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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Mother in law interfering?

104 replies

Woodenbones198901 · 10/11/2024 10:33

Hi i know this is called Mumsnet but I’m a new dad to a baby girl, who’s absolutely incredible at 12weeks she has been as good as gold and starting sleeping through the night since week 8.. all down to get amazing devoted mum/my wife.

I have a question and I’m in intrigued to see if I am being unreasonable. It’s regarding my mother-in-law

I find my mil to be quite interfering at times, and I feel like she crosses some boundaries. I could be wrong but Im interested in other peoples views on the matter.

My mil has often said she sees my child as “her 3rd child” which I find strange. She loves my daughter which is great but I feel it’s the love of a mother to a baby not a grandmother to a baby, if that makes sense.

Sone things that I find inappropriate

1- she says “nana” constantly to my baby!!! an example and I quote “smile for nana, that’s it for nana, nana, big smiles for nana”. she can’t do an actively or anything without saying “nana” in her face, I counted 48 times once in a 36hour period , I have tried to bring this up in a “jokey” way and she says she’s doing it so she knows who her “nana” is, I think she’s doing it to make sure one of her first words is “nana”. I find that I’m now having to talk to be baby and say mummy and daddy way more than what feels natural/normal just because I will be heartbroken if her first world is “nana” simply because it’s said to her so much! I’m also worried that when my child is showing signs of speaking maybe sounding the letter m/n my mil will mouth “nana” instead “mumma”

2- she snatches and tries to take my child out of my arms.. one occasion was when mil was staying over, it was morning and I got up to change her nappy..I went to go back into our bedroom to have morning cuddles and smiles with my wife, when all of sudden my mil opens her door, arms up takes her out of my arms, takes her straight downstairs to play with her, I was in shock and all I could here downstairs was “nana.. nana” another example but this time I was expecting it and I wasn’t allowing it to happen to me again, we were staying around her house, my baby was having a nap on me, she woke up and was making noises, not properly crying but close to tears, for a few seconds which she does after all her naps because she was hungry, my wife was sitting next to me, I was waiting for my wife to get ready to feed her, my mil jumps up off the sofa arms out “I’ll rock her” I said “no she’s just hungry and wants feeding, I then passed her to my wife who wasnt quite ready to feed but wasn’t getting her snatched from my arms again. She was taken back by this.

3- entitlement! mil bought us a pram which was very generous of her, but I feel she thinks that means she’s entitled to push her whenever it comes out. We visited them last weekend and we went for a walk and my wife used our baby carrier as it’s sometimes easier then pushing a pram and it’s nice to be close to the baby. My mil says “I don’t like the carrier it means I can’t look at her and push her” which annoyed me because I work so i don’t often get to the parenting things like pushing her in a pram, accept on weekends and I thought that if we took the pram that moment would had been taken away from me. We have never got the pram out in her company and her not grab it and push it immediately, got given anyone else the option to push her.

4- always calling to find out how the baby is. We had to take our child to a chiropractor as she had lower back pain. Within 10mins of us coming out she was phoning, I felt like she thinks she’s the third parent! My parents waiting till the next day to ask, I’m quite fortunate that my parents give us space and are not the interfering type. I know it can be harder when it’s the fathers mil that is interfering.

5- on a recent visit to my Mil we arrived late around 7:30pm which happened to be our baby’s nap time mil was taken back and disappointed saying “oh but it’s my time with her” we left our baby in her car seat in the lounge with the visor Down, making it dark for her. Mil was itching to look at her, we said “no she’s sleeping” I also said “ it will mess up our routine if you wake her up” we went back and forth to the car unloading stuff, I heard mil husband saying “don’t do it” then mil comes in to the bedroom and says “she’s awake” mil obsession with her meant she had to open the visor and look at her causing her to wake up. She denies it but it was Blatantly obvious she did.

I was chatting to my wife about it but understandably being her mother she sees nothing wrong with it, but I can’t help but think something isn’t right, I may be making mountains out of mole hills but I’d like to know other people’s opinions on the matter.

Thank you

OP posts:
nildesparandum · 15/11/2024 22:19

Baby sleeps all night because your wife is an amazing mum?
Being an amazing mum has nothing to do with it.My first slept through the the night from 6 weeks old, his brother was exactly the opposite.He would wake up every two hours until four months old.Same mother different baby.
I am beginning to wonder if this thread is real.

Harry12345 · 16/11/2024 01:35

I think it’s totally normal for a grandparent to be eager to hold the baby once per week and to phone after an appointment to find out how the baby is. My mum and mil was the same and I thought it was nice, saying nana to her is normal too. You obviously just don’t want that close of a relationship with her but she seems nice and just sitting, it’s normal for a grandparent to love a grandchild as mum as their child too

BeWittyRobin · 16/11/2024 18:51

Honestly don’t worry, they actually say a baby shouldn’t be in car seat any longer than 2hrs without stopping taking a break and get them out. But she was being closely watched and honestly you can tell when the position is causing breathing difficulties. My no7 child who is 1 next week was poorly when he was about 8 weeks was taking him to drs which is only 5 mins down road and I put him in the front passenger seat, so I could watch him closely and he unfortunately went down hill very fast due to his position in the car seat, it wasn’t slow it was super quick and noticeable, he stopped breathing and was blue lighted to hospital. Thankfully he was fine. I was understandably very worried about him going in his car seat ever again 🙈 they said that, a healthy baby the recommendation of 2hrs is the standard precautionary advice given, but providing they are watched etc and well a little longer is fine. But breaks and not being left alone when still napping after a car journey is fine but not over night sleeping or a regular napping place.

But knowing the recommendations can be very useful I know that when I had my first in 2007 it wasn’t really a thing the 2hr rule I’d never have known with my youngest if someone hadn’t told me. Parenthood is a huge learning curve we never know everything I always look at it, people can give advice and it costs nothing to listen, so hear it and do what you like with it. Act on it or ignore it. (That’s with anything and I’m thinking for the future when your mil says how she did it with your daughter 🙈😂 it will be annoying but all us mums do it at some point not to be annoying or controlling but just because we’ve been there and want to help.🙈) parenthood is hard. You think you crack it then boom they enter another phase and you feel like you are back to square one.

good luck it’s an amazing journey, hard but amazing

eatreadsleeprepeat · 23/03/2025 14:27

You shouldn’t need to communicate boundaries but in this case you have to. Communication now might stop the relationship deteriorating. We stay at the other end of the country so don’t see our grandchild often, when we do I try to follow my daughters lead in style of upbringing, we spend more time at their house when SIL is at work, when he gets in I back off to the kitchen to give them family time and when we have eaten head back to our accommodation. I did love cuddles, and pushing the pram but tried to show some restraint. You need to agree with your wife what matters most and say that. So tell MIL that Sunday tea time and evening are for you three only.

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