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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:
CoraPirbright · 06/12/2018 19:18

Ah SandAndSea has the perfectly worded answer.

And for all the posters suggesting that you complain to the cow about how her son does sweet FA, I am willing to bet a pound to a penny that it simply will not compute as this MIL is also one of those old fashioned types who thinks that anything domestic is solely the province of the little wife, chronic fatigue or no!! Am I right OP?

Onynx · 06/12/2018 19:19

@SubtitlesOn I was just about to suggest the same thing. My MIL is extremely nosy - she really did open my underwear drawer when we were showing her the new bedroom furniture & has a tendency to use the upstairs bathroom but then walk into all the rooms upstairs. We have wooden floors- she must have thought we were deaf. Next time she called she asked to use the bathroom (we have one downstairs) she walked right past that & went to go upstairs but couldn't figure out the stair gate. When she called 'how do I open this?' I just responded 'oh you don't- the downstairs bathroom is working fine' - she was like a goldfish looking at me but didn't dare say anything else. The same woman actually locks all the bedroom doors in her own house whenever anybody calls😏

5amWakeUo · 06/12/2018 19:26

Tell her to crack on. You don't have to be an audience to her criticism. Have an "I beg your pardon!" Ready if she comes back with 'feedback'.

Jeanclaudejackety · 06/12/2018 20:15

Can you not afford a cleaner? You might think your house is just a wee bit messy but to others it might be like an episode of hoarders

LikeLadyGodiva · 06/12/2018 20:22

YANBU.
She sounds like my MIL. Ironically I’m never allowed to visit her house because it isn’t ‘show home’ yet (she’s spent years and £££ doing it up and DH says it’s like a palace) but because she’s so critical and opinionated of our place she couldn’t possibly let me see her house with a hair out of place ! The sad thing is, I really don’t care ! She’s the one with the issues OP. There is nothing wrong with having a house that’s lived in versus a show home !!

ILoveHumanity · 06/12/2018 21:07

Been reading this thread and it’s making me depressed as I’ve been in exact same situation for years and when I eventually lashed out on DH, it all turned sour for me.

Fluffyears · 06/12/2018 22:22

Mil is the same and loves to provide an opinion. Her opinion is not needed.

Angiemum24 · 07/12/2018 17:25

I would not be there when she visits. Leave DH to explain to the nosy old boot.

Sarahrellyboo1987 · 07/12/2018 17:26

I would say “I hear the local travel lodge has high levels of cleanliness. Perhaps you’d be more comfortable there. Shall I show you out?”

canadianbanana · 07/12/2018 17:29

She is clearly a bitch. You could be a bitch back , and for every criticism tell her your dh was supposed to fix, clean, etc and she ought to have taught him better, or you could tell her straight out "I'm not inclined to allow her 'the tour' because you will just use it as an opportunity to criticise me". If she is actually a nice person generally, she may not realise she is being so harsh. And I would also let her know how busy and exhausting your life is, and you don't have the time to keep it in pristine condition and your dh, aka HER SON, doesn't lift a finger to help. Hugs and support to you, she is a cow.

dwab45 · 07/12/2018 17:30

What a weird woman. Tell her to keep her fucking big nose out of your privacy and that of your parents. At the the same time give your husband a big kick up the arse.

Sprockermum · 07/12/2018 17:31

Appeal to her fussy side and ask her for help in ideas for getting on top of the housework and ideas for keeping on top of. Or... Charge her admission fee for the tour
😜 Good Luck pet

bemusedmoose · 07/12/2018 17:32

Leave lots of naughty and deviant things dotted about in every room, dont make your bed and put up some shackles and whips. Apologise that you cant show her around as your parents need her but she's welcome to investigate....

She if she wants another tour next time! 😂

TheCherries · 07/12/2018 17:34

Yep got two of those. Family dynamics means I get the regular inspection by two nosy ones.

Firstly get a cleaner in more regularly. If you and your parents aren’t well enough to do a regular house clean and your husband can’t be arsed then just get someone in.

You work, you own a sprawling home. No shame in paying someone to do something you are not well enough for or can’t be bothered to do.

I have the issue that my nosy visitors come to stay for several days. So they meander as they please so nothing is off limits as they tour themselves into any room, cupboard, personal space that doesn’t have a lock or key.

I can’t monitor them every second of the day.

I have caught them in the act and they are shameless.

My line of defence is to have locks on what I can and have a cleaner in to keep me on top of the daily grind.

PouchofDouglas · 07/12/2018 17:36

Why do you have such a hard to keep home with CFS?

Turquoise123 · 07/12/2018 17:39

Just say " not this time it's all too messy and you are so clean and tidy that it makes me feel bad " and move on - have e.g tea and cakes at the ready to change the dynamic.

All very unpleasant for you - and I think many of us know how you feel.

Good luck !

EllenMP · 07/12/2018 17:43

Let DH take her on her "tour" without you. Perhaps his mother's disapproval will make him reconsider his housework aversion. Or perhaps he will explain your joint situation and she will understand. Either way you don't have to be part of it. "Yes, dear, do take Mother on a tour while I finish my work. Take your time."

Bubblewrapandwine · 07/12/2018 17:44

You don’t need to make excuses for why your house isn’t as tidy as it could be, it’s your house and your busy, we all have different priorities at different points in our lives and you don’t need to make excuse and you shouldn’t feel like like you have to trust every room just for her inspection.

I would just say, ‘No! not today’ and Don’t be made to feel guilty x

ChocolateNoodle · 07/12/2018 17:47

Stop with the tours immediately! Ignore her if she sulks.
Hope you have a downstairs loo so there’s no reason at all for your very nosy rude MiL to go upstairs!

Everhopeful1 · 07/12/2018 17:48

Get a cleaning rota started for her, she can do a room every visit while you pop the ketlle on!

Saj1988 · 07/12/2018 17:50

Does she own your house? Has she paid for improvements? She sounds she’s like your landlady.

Oliversmumsarmy · 07/12/2018 17:50

I would tell her to do the tour herself and if she finds any dust take these whilst handing her a dust cloth and polish.

becky080770 · 07/12/2018 17:50

Yep, I’d go with the ‘just say no’ brigade and leave it at that. You owe no explanations, you don’t have to feel guilty.

Amazonian27 · 07/12/2018 17:53

I always used to get stressed when my IL’s used to visit not that her home was pristine by any means. However, hard I tried MIL usually found something to point out-be it crumbs under the toaster or some dust somewhere I asked DH to dust. And it would always be oh Amazon I don’t think I was meant to see this or something similar. DH could never see or was switched off but she was always very scathing about his brothers former girlfriend too. They both worked FT and it was always brothers girlfriend who got the blame and didn’t know where the duster was etc.
I would go away for the weekend or at the very least let DH do the tour on his own. Say you can show your mum around and indulge her in her conversations about housework etc. I have enough on my plate with, X, Y and Z and I’m going out shortly.

MsLexic · 07/12/2018 17:57

OMG, you have cfs! I have fibro which came out of what appeared to be CFS, so totally sympathise.
How can anyone EXPECT you to do a whole load of housework! I don't even make my bed, I can't. When I cook for instance, it's in a crock pot.
I just think your MIL is a pain in the butt.
I had one like that. She once came round and did the gardening. This meant she dug up all my lovely pansies I had raised from seed and replaced them with her horrific busy lizzies.
She was always criticising and it bred a nasty thing whereby my ex husband felt justified in treating me badly.
I now have a kind partner who makes my bed, vacuums, and makes my dinner if I can't cope. Which is often.
I do some chores and always would unless I fall down at it.
Anyway, enough of me- your husband needs to help you more.