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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to not be happy with my MIL as a neighbour or to have weekly contact with her?...

341 replies

Ewg9 · 10/04/2024 23:25

Just wondering other people’s views, and if I'm just on some post pregnancy hormone frenzy but we live next to my MIL, we have done for a year now in a house she owns (we pay the bills but pay no rent). I now have a five month old and since his birth I've really been struggling with her. I'll say that she was always the matriarch, twice divorced professional lady with her own business with two devoted sons. Since the birth, the dynamic between us has changed. She irritated me early on by coming over the last evening of husbands paternity leave to hangout with us and baby and I felt this was encroaching on our time as a new family. Since then she has interfered, with her opinions (I know she is entitled to say what she wants) and coming across on occasion critical and undermining our/my ability to care for the baby (I have read that this can be really normal unfortunately). My husband obviously finds her a support and i always try to remember this but i haven't found her supportive or helpful especially since baby arrived. she made a bad joke in the early weeks how she wouldn't help with house work and she pays someone to do hers and doesn't do ironing but that she'd hold the baby whilst i did it. She had the nerve awhile ago to say to my face how I’d had a good labour and that we have a good baby and that we were having an easy time. I snapped back and catalogued the difficulties we had had (yes the baby hasn't been colicky but there have been other difficulties like all first time parents might experience. Breastfeeding was a nightmare for months due to jaundice, a tongue tie and then thrush so the first 3/4 months of feeding were terrible. Anyway, MIL sees the baby once a week as she has hosted us for Sunday lunch since baby arrived and I may seem ungrateful, but I don't like seeing her every week and if anything, would prefer to reduce the contact. If she could, she would definitely be coming round more she is only next door after all. Anyway, she has recently said to husband, that she doesn't want to cook Sunday dinner anymore as she's not getting the time with the baby because she's busy cooking. We usually arrive and eat and spend a couple/ a few hours with her afterwards for her to have cuddle time. I’m trying to tell myself to appreciate what she has done, and that she lives on her own and that it’s good for hubby and for baby and that I can retreat and keep out of the way more as baby becomes more independent and that somethings just change.

but I am posting this as I don't know where to turn, I feel suffocated living next to her, and I just want space and time to be a new family. I feel the same with my own mother (she would be seeing the baby more if she could) she also sees baby once a week. I think it's more intense with the MIL as she lives next door and in fairness to my Mum she helped us loads with meals and with house jobs and I suppose she is my Mum. There are other things I could list about the circumstances which are difficult such as I don’t value the free house, it’s in a poor area and out of the town, i have no connection to the place and I feel very isolated (both physically and emotionally) and have done since the baby arrived. my emotional state is hanging by threads quite frankly though I am doing my best in trying to get out and meet other Mums at groups. Am I being unreasonable and just psycho Mummy for not wanting a weekly date with my MIL or to be her neighbour? Sorry for the jumbled essay but feel better for finally saying how I feel...

OP posts:
Thingymajiggy · 13/04/2024 02:55

Mog65 · 10/04/2024 23:35

Sounds like you are really down. Speak to your GP. Your mum and mother in law just want to share and love their grand child. Stop trying so hard. Send you hubbie round to visit with the baby for sn other and have some you time. But sounds like you're trying to hard. Maybe postnatal depression a little bit. Good luck 😊

My thoughts exactly. Go easy on yourself OP and go easy on your MIL

BlueFlowers5 · 13/04/2024 04:06

Is there a chance that a visit to the GP might be in order, OP?

MumTeacherofMany · 13/04/2024 11:38

No rent & a weekly roast. How do you cope OP

BIossomtoes · 13/04/2024 14:00

Lostwelshlady · 13/04/2024 00:28

Did you miss the part where she invites herself over on the last night of paternity leave when original poster just wanted it to be the three of them? Or when original poster feels criticised as a new mum? Way to be supportive 🙄

No, I didn’t miss that bit. One evening? Absolutely fucking scandalous! Like a pp said, the only way mil could be any more supportive is to leave the country and send them money every week.

saraclara · 13/04/2024 14:05

BIossomtoes · 13/04/2024 14:00

No, I didn’t miss that bit. One evening? Absolutely fucking scandalous! Like a pp said, the only way mil could be any more supportive is to leave the country and send them money every week.

Edited

There's also no indication at all that the MIL knew that OP wanted that evening to be just the three of them and deliberately chose to intrude. Or even any indication that her son didn't want her there.

this woman can't do right for doing wrong, clearly.

EnglishBluebell · 13/04/2024 14:22

I'm sorry OP but you sound horrible, ungrateful and staggeringly argumentative. This woman has given you a free house, barely said a word wrong! I mean what on EARTH is wrong with pointing out that you could've had things a lot worse with your baby? Some people have theirs in NICU for months and 24/7 colic or a baby who WON'T feed at ALL! I had the most horrendous 38 hour labour where baby & I very very very nearly died.
That's what she is referring to by having it easy. I'm gobsmacked that you want to reduce contact when she currently only sees her grandchild once per week? That's cruel, unfair and ungrateful. Can you imagine if your other half demanded that YOUR mum only came once per week? You'd be furious I expect!

