to need him to look after you and the twins from the moment he gets back from work and under no circumstances will you be hosting an extended family meal or running around the country to attend one elsewhere.

CaptainBrickbeard · 11/11/2018 11:42

My first baby came after the due date, the second one three weeks before. You can’t assume you will go over again. Either way, you will be tired and not up to hosting. He and his mother are being unbelievably selfish.

GemmeFatale · 11/11/2018 11:42

*can explain.

Mamimawr · 11/11/2018 11:43

Can you contact your MIL to explain that they are welcome after lunch? Unless you are in hospital of course.

Nanny0gg · 11/11/2018 11:45

You may have had the baby by 40 weeks.

Tell him No. Not happening.

And for once, show him this thread.

YouTheCat · 11/11/2018 11:45

Let him do that then. He does all the planning, organising and cooking and then, when it all goes tits up because you're in labour or still in hospital, he'll be the one stressing over it. I suppose, at least, if you are hosting at yours you can always take yourself off for a rest. Let them get on with it.

Feefeetrixabelle · 11/11/2018 11:46

Tell him he is perfectly entitled to offer what he wants to his family. But what he wants he will be providing. So if he wants a meat fest he will source, prep, cook, serve, host and clean up after said meat fest. You will be caring either for a bump and twins or newborn and he will also have to entertain the twins. Oh and you’ll have your cup of tea refilled every half hour too cheers love.

Returnofthesmileybar · 11/11/2018 11:48

He'd be fine with hosting?? Oh sorry then of course that's ok then he is wonderful! NOT! Don't be deluded, a grown man is prioritising his mammy instead of his wife who is due that day!! His very reasonable wife who offered a lovely alternative at that. He gets every Christmas with his family and he can't do one thing for you at this stage in your pregnancy? Stop fooling yourself, he is a prize prick who cares more about his mother than you

Hadenoughofallthis · 11/11/2018 11:50

What the ABSOLUTE FUCK is he thinking????? Shock

No. No. No. This must NOT happen.

TitusAndromedom · 11/11/2018 11:52

I think I need to put forward the idea that having either a very newborn baby or being in labour is a possibility, and as a result it’s probably best if people make other plans and don’t rely on us for dinner. In fairness to him, I have been very dismissive of any suggestions that the baby could come on or before forty weeks, but perhaps that’s a reality we both need to consider.

OP posts:
pointythings · 11/11/2018 11:53

I really think you need to talk to your DH and make him clarify the misunderstanding - you just can't assume you won't be in labour or immediately post-partum on Christmas Day. My DD2 was born on her due date, it does happen. I think you're being crazy generous in offering to host anything at all, really.

CuriousaboutSamphire · 11/11/2018 11:55

Stop being so nice about it.

Have you asked him:

What will happen if you give birth a day or two beforehand?
What will happen if you go into labour on the day?
Who exactly will be looking after you, stone cold sober ready, just in case
How the hell he thinks you will be able to relax with everyone in your house, expecting Christmas dinner and all the trimmings
What the hell his mother was thinking making your house the venue for Christmas when you are so close to your due date
Where you stand in his list of important people
Does he not think it important to be ready for the newborn
Why the fuck is he ignoring your wishes

If you haven't you should. Both he and his mother seem to have forgotten that you are a human being and will be in need of care, courtesy and consideration, none of which they are offering you with this stupid arrangement!

Pundora · 11/11/2018 11:56

I'd have to take things into my own hands, phone mil and explain that dh made a mistake. You are due on that date and it would be simply daft to make any set in stone arrangements apart from having a quiet xmas on your own. It's beyond reason to expect you to tolerate a houseful at 40 weeks pregnant.

topcat2014 · 11/11/2018 11:56

What kind of inlaws exist that think this is remotely sensible - after all they have had 8 months to get used to the idea.

Surely they are not that dim?

Plan to spend Christmas alone (ie your own family only) as you never know what might happen.

Inertia · 11/11/2018 11:57

He hosts. That means he plans, shops, cooks, clears up.