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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

MIL demands a ‘tour ‘every single time she visits

248 replies

bringincrazyback · 06/12/2018 13:20

No, this isn’t a MIL-bashing thread as such, I’d be annoyed if anyone did what I’m about to describe, but I do have to say that my MIL’s ways do test my patience at times.

She’s due to visit at the weekend, and as always, I am somewhat dreading it. She demands a ‘tour’ of the house EVERY time she visits, regardless of whether we have changed anything since her last visit or not. The house is a big old Victorian pile which we love and which people are always quite excited to see, but with four cats, me working from home, suffering from chronic fatigue and caring for my parents part-time, a pathologically messy DH and my parents renting part of the house from us, the fact is that I don’t want people to see every single room, as I’m pretty much the only person in the house who does much in the way of cleaning or tidying (my parents can’t due to various disabilities, and DH barely lifts a finger, because cleaning and tidying are for ‘uptight’ people in his opinion. Oh, and ‘no one notices either way’, apparently. Except that his own mother VERY MUCH notices.)

It’s really MIL's attitude that's the problem, as the 'tours' are actually thinly-disguised inspections during which it always appears she is actively looking for things to criticise. Her own standards of cleanliness and tidiness are extremely high, and she frequently refers to people who don’t subscribe to her own high standards as lazy. We do show people around the house a little, and show them some of the rooms, but not all. I consider bedrooms, for example, to be private (on her last visit MIL demanded to be shown my parents’ bedroom!!!) and I won’t show people rooms which are cluttered or messy, and there are always a couple of those in our house, because with so much on my plate it’s just not possible for me to keep everything pristine, even with a cleaner coming in every couple of weeks.

I think I could see MIL wanting to see the whole house if we'd changed anything in it since her last visit, lol - but she had the full tour the first time (Highlights: 'You'll have to get rid of that awful carpet', 'You need to do x, y, z to the garden ', 'You'll be redecorating the whole house, of course ') and the second after we’d had a LOT of work done ('I see you've still got that awful carpet', 'I'd have thought you'd have ripped those wardrobes out', 'You need to get the exterior repainted') so she’s seen everything now and I really couldn't work out what the deal was with wanting to see Every Single Room again last time and acting like a spoilt child when she couldn't.

Highlights of her last visit: starting to pull branches off one of our trees because 'they need to come off', opening every cupboard and looking into it, sniffily remarking 'Oh, well, the garden's looking a bit better now' in front of my mum and dad who put a LOT of time and effort into making this garden look great when they were more able-bodied, opening cupboards and looking into them, and - the piece de resistance - pulling the classic 'trailing finger along dusty surface, then looking at finger' move. Basically, the more stuff she sees, the more she finds to criticise, so it's easier for my blood pressure if I can limit the amount of criticisms of my home that she's able to find. When did it become socially acceptable to demand a ‘tour’ the second one arrives in someone else’s home? And then whine when said ‘tour’ doesn’t extend to every single room in the house? frowny face

AIBU to be dreading her visit? And, more importantly, AIBU not to let her roam around our home at will, especially given how critical she is?

OP posts:
adreamofspring · 06/12/2018 14:48

You already sound like you have a lot on your plate. You do not have to put up with this. No more inspections! I gave those up when I stopped going on brownie pack holiday. Politely laugh it off and offer her tea like a PP said. DH MUST back you up and that includes a gentle call out when she’s a rude F**ker

delboysskinandblister · 06/12/2018 14:53

YADNBU

At the first instance of that shite behaviour she would be swiflty shown the door with

'I've been meaning to get rid of that cumbersome bit of old junk for years, don't let the door hit you in the arse on your way out!' Merry Christmas

Fuck that OP! It is your house not hers. Man up! Wink

ButteryParsnips · 06/12/2018 14:55

Is your DH present when she does this? What does he say?

cupofteaandcake · 06/12/2018 15:02

OP you are moaning about something that you are enabling. This is very easy to stop, you just tell your DH that he needs 'look after' his mother whilst she is there. There is no need to be rude to her, be out when she arrives, push everything back onto your DH.

I really really don't get why posters think they are responsible for their in-laws. She is your DH's mother, when she visits leave it to him.

Escolar · 06/12/2018 15:08

Tell your DH to do the tour. This time and every single other time. If DH isn't home when she asks, say "DH will take you round, you'll have to wait till he gets home".

Honestly OP, this is DH's problem, not yours. His mum, his mess, his problem.

