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Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

In laws going against my wishes in pregnancy

119 replies

RL9 · 27/11/2022 08:08

Sorry for the long post .. How can I approach this and has anyone had a similar experience with in laws/family not respecting their wishes regarding baby. So when me and my partner started to tell his family we were expecting a baby, my partners step mum made a few comments like ‘hope it’s not another girl/ we don’t need another girl’ because there’s no baby boys in the family. I’m sure it wasn’t malicious but it still upset me because this is our first baby and if we weren’t bothered about gender why should she be. My sister in law was then saying how the family will be disappointed if it’s not a boy, they want a grandson and made similar comments to her with her pregnancies (she has three girls) and she was upset by it too. Anyway me and my partner decided we would find out the gender and keep it a surprise for our nearest and dearest both sides of the family and our friends.

Our little boy is due in the spring. When his step mum found out we were keeping the gender secret she was very rude, saying ‘what’s the point in that’ etc. I explained the point was it’s only a few months til we share our baby with the rest of the world anyway, it’s the first grandchild on my side of the family, my disabled dad who wouldn’t have even been here to meet his grandchild if I’d waited a few more years as planned to have a baby had three girls between me and my sisters and although he just wants us to have a healthy baby he always wanted a boy of his own or a nephew when we were growing up - and I wanted it to be a surprise for him. Few other reasons but doesn’t matter what as it’s mine & my partners baby no one else’s. So we found out baby is a boy at 17 weeks and we bought a blue outfit and dressing gown for our boy which my partner kept in his wardrobe (we’re waiting for our house to be ready so at present my partners back at his parents and so am I)

The beginning of this week my partners step mum was helping my partners real mum (who he lives with) do some DIY in the house. We had the 20 week check on Monday and came back to my partners. His mum and step mum asked how it went and we said all good, then when I left the room I heard his step mum (very over the top loudly) say ‘It’ll be nice to have a little boy’ and I didn’t think anything of it, the next 5 mins she over exaggerates how ‘I know it’s a boy anyway. I know it is’ etc etc. I still didn’t think too much into it and in the end his real mum says ‘no she doesn’t she’s just guessing’. Then I see my partner Friday night he picks me up from work and tells me he visited his dad and step mum in the afternoon and she was still doing the same thing going on how she knows it’s a boy. And my partners dad told him when she was out of earshot she said she’s looked in the wardrobe and seen our babies blue clothes. By the way she had no reason to be in his wardrobe no decorating or work happened in his room, she had to temporarily put some furniture in there but the wardrobe has doors so was closed.

So she’s gone out of her way to look. And you know what, if she had peeked and kept it to herself I wouldn’t be so mad. But announcing it around other family members .. I’m so cross. It’s our news to share about our baby not hers and if she can’t respect our wishes before baby arrives I doubt she will when he’s here. My partner doesn’t like confrontation, but I feel like I should approach it? Does anyone have any suggestion. I feel like if I let it slide she will think she can do/say what she wants and bend rules as she pleases around my baby. She does it to my SIL too like giving her babies (3 and under) round hard lollipops infront of her when she as the mum has said no. I nearly said something on that occasion but didn’t .. thank you if you read this massive rant

OP posts:
Baconking · 27/11/2022 11:06

chikp · 27/11/2022 11:04

Because they wanted to.

Well sure, but it was a risk when trying to keep a secret

SparkyBlue · 27/11/2022 11:08

To be honest you all sound like people who love dramas.

Baconking · 27/11/2022 11:08

OkOkOkOkOkOk · 27/11/2022 10:33

No I don't.

Just read the super long post again to spot the line which said she was putting furniture in the babies room. So I'll rephrase just for you...

So she was in babies room with good reason, she may have opened the wardrobe seeing what it's like not expecting clothes to be in it yet.

That ok now?

It wasn't the baby's room, it was the DP's room at his mum's house

GroggyLegs · 27/11/2022 11:12

Anyone who's 'disappointed' to have a healthy grandchild (both MIL & your dad) because they can't see them as fabulous little individuals, instead of pink & blue stereotypes should be kept at arm's length.

crossstitchingnana · 27/11/2022 11:15

This is a massive power battle.

