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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

MIL getting in my DH’s head?

41 replies

GordonsAliveAndEatsPies · 23/05/2021 19:11

I find my DMIL’s behaviour a bit baffling. She doesn’t contact us unless she wants help and then takes the tone of ‘You will (ie: DH) do this or that’ or ‘I have a list of things for you to do’. She is comfortable financially but will walk off when bills are due to be paid or any other time she feels she might have to put her hands in her pocket leaving us to foot the bill (tho she doesn’t do this to DHs siblings).

Indeed, she loves to tell us how we need to ‘share’ as we are ‘family’ and it’s ‘only fair’. Now DH and I have a decent business we run that pays for a nice lifestyle but a decent chunk of our given wealth is because of investments and gifts (the house) given to me before we got together by my parents. As I say we are building up our own but 2/3 would still be because of that. I should also add that whilst DH’s siblings have had help from MIL, we haven’t on the context we don’t need it (which isn’t wrong but wouldn’t strike me as ‘fair’ as defined by her reasoning).

MIL doesn’t understand that whilst she doesn’t benefit from our wealth (and nor does DBIL who is cut from the same stuff so it is a family trait) DH does as well as our kids (who she pays scant regard for unlike her other grandchildren who are all geniuses - and unlike my parents who actually know the kids well).

Anyway, normally DH sees through this bullshit but in response to a point raised regarding a future influx of money from my side he commented that if Scottish devolution happened and the economy crashed (pls don’t derail this with arguments on Scottish independence) we could give her our current house because it would be one of a portfolio.

Of course all this is a theoretical situation (again let’s not focus on how likely it is or isn’t regarding independence) but am I right to be a bit concerned. When I asked where this had come from he waffled on about how poor she had been in the past (tho as I say she and FIL worked in very professional jobs and there is a good pension) and that it was his duty as she ‘had raised him’ and given him some money towards his undergrad 30 years ago... (god knows why it wouldn’t be his siblings duty in the same way)

To me it sounds like she has been laying it on thick to raise potential scenarios where there would be an expectation. There is a particular thing we are doing at the moment that she is very annoyed about because its not being shared wider but I feel this has been the trigger (she has said it should be shared and it’s influencing her reactions to other unrelated things). Or is it more likely the inherent brain washing that she has done in the past that is making him feel this guilt now.

OP posts:
Looksabitbig · 23/05/2021 20:15

We already have devolution!

Naunet · 23/05/2021 20:15

I told him to get to fuck on any level and that his mother specialised in a ‘poor little me act’ that didn’t wash

Sounds like you have it handled OP 😄

Notaroadrunner · 23/05/2021 20:16

Keep telling him to fuck off with his ridiculous notions. And tell his mother to fuck off the next time you see her too. Bloody cheek of the pair of them.

GordonsAliveAndEatsPies · 23/05/2021 20:31

Sorry meant full independence

OP posts:
Prem7979 · 23/05/2021 20:31

Hide the money op. Don't let DH access it.

And tell him that there is zero chance of MIL being given your house, or any inheritance from your side.

BruteForce · 23/05/2021 20:32

@Daydrambeliever

Sit down and work out exactly how much money your parents have given you towards your business and speak to a solicitor to find out if there is anyway to ring-fence this retrospectively.

Perhaps if he sees it set down in black and white he would understand that its not reasonable to expect your parents to subsidise his mother.

Definitely the above.

Protect yourself and your children first and foremost, OP.

Act first, get it sorted then tell him. If your marriage fails because of her interference (as quite a few do when men are still a mummy's boy at heart), you'll be safe financially.

Professional legal advice all the way. Let's just say I wish I'd had someone convince me to do that that when I was in a similar position with my ex years ago.

peboh · 23/05/2021 20:38

So basically your dh is a spineless man who can't tell his mummy no?

katy1213 · 23/05/2021 20:44

Fuck that. Keep what's yours in your own name. If your husband can't be trusted to keep your affairs private, then I wouldn't tell him about any incomings from your side.

Geordieoldgirl · 23/05/2021 21:06

I'm glad that lady can't get her hands on anything your parents were able to give you! The cheek of her! I just hope your husband will come to see her antics for what they are.

Wanttocryatthecost · 23/05/2021 21:08

You need to tell you DH to grow some balls and tell his family to jog on.

One of my DBs has done very well for himself, him and his wife have worked really hard building up their business, they have struggled plenty in the past for no help from anyone. I know exactly what my DB would do if my DM tried this shit, he’d laugh in her face and tell her where to go, just like he would for any of us. He’d make it clear he has worked 7 days a week for the last 25 years to build up his own business and he didn’t owe anyone anything except his wife and children.

Now before anyone slags my DB off, he has no problem helping family, just not giving hand outs or people expecting hand outs from him. Another dB is always getting himself into financial troubles. My DB will happily offer him work to earn the money to cover his debt, he won’t just hand it over. He had no problem helping our DM out after our DF died especially as she’d stopped working to care for our DF. What he would have a problem with though is if he was expected to keep her for the rest of her life, then he’d tell her to jog on. And there is no way he would hand over his wife’s inheritance to our side of the family, she wouldn’t let him if he tried.

HappydaysArehere · 23/05/2021 21:19

If I was able to leave a house to my dd I would be furious and turn rapidly in my grave if her dh handed it to her mil. Someone mentioned culture and someone added to the post that culture doesn’t come into it.
From what I understand, from people I know, in some cultures it is expected that families should share their good fortune. This may or may not have some bearing on. OP’s problem. In any case you must stand firm. If your dh wants to give something to your mil make sure you are not the source of his generosity. She sounds an ungrateful and manipulative woman which is all the more reason that you stand firm. Let her know you are determined and she will have more respect for you than she appears to have at the moment.

Blanca87 · 23/05/2021 21:28

You are concerned about the economic downturn of a country that might get ‘full devolution’ when said country has a devolved democratic mechanism and is erm devolved.... 👀

cunningartificer · 23/05/2021 21:46

Hmmm. So it was a theoretical conversation about you having Euromillions amounts and his mum having nothing and he said he’d like to look after his mum? Weird conversation, and I’d be more concerned if he’d said he didn’t care what happened to her. You’ve got it all ring fenced so why are you stirring the pot with this sort of speculation anyway? If it worries you, perhaps have a theoretical conversation about you losing all your money and how does he think his mum would react...

Billybagpuss · 24/05/2021 05:26

Far cheaper to pay back what she gave him for undergrad load plus interest. Back 30 years ago it couldn’t have been more than £3k total. Even with compound interest of say 5% only comes in at about £12.5k way less than a house.

MiddleParking · 24/05/2021 05:33

I told him to get to fuck

Ah, we really don’t see that enough on MN!

It’s incredibly weird that in a Euromillions-style hypothetical he doesn’t think “I would buy my mum a house”, he essentially says “we could give my mum your house”. Doesn’t sound like he’s truly thinking of a Euromillions-style hypothetical. It sounds like you’ve got everything watertight, which is ideal!

user77hjjy · 24/05/2021 07:25
Confused
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