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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Party organisation - is MIL being ungrateful or are we unreasonable?

203 replies

verticality · 08/07/2019 09:55

My MIL is in her early 70s. When she turned 70, we threw her a family party - basically, a long weekend away at a cottage, day-long activities she enjoyed, and home-cooked three course meals every night. The four of us (her two children, and two partners) paid for and organised the accommodation and all the food and wine, did all the cooking, and baked and decorated a special cake (which, incidentally, she was very rude about).

The organisation of all of this fell largely on me and my BIL's partner, at a time when both of us were stressed. My husband and I were having major building work done, and my husband's work was insanely busy, so he was never home and I was left handling builders myself. When I turned 40 a few months before my MIL turned 70, my celebratory 'treat' was watching a concrete floor be poured because we had no spare cash! Part of the reason for that was that anything we had was either going into the house or towards her birthday treat!

I sucked it up because, hey, I'm a grown up and this is what you do.
(However, words were had after this about the division of labour/wife work in terms of families after this. I did have a DH problem wrt to him 'outsourcing' his family carework onto me, and boundaries have been firmly drawn).

So it came as something of a surprise when MIL announced this weekend that she is 'sick of organising her own parties', and that she expects all of us to 'step up and arrange things for her in future'!! The tone was very much that we were all a major disappointment to her, despite the fact that we'd tried quite hard at a difficult time. When we were a bit taken aback and asked her what she meant, it turns out that she expects us to organise not only a weekend away but also a much bigger party involving all of her friends from the place where she lives, which is roughly 300 miles away from where we live! We don't know these people and I am honestly not sure how on earth it would work practically - we would have no idea where to send invitations/whom to invite.

I've never expected anyone who wasn't my partner to organise anything for me beyond the age of 12, and even then my expectations haven't been particularly high. Is it normal for people to demand that sons/daughters organise absolutely everything for their significant birthdays? What is normal in terms of time? PIL have both been retired for ages, and FIL never so much as lifts a finger to help towards any family occasion, despite being 100% capable and competent. Isn't it more his job to arrange his wife's birthday events, or AIBU?

Also: what is normal in terms of financing these things? These weekends away run to a cost of hundreds (FIL's 70th a few years ago was upwards of £700 per couple, MIL's was upwards of £500), and we would honestly struggle financially to organise a big party on top.

This is likely to come up again when we see them in future, so I would like to have some kind of response prepared. I was so surprised this weekend that I was speechless, which meant that I didn't really assert myself at all Sad. What is reasonable, oh wise vipers of Mumsnet?

OP posts:
verticality · 23/11/2019 17:00

Oh, that's really sweet of you to check in with me. Thank you for thinking of me! I am doing really well. After DH took it on, the situation has pretty much settled. We are not doing Christmas but we will see them briefly in the new year, so we will see how that goes.

Generally, in myself, I don't really feel angry or upset, I've pretty much let it go. I have not, however, forgotten about it and am a little wary and cautious about the future and fully prepared to push back at any hint of a repeat.

DH has been super supportive and I think the feeling that we are 100% in this together, as a team, has helped a lot.

OP posts:
Havaina · 23/11/2019 17:22

Thanks for the update OP. I didn't read your thread shen you first posted it but I was so annoyed on your behalf just now.

I would have liked it if your dh had told his mother that her behaviour to you was unacceptable and that you would not be helping with or organising anything ever again.

I hope you didn't give her birthday present suggestions in October and that you stick to your resolution of not helping.

WaningGibbous · 23/11/2019 19:50

Would you usually spend Christmas with them?

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