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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To say no to the constant family requests to visit?

39 replies

Timeouttime · 20/06/2020 11:39

I have 2 DC's aged 8 and 11, I feel like the hardest days of looking after small kids and having to watch their every move is behind me. I enjoy a few hours now, when we've finished homeschooling, while the kids all just disappear and play while I get on with work and housework.

My problem is my in laws. They live very very close. And they expect to see us an awful lot. My FIL likes to organise family get togethers every weekend and
SIL messages on every available sunny day asking if they can 'nip round for a bit' after homeschool. They have a young toddler and I think they see us as entertainment for him. Whilst I love love love seeing them all I don't want to do it all the time, once every other week would be perfect for me! I appreciate I need to compromise at once a week probably but AIBU? My husband thinks I'm making a big deal about nothing but I get so uptight waiting for their call that I know is coming. I find it very hard to say no as often I feel saying I've just got to get on with stuff is just rubbish and antisocial, even though it's the truth!

What would you do? AIBU? It's causing me lots of stress 😔

OP posts:
HelmutShmacker · 20/06/2020 14:50

YANBU!!!!!

user1494055864 · 20/06/2020 14:56

Tell them once you have finished homeschooling, the kids amuse themselves so you can get on with your work! It's really that simple! If they have a problem with that, it's theirs not yours xxx

GabsAlot · 20/06/2020 15:07

obviously youre talking generally befor elockdown-i was going to say just tell them they cant play on anything because of corona and cant come in either

Jaxhog · 20/06/2020 15:10

Aren't we still in Lockdown? That would be my excuse for limiting family visits at the moment.

ComeBy · 20/06/2020 15:15

You’ve got the perfect excuse:

‘Sorry, I am working and have Zoom calls with clients / colleagues, we have to fit these in after homeschooling’

Or just say ‘ah, not today or tomorrow but are you available next week on Tuesday?’

Or “the kids have a project, can’t fit in a visit this week what about next?”

“I’m getting the start of a headache and a temperature, could be hay fever but we are isolating for a week’

OR:

They come, regularly, let your DH experience a few evenings of no or late dinner, no milk to put in tea, all bread and biscuits missing in action. “Oh yes, I was busy with SIL and family and they wanted toast / biscuits “.

InvisibleWomenMustBeRead · 20/06/2020 15:17

Agree with pp, tell them you need to get on with your work once homeschooling is done, so you can't have them around. Use that a few times along with having other friends to visit / going out to exercise or shop or whatever, and just keep repeating. You're not being unreasonable at all Op and if every weekend is too much for you, then tell your DH that it needs to be every other weekend and in the in-between weekends, he can go to his parents or sisters then and give you some peace.

picklemewalnuts · 20/06/2020 16:37

Change your work times, maybe work across lunch, so you are homeschooling again 3-5.

Timeouttime · 20/06/2020 16:51

@picklemewalnuts that is a genius idea!!!!

OP posts:
Appuskidu · 20/06/2020 16:56

DHs family-he can take the kids to their house at the weekend.

I refuse to entertain in laws alone!

JellyBabiesSaveLives · 20/06/2020 17:00

During the week, you’re working, so sorry. At the weekend, you’ve got a headache but dh will bring the kids to yours, what time? Or tell them you’re fed up of being home all the time so you’ll meet them somewhere - wean them off the idea that they come to play in your garden whenever they’re at a loose end.

If you’re working from home, doing homeschooling and doing all the housework - do you and dh still get equal free time? Or does he need to step up?

afromom · 20/06/2020 17:02

I would just tell them that you are busy with work. We have the same problem with DPs sister and her family. Except our DCs are 16 and 13 and nephew is only 6. Whenever DSD is with us (normally EOW, but week on, week off at the moment since lockdown) they try to come for drinks. Luckily it's got better since lockdown as SiL is pregnant so they've only been round once.
I just say, I'm working, DP is doing overtime, I'm going to the supermarket, etc. So we manage to keep it to about once a fortnight.

FrancesHaHa · 20/06/2020 17:08

I would also tell them you're working. Or if you're working consider not answering.

PIL started calling me during lockdown, something they never would have done before. They don't call DP as consider his work more important than mine. If it was a working day I just didn't answer, and DP later told them I'd been busy with work. Now they only call on non working days. It's never for anything important, just a chat, which frankly I don't have time for if I'm working.

Appuskidu · 20/06/2020 17:25

They don't call DP as consider his work more important than mine

That would really piss me off!

Timeouttime · 20/06/2020 18:03

@JellyBabiesSaveLives that's a whole other thread / argument required 😂 I'm definitely realising I'm doing more than my fair share and words have been had!

I really need to stick to my guns and use all the great ideas mentioned on here. And just bloody hope they get the message. I've been fighting this for a good year now but lockdown has given me perspective on what's actually good for my kids and me - and it's not always doing what everyone else wants! Thank you for making me feel better I was feeling very guilty even though I knew I shouldn't.

OP posts:
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