Tinkobell · 06/12/2018 15:11

Your house, your rules OP. But since you KNOW the demand is coming you can beautifully orchestrate your response which you need to deliver in a firm & final tone and follow with a swift distraction.....something along the lines of "Oh no X, we're not doing that this time - nothing's changed and I've my parents privacy to consider - this IS their home - now; it would be very nosey Parker to just wander in on them.......now how about a lovely gobstopper or a dry scone - watch you don't choke on it!"

mawi · 06/12/2018 15:12

My mother was a bit like this when I first moved out of home. She came round one day and I had being cleaning out a cupboard and then got bored so it was sitting in a heap and she started complaining and I just told her it’s my house if you don’t like it you can leave. She shut up and never mentioned if my house was untidy again.
Sil (Dhs sis) came over for a visit when we moved into new house, had the tour etc. Came back a week later and started up the stairs, I asked where she was going and she says to see the bedrooms. I told her that she wasn’t and that was it. I am sure she complained about me to Mil but I don’t care.
So basically what I am saying is set your boundaries and stick to them.

Tinkobell · 06/12/2018 15:14

.....if you've a big Victorian pile, take her up to the attic, knock out the electrics and lock the bloody door! Sorry that's v sadistic of me 😁😈

SDTGisAnEvilWolefGenius · 06/12/2018 15:24

@bringincrazyback - your MIL doesn’t care about being rude to you or upsetting you - you should cultivate the same attitude towards her. When she asks for a tour, just say “No. Every time you ask for a tour, you make rude and offensive comments on the house, and that is not acceptable. Cup of tea?”

Thejezebel · 06/12/2018 15:27

What's a Victorian pile misses point of thread

sackrifice · 06/12/2018 15:29

'Can i have the tour'
'Have you paid the £25 entrance fee?'

SarahSissions · 06/12/2018 15:31

I would leave DH mess and comment back that you have no idea how he was 'dragged up' and 'he must have been born in a barn'. Whenever she makes a dig retort with one about her parenting skills producing a lazy messy husband

MillicentBeauchamp · 06/12/2018 15:37

I would ask her for a "tour" of her house - she will soon get the message

SushiMonster · 06/12/2018 15:37

You can't clean due to a disability.
Your DH doesn't want to clean.
You don#t have a cleaner.
You live in a massive and hard to keep clean house.

Not an ideal combination!

SugarCoatIt · 06/12/2018 15:43

What a sense of entitlement and invasion of privacy, all rolled into one!
I'd be dreading her coming too!
If your parents rent part of the house, tell her it's out of bounds, because your parents rent it and you're being respectful of this.
Tell her you'd love to show her around but not much has changed from last time.
If she does the dusty finger trick, present her with a can and polish.

Findingdotty · 06/12/2018 15:44

Lock the doors to the rooms that you don’t want her in and keep the keys on you. It’s not her house so she has no right to poke around or criticise.

halfwitpicker · 06/12/2018 15:45

Depends on the house, TBF

A Victorian pile? I think I'd want a tour each time!

Tinkobell · 06/12/2018 15:45

Tell her to bog off!

halfwitpicker · 06/12/2018 15:45

Joking, obv

Tell her to get lost

StrangeLookingParasite · 06/12/2018 15:45

Some covert - or not so covert - boasting chucked in there too.

Wow, what a bitchy thing to say.

Sallycinammonbangsthedruminthe · 06/12/2018 15:50

Might be stating the obvious but ...Cancel the visit!

Genevieva · 06/12/2018 16:02

Best to nip it in the bud.

When she arrives say. "How lovely to see you. Just to pre-empt, we will not be giving you a tour of the house again. Downstairs only today. Now, do come in and have a cup of tea and a piece of cake, after your long journey."

Keep smiling, take her coat and sweep them into the the kitchen / sitting room / wherever you want them to be. If she pushes her luck, remind her that no one enjoys having their home inspected and criticised, so you will all have a much more enjoyable time talking about other things over tea and cake.

It is amazing what you can get away with saying when you are both polite and shockingly blunt with an unbroken smile.

brizzledrizzle · 06/12/2018 16:06

Have you tried asking for a tour of their house when you go there?

SandAndSea · 06/12/2018 16:08

She's been incredibly rude to you.

I wouldn't have it so that's my advice to you. Just say no. I like the idea of referring to it as an inspection (ref. pp) - it says it how it is and might make her think. But I'd still say no, it's really not appropriate - also good words to use.

Or, buy a blow-up doll and place her, spread-eagled, on your bed. And, hang a skeleton behind one of the closed doors.

PoisonousSmurf · 06/12/2018 16:11

You need to read the riot act to your MIL! She should be nagging her son, not you! You've got too much on your plate Sad

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