KettrickenSmiled · 27/11/2022 11:26

crossstitchingnana · 27/11/2022 11:15

This is a massive power battle.

Only if OP engages in it.

Her inlaws are being so ridiculous she'd be better off rising above it. It's pointless. I don't know why she isn't just sniggering quietly while ignoring their antics.

Survey99 · 27/11/2022 11:30

Very nice of them to house both of you especially when you obviously dont like the woman who seems to have done nothing drastically wrong other than being a bit of an over enthausastic gp to be who accidently saw some blue clothing in her home.

If you wanted to know the sex of your baby fair enough, want to keep it to yourselves, fair enough, although. Teasing people by telling them you know the sex and buying blue clothes while you live in their home sounds very immature and drama seeking.

You engineered the drama and are making this into something bigger than it has to be. The news is out, is it really that big a deal?

blacksax · 27/11/2022 11:35

Good grief. It is totally up to the OP and her partner whether they tell people the baby's sex or not. It is nobody else's business but their own to decide whether or not to share the news before the baby is born.

The step-MIL sounds like a right interfering cow.

MakeMineALarge1 · 27/11/2022 11:37

Jees so much bloody drama

saraclara · 27/11/2022 11:38

PrincessPoodle · 27/11/2022 10:29

How is it a power play for people to keep private information about a baby that is still holed up inside the OP?? It's not public property.

Again, keeping the information private is absolutely fine. It's the whole "I know something you don't know!" business of OP letting the family know that she knows, but isn't going to tell them, that's the power play.

Why even tell them that she and her partner know, if she's not going to tell them? It's just a 'nah nah ne nah nah' playground thing. They could just have said nothing at all.

CaffeineMama · 27/11/2022 11:39

I dont agree with all the PPs saying its weird or precious of you to find out the sex and not tell anyone else. It's your pregnancy and up to you how much information you share.

I also think your partners SM sounds seriously irritating, but if I were you I would just let it go. It seems like a big deal now because she's making a big deal of it, but you've got bigger things to be thinking of. A house move and a new baby will keep you very busy, so try not to let things like this take up any energy.

I know it's really difficult when people do things like this, especially when you're pregnant and hormonal. I briefly fell out with my mum over a fucking Christmas tree ornament when I was pregnant. Looking back, it was absolutely not worth the upset. You will most likely feel the same about this when baby is here.

Otterock · 27/11/2022 11:42

If you really wanted to keep it to yourselves you wouldn’t have told everyone you know and wouldn’t have bought clothes baby clothes in a colour that traditionally links to a specific sex. Sounds like you’re secretly loving the power play

BetterBeGryffinphwoar · 27/11/2022 11:43

Probably missing the point but I think it's weird to colour code a baby.
Colours other than pink or blue are available.
Boys won't spontaneously combust if they wear butterflies, girls won't fade away by having diggers.

AltheaVestr1t · 27/11/2022 11:43

You have created this situation. Tactical sharing/withholding of information in families is manipulative, childish and completely unnecessary.

tunthebloodyalarmoff · 27/11/2022 11:45

Just let it go. Honestly just focus on your little family and ignore theM.

rwalker · 27/11/2022 11:50

Sounds to me like u like the drama
you knew they were desperate to know the sex
to tell them you know but won’t tell them sounds like a vindictive power trip

don’t understand why u told them you know should of just said nothing

WineCap · 27/11/2022 11:53

We found out the sex and decided not to tell anyone. My DH insisted we were honest and told people we knew but it was misery as people were always trying to catch me out. T

I think you need to let it go but I also wouldn't be making any special efforts to encourage a relationship with my MIL in your shoes. She sounds unpleasant.

mrsDracoMalfoy · 27/11/2022 11:55

I'd hide the blue ones better and buy some cheap pink stuff and leave it about.

SkylightSkylight · 27/11/2022 15:51

OkOkOkOkOkOk · 27/11/2022 10:33

No I don't.

Just read the super long post again to spot the line which said she was putting furniture in the babies room. So I'll rephrase just for you...

So she was in babies room with good reason, she may have opened the wardrobe seeing what it's like not expecting clothes to be in it yet.

That ok now?

Nope still wrong. Try again!

it's the Dp's wardrobe, not the baby's & that's just the star of the wrongness.

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