Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

MIL Boundaries - She went in the bedroom

248 replies

GYNisaliarWTF · 22/01/2020 05:10

Long one but aren’t they all.
We recently bought and moved into our home (house renovated brand new), it’s round the corner from MIL & she didn’t visit at all at prev address (not too far).

I am pregnant, and very unreasonable 90% of the time hence being here.

We moved in during Xmas break. People have been round unannounced nearly every day since. I am not used to this AT ALL as ‘my people’ have respect for boundaries and prior- warning that they are coming.

This has resulted in MIL finding me asleep on the sofa on two occasions (I’m a sleepy pregnant lady and it was my day off) and has both times made me feel like I shouldn’t be sleeping in the afternoon (disclaimer- I work full time in an office for local government all year including Xmas except bank hols and also run a busy hair and beauty business both home and mobile so most weeks I do 13 hours a day/ 6 days a week) so I think I’ll be forgiven for a nap on my day off.

AIBU
Yesterday she came round when I wasn’t home, she doesn’t usually have a key but is regularly here when I’m not (DP doesn’t mind her being here all the time). She was here all day.
I had preempted that she would clean my house, so on Sunday I cleaned all the way through downstairs. We’d already agreed months ago that both she and my own mother weren’t to have a key as I’d be uncomfortable with them doing washing or cleaning whilst I was out (Id have a cleaner and I’m more than capable of sorting my own washing) she agreed that she too would be annoyed if someone cleaned her house while she was out

I came that came home to find she has cleaned my (already very clean) downstairs toilet, which stunk of bleach (which made me sick) and furthermore had proceeded to clean my (already clean) kitchen, re-arrange my cupboards, move my decorate items around into different places in the windows (giving the impression she didn’t like how I’d done them, or thought I’d done them wrong). She also bought a new window cleaning tool and TEN LIGHT BULBS and left the bill on the living room side after proceeding to change ALL my lightbulbs in my lounge making it now only slightly resemble blackpoolfuckingilluminations. (They are the same specification LED that I use in my beauty lamps for make up application). She obviously thinks my nearly brand new windows and toilets are dirty, so has kitted me out as if she’s doing me a favour (when in reality I’m really just busy, and haven’t got around to unboxing all the cleaning equipment from my previous home yet)

worst of all
When I went upstairs in the evening, I noticed she hadn’t cleaned the upstairs bathroom and was relieved, there’s no need for her to be upstairs; we have a downstairs loo as aforementioned. I took a shower and when I entered my bedroom, my bed is made and window is open. I asked DP if he had done this (I was livid as bedroom minus 2 at this point and I’m soaking wet from shower) he had not. So she’s been in my bedroom, decided the bed needed making and the place needed ‘airing out’. Not only that but she’s not done anything else upstairs, so looks as if she’s gone upstairs and gone straight to our bedroom to do this. Very annoying.

I’m beyond insulted but I daren’t approach it with her. We usually have a great relationship but since having this house she is ignoring my wishes to fulfill her need to fill her nest again, but I’m a fully grown woman who has no requirement for her interference on this level. DP has had to ‘have a word’ with her previously as she bought kitchen items which id already bought.

Advice on how to approach please, I don’t want to hurt her feelings; but she will be really hurt that we’ve got these boundaries in place regardless, as I genuinely don’t think she would think that my bedroom is a no- go- zone.
She cried when I told her I’d already bought a kettle, despite assuring me she’d be happy to take the one she’d bought back to the shop.

I don’t want to burn any bridges but I also want to feel like this is my space, and that I can make it my own home (v difficult for me- new town, no family or friends of my own here, recently discovered pregnant following GYN telling me it wouldn’t ever happen)

Please be kind, although I’m furious about my personal space invasion I do want to keep my relationship with her as she’s an actual angel of a human (but has no boundaries).

OP posts:
LightDrizzle · 22/01/2020 08:42

Absolutely agree with everyone else. YANBU at all, but you will lose my sympathy if you sidle round and undermine all your DH’s hard work with his own mother. She clearly uses tears to get her own way, Kettlegate is the proof of that.

If you don’t mind her dropping in unannounced all the time now (really?) - you will when you are on mat leave and napping after disrupted nights. Just as you don’t clean, provision and decorate your own house properly, I’m sure you won’t burp, hold, feed, dress your own baby properly and will need her “help”.
It will be far easier to put boundaries in place now than after the birth when you are a shattered hormonal mess, and she has been turbo charged by sight and smell of her new teeny tiny snuffly grandchild.

Also lock the door and don’t respond if you don’t want to be disturbed and they turn up unannounced and uninvited. Don’t reward bad behaviour.

Disfordarkchocolate · 22/01/2020 08:43

Give back the bulbs etc, it sets a nice clear boundary. With someone like this, you are going to upset her so get it over with. Then, work on your husband as he will end up walking all over your boundaries too.

My in-laws are lovely but I'd never live really close, and that's with a husband who is always on my side.

DisinterestedParty · 22/01/2020 08:47

@buddhababy2019 Rtft the OP already explained that she didn't ask the MIL to come to the house.

