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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

MIL let’s herself in to our house

117 replies

Kelwar · 10/11/2024 08:04

Hi all,

just wanted to see what you guys think of my current situation with my MIL.
She’s a strong personality.. and my husband and I had a toe to toe with her 20 odd years ago due to her making relentless snide comments. When my husband confronted her, she caused a huge family rift involving his sister (who at that time took their mums side) resulting in our children and my SIL’s children not really growing up together..MIL screamed at my husband for daring to question her motives at that time.
Things simmered down between us all.. my DH and his sister get along ok and we know his sister now realises their mother is a bit of a cow at times.
There is history of difficult behaviour with MiL.. my FIL (who was lovely) passed away 8 years ago.
I appreciate my MIL can get lonely at times even though she keeps relatively busy so she spends time with our family having dinners and my husband pops down to see her every weekend.. I can’t actually do every weekend as she does my head in.. but hubby helps her with her insurances etc and odd jobs around her house.. to be honest the jobs are ridiculous things such as re setting her digital clock… things I know she is more than capable of doing herself… but she’ll call him to help her just to get him to pop by.
About a year ago she started turning up at our house unannounced bringing with her cakes and treats for us all.. sounds nice right? But I found it was her way of coming over.. and in all honesty a bit intrusive.
2 weeks ago, we were all up upstairs getting ready and playing with our new kitten when our dog starts barking and we realised MiL had let herself into our house and was wondering around our kitchen. I tried not to think too much of it as maybe we hadn’t heard the front door knocking..
On Thursday I got home from work and noticed there were some sausage rolls I hadn’t bought in our fridge. Thought my hubby had bought them so again didn’t think about it until yesterday we took MIL for lunch and she asked my children if they had enjoyed the sausage rolls she’d left in our fridge. As it turns out, she had popped over (my husband works from home) had let herself in, played with our kitten and left the food behind in our fridge.. hubby hadn’t even realised she had been in the house as he had been on a call .. but she boldly declares her intrusion over lunch like it’s normal.
I mentioned to my husband that I feel she is over stepping a boundary and that she has no right to just walk into our home like that. His response was that we do that at her home.. but I pointed out that that is his family home and I would never just let myself into her home without him being there.. for me it’s a woman thing and respect.. she’s never lived here and therefore doesn’t have the right to just let herself in..in truth I know he probably agrees with me but is too scared to confront her as she is not a woman you can talk to without her going mad.
AIBU or is this normal for families to just walk in to each others homes?
She didn’t used to do this to my knowledge so not sure what is going on?
I feel like she’s trying to exert her place within our family... she does present herself in a grandiose way anyway and I’ve always felt like she is expects to be no1 in my husbands life.. it has caused many problems within our marriage over the years..
What can we do other than lock our door all the time?

OP posts:
Moonchildalltheway · 10/11/2024 13:24

Normal in my family. My dad often pops in when we are at work or when hubby is wfh and puts things in our fridge which he has bought for us. Both sets of parents have keys to our house.

MrsSkylerWhite · 10/11/2024 13:25

Does anybody actually say Big Boy? 🤣

Kelwar · 10/11/2024 13:25

LatteLady · 10/11/2024 13:23

When one of my friends first got married her m-i-l used to turn up on Sunday afternoons without invitation, often when they were about to do the deed... she would not be told that it was not always convenient. That soon changed when she let herself in one weekend and cries of "Let me have it, Big Boy" and "OMG, I'm coming darling" rang out over the house. She let herself out swiftly, taking her daughter with her... Never did it again.

Mind you, her Christmas present to my friend was home made knitted dishcloths for the first year and doll cover for the loo rolls for the second year...

Lol… that’s brilliant!
mum motyer bought us dishcloths for our first wedding anniversary.. yay.. thanks mum.. the dream gift!

OP posts:
Ffs22 · 10/11/2024 13:30

Keep your door locked at all times? Who doesn’t do this anyway?? Get inside bolts/ latches as extra security. If she has a key get it back or get locked changed.
Leave something very embarrassing out on show( as long as kids aren’t around)

OriginalUsername2 · 10/11/2024 13:35

When she asks why the doors are locked I would tell her that she made you both realise that anyone could walk in without you knowing about it.

