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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think I can skip MIL's 60th bday

580 replies

anonymoush · 28/10/2024 20:10

MIL is turning 60 and I'm turning 30 in the same week. Going out for a meal for both birthdays. My DC is a toddler so wouldn't be a good idea to take them to an evening celebration meal because we'd like to go somewhere "fancy" and naturally whenever DC is out for a meal with us due to their age it's hard to maintain a conversation with grownups, more like you get distracted every 2 seconds because either a wipe is needed or they want help feeding or they want to point out how orange the carrot on their plate is etc. Everyone (ie myself, guests, toddler) would be happier is the toddler stayed at home with the nanny whilst we go for the celebration meal.

We have a nanny who does 9-2 a few days a week, she doesn't love doing evening babysitting as she has her own children, is a single mum and (understandably) wants to spend evenings with them. However she's kindly agreed to babysit on one of the dates, up to us which one. We have a great relationship with the nanny, she's absolutely amazing and I don't want to pressure her if she's said that it's once per month max.

PILs are coming down for the weekend from their hometown (a few hours away) and MIL said she'd like to go out for dinner for her birthday. I can't be both at my own birthday dinner and at hers because we only have childcare for one of the evenings. I've said I can join them with DC if it's something like afternoon tea, or we can join for dinner and just have starters then leave (as DC wouldn't stay seated much longer, will want to run around, as it's one of those slow service, fancy restaurant) or we go somewhere more relaxed / not as fancy and I'm happy to be the one doing all child related duties at the dinner (ie passing the wipes to DC when requested, taking them to the toilet, maintaining chat with them or doing colouring so they're entertained). None of these suit. I'm also happy sitting this one out, but the idea is outrageous for MIL and DH because it's MIL's 60th, super important that everyone is there. She wants to go somewhere fancy without the baby but with me there. My husband insists that in this case I should ask the babysitter to cover MIL's birthday and he will just not attend my birthday - I go with just my parents and siblings. I think that's ridiculous - your spouse is a closer relation than a PIL, it's my 30th just as much as it's her 60th.

I'll add that MIL and I don't get on amazingly. We're civil, we can maintain a conversation but due to being very different people, me not being treated particularly kindly by her through pregnancy and postpartum and a few other things, we aren't besties. I think she also doesn't love a few things about me, small things like wishing DH married someone significantly younger (we're same age) and doesn't love that we do one parent one language with me speaking the minority language (ie I speak to my child predominantly in a language she does understand but is by no means fluent in, it's a common tactic to make a child bilingual) but it's nothing like hate or wanting to not be in each others lives.

Except the nanny there's not really many babysitting options - my parents are older and couldn't really cope with an energetic toddler for a whole evening / wouldn't want to, siblings don't live particularly close so it would make it logistically difficult, DC would cry the whole time with MIL if she babysat and shes somewhat disinterested so I doubt she'd want to babysit either.

AIBU to want to either skip MIL's birthday or do one of the other options I've suggested - a more relaxed restaurant, an earlier meal like lunch or afternoon tea or leave halfway through the meal? As opposed to having my husband be absent at my own 30th.

OP posts:
ReadingSoManyThreads · 28/10/2024 20:40

Why on earth are people suggesting they combine the two events?

Who on earth would want to share their special birthday dinner with a MIL they only just tolerate (and visa versa)??

ReadingSoManyThreads · 28/10/2024 20:41

You enjoy your 30th birthday night out.

Your DH can either make babysitting arrangements for his mother's birthday meal, OR (and this is the option I'd do), just stay home with toddler. They cannot demand your presence, especially when they are demanding your child's absence.

thursdaymurderclub · 28/10/2024 20:42

good lord you sound hard work and exhausting.

