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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to ask parents to condition their sons this way?

109 replies

TiredGatekeeper · 15/02/2024 08:38

There is a situation in my marriage that has been going on for years and I am sick of it. However, before I go into that, I want to explain what I see as the best case scenario.

I have brothers. They are both married to nice women. One lives close to my parents, the other a few hours away. Both of my brothers go out with my parents, pop in on their way somewhere or back, arrange to go out with my dad to the footy, go round for a cup of tea etc. ON THEIR OWN. Sometimes they bring their wife, or wife and DC, but a lot of the time they go round to my parents on their own. FYI they are not neglecting their families. They are "popping in" for a bit, or spending an hour with them if their wife is off doing something. Also, my grown up nieces and nephews do this. They call up, then pop in. My SIL's are very nice, and very welcome when they come over. They are family and we love them.

My DH does none of this. It is as if I am the gatekeeper. Everything seems to have to be run by me. An example is we have been invited to something, I can't go, so he said "we can't go as TiredG is busy". Why can't he go on his own?
He never pops in, goes round on his own, has an independent relationship with his blood family. I am certainly not a control freak, I want him to go. Why can't I see them sometimes, and the rest of the time he goes and has a cup of tea, goes down to Homebase with his dad and other stuff?

As a result there is animosity between PIL and me. They think I block them. I don't. My DH just doesn't want to go there alone. I can see that a lot of it is that his mum and dad are difficult. I know I have a DH problem, but he has also been conditioned this way. When he got married his mum basically wrote off having a son, even though it turns out DH and I do way more for them than their DD's. My FIL wouldn't be allowed out without MIL at his side, so I also think my DH has been conditioned that your wife controls your movements and you don't do anything without her say so. My MIL thinks it is all my fault, and I am quote: "the one wearing the trousers" but that really isn't true according to my own family and friends, who say he clearly does. I think it is their fault, for not investing enough time and effort and having a good relationship with their son.

So, I'd like to ask mums (and dads) to instil in their sons that just because they have met someone, doesn't mean they lose all autonomy over their familial relationships, and it is OK, and in fact healthy to still go hang out with your parents and siblings ON YOUR OWN.

Women do this all the time. It is not controlling, or manipulative, or you are not a MIL from hell if your adult son comes over and chills on your sofa for an hour with a cup of tea and goes and opens the fridge and gazes a bit. In fact, it is healthy.

OP posts:
Ariona · 17/02/2024 17:02

Why do you even care what your IL's think about you??

Laiste · 17/02/2024 17:13

Surely you can point to your brother's loving relationship with your parents wrt answering your son's questions?

You don't have a husband problem. You have a you problem.

Leave his relationship with his parents to him to manage and stop worrying about what they think. They sound like umpleasable people. You're enabling their twattery by giving it headspace.

Emma8924 · 17/02/2024 17:15

Maybe for whatever reason he doesn’t feel comfortable visiting alone. Just have a conversation wit him about it, and explain the issue you have with it

mathanxiety · 17/02/2024 17:27

Xiaoxiong · 15/02/2024 08:44

If you pull DH up on it and say "why are you blaming me here, you can go round on your own without me" what does he say?

Or if you say "you are causing bad blood between your parents and me because they think I am blocking you going round, which I absolutely am not and you need to cut it out blaming me for this"

This.

You're a human shield, OP.

RhubarbGingerJam · 17/02/2024 17:52

TiredGatekeeper · 16/02/2024 08:08

I hate that we all end up going to the in laws house and it ends up as a whole day affair and we all have to do the same thing like go for a walk. It's so suffocating.

Same here. It is a whole day out drinking endless tea, and sitting on the sofa for 6 hours. I wish we did go for a walk!

Why can't you say oh we'll have to go now - or insist on a walk? My IL block anything I suggest so have sometimes got DC or DH to suggest or just announce we are doing a trip to shop etc and ignore/brush off any attempts to stop.

Why aren't you talking to husband pre arrange walks or cut short visits - telling him to stop blaming you for things and pushing his family jobs back at him.

I think Op you should stop being so passive and thus growing quietly resentful - have a clear conversation with your DH and stop just accepting the situation. If you're unhappy at 6 hour visits stop doing them - meet them somewhere else or have something to rush back for - or use your words and leave or just refuse to go to them.

fruitbrewhaha · 18/02/2024 22:08

I think your situation is unusual here op.

What happens when you tell your dh to go without you? And that he needs to facilitate his relationship with his parents.

Spicastar · 18/02/2024 22:47

You say you're scared your own sons won't visit you because DH doesn't like visiting his overbearing and controlling mother. This is a more complex situation than monkey see, monkey do. Your sons will base their decisions on whether they have a close, caring, mutual relationship with you and that's what you can try to build now. They don't just decide not to see you because dad doesn't see grandma. You're not your MIL and your sons have a different upbringing and childhood memories than your DH, I'd believe. Focus on creating beautiful memories and a warm relationship with your own kids and stop pressuring your DH to see a person he's clearly not comfortable to visit alone. Cut him some slack.

Katemax82 · 19/02/2024 07:23

My dh avoids seeing his mum as much as possible. Of course it's my fault so I know where you are coming from

cockadoodledandy · 19/02/2024 10:59

You don’t have a DH problem. You have an in laws problem. They sound toxic and I don’t blame your husband for not wanting to be around them unless he needs to be. Don’t force him; he’s probably spent a lot of his life waiting for the time he can get away from them. Have you considered he might want to cut ties to them?

Just because someone is a blood relative doesn’t mean they aren’t toxic.

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