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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

MIL's First Visit

162 replies

Lulu1027 · 06/11/2021 09:28

My mother-in-law is visiting to meet my newborn son for the first time and, ostensibly, to help care for him. She's a kind woman, and we've always been friends, but I've become infuriated by her carelessness and lack of self-awareness. Here are a few examples:

-She keeps falling asleep while holding the baby during the daytime. Not dosing, but fully unconscious. I am doing the night shift, so she's sleeping 8 hours a night. Nevertheless, she said that "holding the baby is her favorite way to nap." This strikes me as unsafe, and is, therefore, no help to me. When I'm meant to be doing chores or resting myself I end up keeping an eye on her to make sure she doesn't drop the baby. When I nicely asked her to stop doing this because I feel it's unsafe she was incredibly hurt, started crying, and said she didn't like my tone.

-Due to a tongue tie, the baby is bottle-fed, with half formula/half pumped breastmilk. MIL offered to make the baby's formula bottles and DH and I both repeatedly told her the appropriate ratio of water to powder. It's also printed on the can. Later that day it became apparent that she had mistakenly diluted the bottles. As a result, he was not getting enough calories had loose stools from excess water intake.

-We went to the local fire station for a car seat installation check. While there, MIL recounted that she once accidentally put a car seat holding her infant son (my DH) on the roof of her car and forgot about it before driving off. The car seat tumbled to the ground but thankfully the baby was alright. She told this story as if it were a funny anecdote.

-The piece-de-resistance. She accidentally turned off our furnace, having mistaken the plainly marked furnace switch for a regular light switch. It has a bright red switch plate that reads "oil burner, emergency only." Before I knew the furnace was off, the baby awoke screaming and freezing cold. I spent a freezing sleepless night rocking him in a blanket trying to keep him warm. The next morning, upon learning that the heat was out my MIL commented that we have "strange switches in this house" and I immediately knew what had happened. Up until MIL's visit the baby has had a consistent sleep schedule, but since the furnace incident he has barely slept, night or day. I've now been awake for 48 hours, while she's sleeping soundly downstairs.

She then had the audacity to comment that I'm spoiling him by rocking him at night. He's clearly distressed because she starved and froze him!

This is a bit of a rant, but I'm also looking for some validation. AIBU to be completely fed up? All this "help" is making me more exhausted than before she arrived. Any advice on how to proceed?

OP posts:
HumphreyCobblers · 06/11/2021 09:32

Well she isn’t any help at all is she? More of a worrying hindrance. The sleeping whilst holding this is awful, how are you suu I posed to not watch her continuously to make sure the baby is ok? That would freak me right out.

Future visits need to be social only, not to ‘help’.

toomuchlaundry · 06/11/2021 09:32

How long is she staying?

HumphreyCobblers · 06/11/2021 09:33

Sorry about the typos. Meant to say the furnace thing is infuriating but not as worrying as the falling asleep as is unlikely to happen again. As for the car seat anecdote - if I had done that I would still be beating myself up over it, not seeing it as funny.

Aimee1987 · 06/11/2021 09:39

The sleeping thing is the most worrying to me. The situation you described the the highest risk for sids.

Your right she is not helping at all. How long is she staying? What does DH think of all this?

HelloDulling · 06/11/2021 09:42

Stop allowing/asking her to help with the baby. She can make coffee or even help with some housework, but she cannot be trusted to care for a baby.

Babynames2 · 06/11/2021 09:45

Falling asleep with a baby like that is really dangerous and a very high risk for SIDS/suffocation. Stop ‘asking her’ to not fall asleep holding him and bloody tell her. Explain that it’s dangerous. And every time she does it take the baby off her.

As for the bottles just don’t let her make them. The other stuff is annoying but not as bad. But clearly she isn’t actually helpful. Don’t have her stay as long again.

Pumpkinsonparade · 06/11/2021 09:45

Surely just remove baby and put in the pram?
Every time.
My mil used to stand pushing ds's pram the whole time he napped.. I asked her did she really think I had time to do that? Your routine op.. Not mil's.

LivingLaVidaBabyShower · 06/11/2021 09:45
  1. This is not safe AT ALL.
Tough shit if she is crying. You need to get a sling or a bouncer. Or she has to stand if holding the baby. If you want to be kind say you need more skin to skin for breast milk supply.
  1. Do not let her make the formula. Explain it needs to be made correctly and its easy if you do it. Be matter of fact. Ignore any tears or drama.
  2. Ignore
  3. Put a giant post it on it and forget it. Its a one off. Give it over to Jesus.

Separately accept she is as useful as a chocolate tea pot, relax your standard for cleaning/the house for a few weeks and get your out of your house asap.

2tired2bewitty · 06/11/2021 09:46

If she’s meeting him for the first time on this visit how have all these things happened, or did they happen with a different dc?

LivingLaVidaBabyShower · 06/11/2021 09:46

Or get her to cook and do housework and you care for baby.
Dont mess about be clear and firm.

Chelyanne · 06/11/2021 09:46

Send her home

Spudina · 06/11/2021 09:47

You can’t leave her with the baby. You need to stop asking her “help” unfortunately. Can your DH suggest she goes home? It would be better coming from him.

Disfordarkchocolate · 06/11/2021 09:48

Do not let her look after your baby; your baby will be unsafe.

balonsz · 06/11/2021 09:48

It sounds like a long visit?

EileenGC · 06/11/2021 09:49

She can't care for the baby anymore, that's how I would proceed.

Why hasn't she been sent home yet? That would've been the first thing I would've done tbh, book her a new train ticket for the morning after and send her home.

This is (presumably) your house and your baby. Put yourselves first and tell her this isn't working or helping anyone.

JazzyBBG · 06/11/2021 09:49

She sounds horrendous. DH needs to have a word.

balonsz · 06/11/2021 09:49

Make the formula yourself, don't let her do it & put the baby in your room when you nap

AdaColeman · 06/11/2021 09:50

Pack her bags and send her home. Job done.

maddiemookins16mum · 06/11/2021 09:51

I’m usually a bit ‘give her a chance’ when it comes to the whole MIL/newborn posts, but she’s a blimmin nuisance.

Thehop · 06/11/2021 09:52

Time for her to go

AnotherMansCause · 06/11/2021 09:52

Don't let her make the bottles. I know of someone who suffered a perforated bowel as a baby due to incorrectly made up formula (insufficient water). Clearly she isn't reading the pack or listening to you.

Tillysfad · 06/11/2021 09:54

She's a liability. I would thank her for coming and explain you have had enough for the time being.

Shasha17 · 06/11/2021 09:57

Falling asleep holding a newborn is very serious and potentially deadly. The other stuff is infuriating too. Ask her to leave as it isn't working out.

Notaroadrunner · 06/11/2021 09:57

Just tell her you're managing fine and its time for her to go home so you can get back into your routine. No way would I let her hold the baby if she's falling asleep.

EatYourVegetables · 06/11/2021 09:59

Agree with PPs and want to add that your husband need to step in. The food / carseat / sleep is incredibly dangerous and I would not be letting her do the baby stuff anymore. Perhaps she can contribute by making food for the grownups/ tidying the kitchen / doing laundry? She might however quickly decide to go back home if asked to do these boring tasks which include neither the baby nor napping.

The furnace thing is a one off but I’m sure she’ll find similar things to break (my MIL does, at every visit).

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