Get nanny to look after the little darlings for your own birthday celebration and get a sitter in ( i see no reason why your own parents can't sit for one evening with your kids so that your DH can celebrate his mums 60th without it being all about you!)

pizzaHeart · 28/10/2024 20:43

So it’s such an important birthday for your MIL but she doesn’t want to choose a place/ time to include her grandchild in it?

P.S. after your update about the language I would always assume that your MIL is unreasonable whatever she’s saying. It just feels like this.

JumpstartMondays · 28/10/2024 20:43

anonymoush · 28/10/2024 20:24

Because it's my birthday and I deserve a relaxed evening off childcare

Sounds like the most relaxed option might well be the DH at home doing childcare while you celebrate with friends for your 30th.

How about this - hire a private chef to do you a lovely meal for you and your friends at home. Then you won't need a nanny for that night because you'll all be home. You'll have a nice meal you haven't had to cook or clean up after. Your DH can still be on childcare duty (should baby wake up etc) but still be a part of your nice meal for your birthday as well. And you still get an evening off childcare.

Then book the nanny to babysit for your MILs 60th.

DowntonCrabby · 28/10/2024 20:45

Please show your H this thread so he can see how selfish and ridiculous he is being.

Ozanj · 28/10/2024 20:46

Just leave DH at home with the baby on your birthday and enjoy yourself.

Toomanyemails · 28/10/2024 20:47

Stick to your guns. You're not stopping your DH from attending!
If you got on well with MIL I'd say you could plan something special with her but it doesn't sound like she wants you there for your company, she just wants to know she's pulling the strings

anonymoush · 28/10/2024 20:50

MangoRose · 28/10/2024 20:27

Until the 4th paragraph I would have said you are being unreasonable but if she isn't nice to you and you don't really get on then I would say get the sitter for your birthday. Life is too short for people who don't care about you. I would be fuming at DH if he behaved like that. If he is so intent on you doing both then why can't he find an agency sitter for a couple of hours and sort it that way.

I wouldn't leave DC with an agency sitter or someone I don't know well

OP posts:
LocalHobo · 28/10/2024 20:51

Use a babysitting agency for the second night out(I would ask DH to be the one to make the arrangements), If your nanny can only do one evening session per month,this is something you are going to have to organise sooner or later.

anonymoush · 28/10/2024 20:52

Fluffymarshmallow · 28/10/2024 20:32

Use the sitter for your 30th as planned. You have offered options for the 60th. I honestly dont know anybody who would change their plans like you are expected to do if its all already agreed.

If you had the sitter for the 60th then swapped it for your own 30th then YABU and it would appear awkward.

We don't have a sitter for either as such.
It's just that there's 2 evenings, they're within a week of each other. My babysitter said pick one. We are struggling to pick which one

OP posts:
anonymoush · 28/10/2024 20:53

Soontobe60 · 28/10/2024 20:33

Easy - ask the in laws or your parents to babysit for you on one night, and you and DH go out for your birthday, then the following night ‘nanny’ babysits so you can all go out!

As mentioned, my parents and MIL can't babysit, reasons in the last paragraph

OP posts:
anonymoush · 28/10/2024 20:53

pikkumyy77 · 28/10/2024 20:33

Your DH can figure out how to employ a one off babysitter, you know, for his mother’s birthday. There isn’t just one potential babysitter in the world.

Not that I think it is necessary for you to attend her birthday at all. I’m 64. If I expect people to come celebrate with me I either make it feasible—like hosting a brunch, making it child friendly, or otherwise helping my guests have an easy time coming. Or I don’t get my panties in a bunch if people can’t make it. You have made plenty of concessions. Tell your dh he has to solve the problem without poaching your babysitter.

I wouldn't leave DC with someone I don't know at all (or even someone I don't know well). At least not at this age

OP posts:
MangoRose · 28/10/2024 20:54

anonymoush · 28/10/2024 20:50

I wouldn't leave DC with an agency sitter or someone I don't know well

In that case you have no options for sitters so you can't go, some DC arent ok with people they don't know either so it should never be an expectation you should have to do this.