Cunninghamsarah · 13/04/2024 14:59

I feel for you OP, I really do. I would have hated living next door to my MIL when I had a young baby. I struggled in the first year and felt like I had no confidence. I needed to quietly figure things out on my own and I didn’t cope well with being around people who I wasn’t totally comfortable with. I felt like I was being judged and I worried that people would think that I wasn’t capable of looking after my baby. This was all in my head. Nobody deliberately made me feel this way, but it felt very real at the time. I felt a lot stronger when it was just me, my husband and our baby in our own little cocoon. It was a difficult time but I got through it. Living next door to my MIL would have made everything worse, though she’s a perfectly nice person. I’m wondering, are you a little intimidated by your MIL? I get a sense of that in your message. If so, that will be tough for you.
If I was you, I would definitely move if you can. Not easy, I know but it’s the obvious solution. Take care OP. Take things slowly. Things will get better for you.

Keeper11 · 13/04/2024 15:08

New post possibly from MIL of Ewg9!
My son, his wife and 5 month old baby, live rent free in a house next door to me which I own. I am only allowed to see them once a week and that’s when they come to me for Sunday lunch. They arrive when lunch is on the table and leave 3 hours later leaving me to clear up the mess. During this time I hardly have a moment to see my beautiful grandchild. It is obvious I am not welcome any other time.
I think I get on well with my son, but my daughter in law is a nightmare. She interprets what ever I say as a criticism and now wants to reduce the weekly contact. She was surprised I wasn’t prepared to do her housework or her ironing, although I did offer to have the baby while she did it! Now she says the house is not in a nice enough area!

I think I would prefer to rent the house out as normal and receive rent.
WWYD?!!!

DriftingDora · 13/04/2024 20:14

MumTeacherofMany · 13/04/2024 11:38

No rent & a weekly roast. How do you cope OP

😂😂

MumTeacherofMany · 13/04/2024 20:40

@Keeper11 brilliant 😂

Scenicgirl · 13/04/2024 22:58

Keeper11 · 13/04/2024 15:08

New post possibly from MIL of Ewg9!
My son, his wife and 5 month old baby, live rent free in a house next door to me which I own. I am only allowed to see them once a week and that’s when they come to me for Sunday lunch. They arrive when lunch is on the table and leave 3 hours later leaving me to clear up the mess. During this time I hardly have a moment to see my beautiful grandchild. It is obvious I am not welcome any other time.
I think I get on well with my son, but my daughter in law is a nightmare. She interprets what ever I say as a criticism and now wants to reduce the weekly contact. She was surprised I wasn’t prepared to do her housework or her ironing, although I did offer to have the baby while she did it! Now she says the house is not in a nice enough area!

I think I would prefer to rent the house out as normal and receive rent.
WWYD?!!!

Maybe time for some tough love?
Your son and DIL are taking advantage of you.

Iwantmyoldnameback · 14/04/2024 13:33

I suspect you'd be going back to work if not for MIL OP, how would that impact your bonding?. As your mum also helps out you sound very spoilt and entitled.

Nantescalling · 14/04/2024 23:25

Only saw your post today and without reading any comments, I saw the voting. I was horrified. Then I thought we know nothing about the members here so if 75% are MIL age then you would get a right earful! Looks as if you did and however bad it's made you feel, you have no idea who is judging you so please don't take it to heart ......................

Nantescalling · 14/04/2024 23:28

CulturalNomad · 10/04/2024 23:39

she made a bad joke in the early weeks how she wouldn't help with house work and she pays someone to do hers and doesn't do ironing but that she'd hold the baby whilst i did it

Were you expecting her to help with the housework? I'm afraid I don't see the issue.

That said, I would not like to live right next door to either my MIL or my own mother. How does your husband feel about the situation? Are there any plans on getting your own place?

I don't think the author expected MIL to do housework but that was a gross thing to say.

Babyboomtastic · 14/04/2024 23:33

Nantescalling · 14/04/2024 23:28

I don't think the author expected MIL to do housework but that was a gross thing to say.

She did. It is literally written there in her first post.

She lives rent free
The only time MIL sees her baby grandchild is when she's also cooking the OP and her husband a weekly roast
The OP is upset that MIL didnt want to do her housework like her mother did.

This site being Mumsnet, most of us here are mums, not grandmother's yet 🙄

Tourmalines · 14/04/2024 23:50

Nantescalling · 14/04/2024 23:25

Only saw your post today and without reading any comments, I saw the voting. I was horrified. Then I thought we know nothing about the members here so if 75% are MIL age then you would get a right earful! Looks as if you did and however bad it's made you feel, you have no idea who is judging you so please don't take it to heart ......................

Don’t bring ageism into it . Most people know when someone is bring unreasonable and selfish .

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