As an aside, having been watching crime documentaries all year I would say don’t assume you are any safer with a dog or that the dog is safe from people just for being a big dog.

LatteLady · 10/11/2024 13:37

MrsSkylerWhite · 10/11/2024 13:25

Does anybody actually say Big Boy? 🤣

She rang me not long after and almost wet herself on the phone telling me... the call was further enhanced by her DH, heavy breathing and sounding like he had the most horrendous chest infection. Apparently his DM always called ahead after that to see if it was convenient!

Kelwar · 10/11/2024 13:40

OriginalUsername2 · 10/11/2024 13:35

When she asks why the doors are locked I would tell her that she made you both realise that anyone could walk in without you knowing about it.

As an aside, having been watching crime documentaries all year I would say don’t assume you are any safer with a dog or that the dog is safe from people just for being a big dog.

That is true.. knowing our dog he’d happily let them in with the offering of a bone.. he’s a lab so food is always an incentive to overlook crime!!

OP posts:
Vaxtable · 10/11/2024 13:41

If it’s not your norm the. Get the key back or change the locks

GrumpyPanda · 10/11/2024 13:42

Catza · 10/11/2024 11:53

You don't get to tell me or my family how to live our lives. We are not exactly barging in on you so you don't get to say what is and isn't nonsense about how we do things.

You're free to live your life however you damn well please. However you're telling other people:
People who don’t like it, don’t give out their keys,
then get all huffy when it's explained to you that it's perfectly possible to both exchange keys AND keep a respectful distance.

LookItsMeAgain · 10/11/2024 13:46

rockstep · 10/11/2024 08:06

Change the locks! Why does she even need a key?

Got it in one.

She doesn't need a key - get yourself a lock box that you can set a combination to and mount it to your wall.

The only person (by the sounds of it) that gave her a key would be your husband. Why did he do that? Did he do that without consulting with you about it?

What I would do is change the barrel in the front door and I'd sneakily update the key on yours and your husband's key rings. When she tries to access the house you can raise it with her why she believes she has the right to enter your home uninvited and unannounced. (answer - she doesn't, and there isn't any other answer to that question).

This is a hill I would die on and I wouldn't have anyone outside of the residents of your home having a key to your home.

Cherrysoup · 10/11/2024 14:21

Kelwar · 10/11/2024 12:54

Our dog is quite territorial.. I don’t think anyone would get beyond the porch door.. he scares our friends when they come over so you’d have to be pretty hardy just to walk through the door and dice with your fate! Lol

Which could lead to other issues, somebody walks in, dog gets out, god forbid has an accident, or someone walks in, dog attacks and you are liable.

Or, as in my aunt’s case, a stranger on the phone was pranked by a friend and just walked into her house, she nearly had a heart attack. Lock your doors!

GabriellaMontez · 10/11/2024 14:24

Yanbu.

I appreciate some families are like this.

But yours isn't. And it's very odd that she's just started doing this after 20 years.

Kelwar · 10/11/2024 14:41

GabriellaMontez · 10/11/2024 14:24

Yanbu.

I appreciate some families are like this.

But yours isn't. And it's very odd that she's just started doing this after 20 years.

Yes I think that’s what I’m finding a bit odd

OP posts:
Catza · 10/11/2024 15:51

GrumpyPanda · 10/11/2024 13:42

You're free to live your life however you damn well please. However you're telling other people:
People who don’t like it, don’t give out their keys,
then get all huffy when it's explained to you that it's perfectly possible to both exchange keys AND keep a respectful distance.

I was clearly talking about my family there.

JWKD · 13/11/2024 09:28

I would just say I'm afraid of home invaders. It happens. Then lock the door.

JFDIYOLO · 14/11/2024 15:06

I think the solution is 'sorry darling I think we're going to have to give up sex. I keep thinking every little noise will be your mum opening the bedroom door and walking in on us in the middle.'

Kelwar · 14/11/2024 18:15

JFDIYOLO · 14/11/2024 15:06

I think the solution is 'sorry darling I think we're going to have to give up sex. I keep thinking every little noise will be your mum opening the bedroom door and walking in on us in the middle.'

🤣🤣 he’ll have that door bolted before the know it!!!

OP posts:
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