Your DH is unfair with his suggestion IMO.

anonymoush · 28/10/2024 20:54

TianasBayou · 28/10/2024 20:35

Go out for one meal to celebrate both birthdays?

It's my 30th! I'd like an evening out with my family ie parents and siblings, my husband, so that I can have a great time, not share it with my MIL whom I don't get on great with

OP posts:
anonymoush · 28/10/2024 20:54

DGPP · 28/10/2024 20:36

Get a babysitter for MILs birthday

And do what exactly for my own

OP posts:
Griffys · 28/10/2024 20:55

I think you are being completely reasonable and have offered plenty of decent options to MIL. She isn't budging at all, zero compromise, and your DH's suggestion to skip your birthday is crazy. I would be so annoyed at that. It makes literally no sense.
So it's vital for someone to have their (not very close) DIL at their birthday, no matter what, but it's fine for someone else to be without their spouse for their birthday?

I think you have been more than accommodating, so if MIL isn't happy with any of that then you simply can't go and husband can represent you both that evening. No way would I leave my kids unhappy with a babysitter they don't know/aren't used to/or who can't cope.
Absolutely use nanny for your special birthday and enjoy 🥂

Also no idea why someone said you sound like hard work?! You sound so reasonable!

MumOfOneAllAlone · 28/10/2024 20:55

Your husband is being unreasonable! As long as you're willing to do something else for her birthday, I don't see what the problem is. I'd be sticking firmly to the plans you've made.

How lovely that you're raising your baby to be bilingual - completely agree with your tactic

Perhaps you can even offer to be on facetime during the toasts etc so you're still part of the celebrations?

Hope you have a lovely 30th - hope you tell your husband to have a word with himself! x

Notmanyleftnow · 28/10/2024 20:55

Personally, I would make the effort to attend your MIL's birthday.

dapsnotplimsolls · 28/10/2024 20:56

Your DH is an arse. Don't go to MIL's do and enjoy your own.

anonymoush · 28/10/2024 20:56

thursdaymurderclub · 28/10/2024 20:42

good lord you sound hard work and exhausting.

Get nanny to look after the little darlings for your own birthday celebration and get a sitter in ( i see no reason why your own parents can't sit for one evening with your kids so that your DH can celebrate his mums 60th without it being all about you!)

It's not all about me at all - it's about my child's safety. My parents are elderly and don't have the energy or health to look after a very energetic toddler. It would be dangerous to dump a toddler on people who've said they do not feel they are capable of taking that responsibility?

OP posts:
MangoRose · 28/10/2024 20:57

Notmanyleftnow · 28/10/2024 20:55

Personally, I would make the effort to attend your MIL's birthday.

I don't understand why anyone would prioritise someone's birthday who is unpleasant to them over their own birthday with people who love them. You should be able to not go and say you have no sitter then use the sitter for your own meal!

anonymoush · 28/10/2024 20:57

LocalHobo · 28/10/2024 20:51

Use a babysitting agency for the second night out(I would ask DH to be the one to make the arrangements), If your nanny can only do one evening session per month,this is something you are going to have to organise sooner or later.

At DC's current age I wouldn't use an agency sitter, only someone I know well

OP posts:
Ellie1015 · 28/10/2024 20:58

Yanbu. The answer is you dont have childcare. So as you have said plans need ti include dc or you can miss it. Dh is being very unreasonable to expect you to change plans for your birthday. Why would he think it is ok for husband to skip wife's big birthday but not for wife to skip MIL's.

It is too late now but unfortunately that she knows you have choice of date for childcare. Should have just said no childcare.

Completelyjo · 28/10/2024 20:58

If your parents are local enough to do dinner with you for your birthday why can’t they babysit when it’s MIL’s birthday dinner? If it’s an evening thing in a fancy place won’t your young child be asleep anyway so your parents aren’t running about all evening?

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