GYNisaliarWTF · 22/01/2020 08:50

@81Byerley Fabulous excuse for a Saturday morning PDA in the lounge haaahahaha

OP posts:
Scotmummy1216 · 22/01/2020 08:51

Can you send her to my house 😂. It sounds like she wants to be helpful and maybe because you are pregnant wants to help more. I would tell her that you appreciate her trying to help but maybe just politely say you feel a bit uncomfortable. It sounds like apart from this you have a really good relationship and you don't want to ruin it. It was also very good of her to wait while your phone line was installed.

TheProdigalKittensReturn · 22/01/2020 08:51

I wouldn't be happy if my own family had a poke around my bedroom while I was out, never mind if my inlaws did. That's just not on.

It seems like you've married into a family that has a very different sense of appropriate boundaries to yours. I did too - my MIL, though lovely, treats her middle aged children as if they were still teenagers living at home, with all the expectations and lack of boundaries that implies. We lived with her briefly before getting set up in our own place (I moved there from a different country) and she drove me absolutely mad to the point where I'd be reluctant to even go on holiday with her now.

My experience has been that if you as the DIL try to set the boundaries she'll probably kick off and it will turn into a big mess. Let your DH be the one to have those conversations and they'll go much better. If you do it it'll turn into a big drama about how you're creating distance between parent and child because child was perfectly happy having no boundaries (he wasn't, in our case, and neither were his siblings) until you came along, queue feelings of child being stolen away. Whereas if your DH/her child is the one to set the boundaries then it's about their relationship and the child establishing a more appropriate set of adult boundaries as they move on to forming a family of their own.

GYNisaliarWTF · 22/01/2020 08:51

@LightDrizzle thank you. Just. Thank you.

OP posts:
GabriellaMontez · 22/01/2020 08:52

You sound very considerate of her feelings.

Is she equally considerate of your feelings? Or is your relationship expected to run in one direction?

AmelieTaylor · 22/01/2020 08:55

@buddhababy2019

You seem to have missed half of the OO’s posts. She had an agreed me t with the MIL that she wouldn’t clean the house.

So a) they had an agreement
B) the OP had already cleaned it - DK it was unnecessary and insulting

Secondly - her DH didn’t listen to her actual issue & went off half cocked (personally I’d be thrilled by him doing it, but the OP is allowed to be angry that he didn’t listen to her properly.

The controlling, manipulative woman cries to get her own way.

Buys a cheap kettle Shen she knew the OP intended to buy a specific one she liked

She changed all of the.OO’s lightbulbs & it now looks like an operating theatre

That’s NOT helping - that’s just controlling/ducking weird!.

bluebella4 · 22/01/2020 08:56

Ohmigoodness!! How frustrating! You do need to speak to her but sometimes that usually ends with her not actually listening and huffing. Although it's great everyone is excited they are forgetting this is your home... NOT a show house. It's normal for family to drop (in our family anyway) when you have but they tend to get over the excitement and move on. It seems mum has remind part of the furniture.

My IL's use to come in and go straight up my stairs (without asking cause I said yes ONE TIME) They would head straight for our room. They aren't the type of people you can talk to SO I left a few surprises on the bed for them. Funny enough they haven't went back upstairs again 🤔😂

GYNisaliarWTF · 22/01/2020 08:58

Ok gals.
Lessons learnt and plan moving forward-

  1. Wear big girl pants
  2. Let DP have his opinion. He’s done bloody good work and is entitled to his say and let him deal with repercussions (it is his mother after all)
  3. Leave well alone and act normal but make polite note that this is our space and it needs to be respected in the way previously agreed. Get her to sign in blood.
  4. Make time for naps and don’t feel guilty
  5. Have sex in living room with blinds open next time any IL’s approach
  6. No keys for relatives (there aren’t any anyway)
  7. Lock doors
  8. Establish boundaries clearly now to ensure no kick-off’s when baby arrives
  9. Send kettle and toaster to garage as emergency use for when working on car covered in oil
10. Purchase my kettle and toaster to soothe soul and take control of my space.

Thank you so much ladies. I needed this 👆🏽

OP posts:
GYNisaliarWTF · 22/01/2020 08:59

@AmelieTaylor are you my spirit animal? Because I feel like you might be Grin

OP posts:
Beau2020x · 22/01/2020 09:02

I hear ya! My MIL once walked into my house with my now SIL while I was in bed, asleep with a migraine despite knowing this as my OH went round to her house for lunch and I didn't turn up. OH told her I was in bed ill so her and my SIL pretended they needed to go to the shop and just walked into my house!! I woke up with her stood over the bed shouting my name - WTF! My door was unlocked but she doesn't have a key. Now - if I do not want unexpected visitors, I lock my door while I am in the house.

If you don't dare ask for the key back, simply lock your door and leave the key in the lock so she can't get in. Simple. If she questions why she couldn't get in, just say you went to bed for a nap and locked the door.

She does sound harmless but totally has no boundaries. Maybe just sit her down and say while you really really appreciate all the effort etc etc - she really really doesn't need/have to do all this.

GYNisaliarWTF · 22/01/2020 09:03

@Scotmummy1216 that’s the plan. We do have a lovely relationship, or have had previously to now. She’s always been incredibly supportive and I worry that because my own parents aren’t; that I’m just being an a*hole because I don’t know how to accept her kindness. You are exactly right, it has just made me uncomfortable and I will tell her this in a way that isn’t confrontational; so if she cries it’s because she’s being controlling, not because I’ve been unreasonable. We should then establish true colours as it were. Thank you for your reply Grin

OP posts:
Bezalelle · 22/01/2020 09:05

People who say "Oh, send her round to mine, I could use the help" are spectacularly missing the point. It's never "help" with MILs like this. It's a form of control/manipulation.

GYNisaliarWTF · 22/01/2020 09:07

@Sallycinammonbangsthedruminthe Can you be my MIL from now on please? 😂

OP posts:
Nanny0gg · 22/01/2020 09:08

It's not 'kind'!

What normal, rational person thinks it's ok to go into their son/daughter's home and rearrange everything without permission?

It's intrusive and interfering and just plain wrong!

diddl · 22/01/2020 09:09

It's probably best that it has happened as it has.

There's no use trying to pussyfoot about when people are trampling on you.

Some cleaning whilst waiting in for you, well I think that I could have overlooked that for the favour.

But moving stuff, buying stuff you don't want & charging you for it??

GYNisaliarWTF · 22/01/2020 09:09

@SchadenfreudePersonified thank you.

"Your fucking kettle is in the bin!" < I’ve never laughed so much in weeks.
Thank you for taking the time to reply on so many levels to what I’ve said, I will take your feedback on board. Flowers

OP posts:
WhatchaMaCalllit · 22/01/2020 09:10

I've read the thread and what I would suggest is that if you still have the other lightbulbs that she swapped her ones for, put them back into the lamps (unless they are actually blown and need to be recycled anyway) and then you have a bag of lightbulbs that have only had one day's use ready to go for whenever a bulb does go. She shouldn't have replaced your bulbs but I wouldn't hand them back to her - hang on to them in your shed/garage for whenever you do need to replace a light bulb.

As for the other stuff - I think your DP did you a favour and there isn't any need to smooth things over. She is now left in no doubt not to drop in unannounced and unexpected. This will pay dividends when you've had your baby. It really will.

Best of luck to you!

AmelieTaylor · 22/01/2020 09:10

@GYNisaliarWTF

I know your pregnancy wasn’t planned & maybe you’re feeling a bit out of your depth - but honestly disburse yourself and her of the notion that she’s going to be an authority when your bs y us born or as @LightDrizzle has already said she will make out you’re not doing anything right with YOUR baby. Times change, things change, parents can make their own decisions about how & what to do- or not do. As a new mum, the LAST thing you need is to be undermined, by anyone.

This is YOUR house & YOUR baby. YOU set the boundaries - not her.

Buy the kettle & toaster YOU want (yes I know about the money, but this will set you up going forward when it comes to baby stuff). When she says/asks/cries about the kettle just tell her that you have bought the ones YOU wanted, for YOUR house and that you had already showed her before she chose the others.

Then when there’s talk of baby stuff tell her that you have chosen the cot/buggy/car seat/whatever else that YOU want for YOUR baby & that’s what you’ll be getting. If she gets stroppy about having wanted to buy the ram or whatever -tell her she’s welcome to buy or contribute towards the EXACT one you have already chosen.

I’m worried she’s going to really put you in a bad place )mentally) when you have YOUR baby if you don’t learn to see her manipulative & controlling behaviour for what it is!

Kettlegate is not about a kettle.

GYNisaliarWTF · 22/01/2020 09:13

@Nanny0gg intrusive indeed! I’m glad I’m not going crackers, why the hell would you move someone’s candles and plants and cactus’ .. I’m talking like she rearranged a total of TEN items from my window sill. Madness. She put them in ‘candle, plant, cactus’ order. My house is very Scandi style, this sort of organised placement is not acceptable 😂

OP posts:
AmelieTaylor · 22/01/2020 09:14

X posted with you last few posts!!

I’m a little less worried now, you seem to be moving in the right direction 😊🤞🏼

You’ll ace this parenting lark, you’re a fast learner! 😊🌷

GYNisaliarWTF · 22/01/2020 09:16

@WhatchaMaCalllit thank you. The new ones are far too bright for a lounge, but I do appreciate they’ll come in handy so I’ll take your advice and pop them away. We have two chandeliers (one at each end of our lounge) they came with the house, are absolutely foul and she knows we’re replacing them so I can’t fathom why she’d justify nearly £30 on bulbs for light fittings that might be going to the tip at the weekend. Thank you Flowers

OP posts:
Emmelina · 22/01/2020 09:16

We moved away because of incessant drop ins. Not the other side of the country or anything, but about 15 miles to the closest relative. Far enough away that they have to call and check we’re home first.
And IT IS BLISS.