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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to start limiting contact with my MIL for my 3 kids?

242 replies

clrd · 30/03/2025 20:53

We have three kids—5, 3, and almost 1. My husband works very long hours and earns well, which allows me to be a SAHM (what I’d always wanted to be). Our setup works well: I handle the kids’ schedules, education, health, as well as family visits because if we only saw family when my husband was available, it would eat into our rare family time and mean the kids saw their grandparents much less. It seems to work well with everything except MIL’s visits.

The problem is, the more kids we have, the more overbearing my MIL becomes. She has an opinion on everything. Every visit, she reminds me she doesn’t like the school our eldest goes to (she knows I was the one who researched and chose it). She constantly brings up how I “didn’t breastfeed for long enough” with my youngest, jokingly guesses if I’m pregnant and regularly jokes that it’s time for me to get pregnant again to “keep up the pattern.” When I brush it off, she’ll shake her head and say things like, “Well, you don’t want to leave an awkward gap, do you?” as if our family planning is somehow her decision. She also completely undermines my parenting whenever she visits. If I say it’s bedtime, she’ll immediately counter with, “Oh, don’t be silly! Granny’s still here, they can stay up late.”

When I was pregnant with my youngest, I had horrible morning sickness. One afternoon, MIL was over while I was struggling to get through the day, barely able to keep food down. As I’d been trying to keep 2 toddlers happy all morning, I thought now that their gran is here maybe I’ll sit and relax for a minute. She looked me up and down and said, “Just because you’re pregnant doesn’t mean you can stay on the sofa all day - the kids will think it’s new baby’s fault their mum doesn’t play with them. Also put some make up on before DH gets home - men love with their eyes” all said in a tone as if she’s doing me a favour sharing her advice based on a lifetime of experience and knowledge. I was exhausted, nauseous, and barely holding it together, and I just burst into tears. Instead of apologizing, she just rolled her eyes and muttered, “Oh, it’s just hormones.”

Another time, she made a comment that actually reduced me to tears in front of my kids. The baby had been fussy all morning, I was dealing with a tantrum from my toddler, and my eldest was whining about something minor. I was completely overwhelmed. MIL just sighed dramatically and said, “Maybe if you gave them more time each individually, they wouldn’t act like this.” I just broke. For context, they have all my time. I rarely go anywhere without them and spend all day every day making sure they’re healthy, happy and being developed. Admittedly it’s mainly with all 3 (or now, 2 of them, as the oldest is at school) rather than 1 on 1. I started crying right there while my kids stared at me, and instead of offering any kindness, she just muttered, “Oh, don’t be so sensitive.”

For context, my husband is from a culture where grandparents are much more involved, often even living with their adult children. That’s not how we’ve structured our family, but it explains why MIL sees herself as having a bigger role than I think is appropriate.

My husband is an amazing dad, incredibly supportive, and earns more than enough to provide us with a very comfortable life. We even have a housekeeper, so it’s not like I’m drowning in housework, it’s just that every time MIL is here, I feel constantly judged, criticised, and completely dismissed.

Would I be unreasonable to start limiting contact, even if that means the kids see her less?

OP posts:
Needlenardlenoo · 04/04/2025 17:49

I think you have really gained some insight, OP.

I have met one or two people like you before with very gentle (sheltered?) upbringings, for whom it is a real shocker when they encounter much more combative families where they must assert themselves and be on their guard.

(Although I imagine any inlaw would find MIL a challenge!)

There is a big age gap between you and your husband. That's probably not helping.

I had a different experience. I was brought up.by parents without much emotional intelligence, something I've needed a lot. I taught myself what I needed though and so will you.

Onlyonekenobe · 04/04/2025 18:09

Aw, bless you op. You sound very sweet.

I think the reason she’s getting to you (and I think she knows this, too, which is terrible of her) is because there’s a part of you that questions whether she might be right. It’s normal. You’re young, you’re a young mum, and you’re busy.

Don’t berate yourself for this. You’re allowed to learn on the job (that’s what parenting is!) and you’re also allowed to turn down help from grandparents. The best grandparents are the ones that understand that every child is different and every family is different, that what worked for them won’t work for everyone. And also only to give advice when asked for it! She considers herself the oracle of a single truth. Such a thing simply doesn’t exist.

Shes very arrogant to think she knows best for your children. In your shoes, I’d be turning everything she says into a question: what makes you think that? (wouldn’t bother listening to the answer) Oh, do you think? Oh is that how it was in the 80s and 90s? oh is that what your friends think of their grandchildren? Basically I’d just let her talk and talk - she obvs loves the sound of her own voice - ignore everything she says and just do my own thing. As regards my DC, if she says something you don’t want them taking on board, you correct it there and then in front of her and give not a shit what she thinks of it. You will make mistakes and that’s okay. Know that she made plenty too. It’s important for children to see their parents mess up, take responsibility, fix things and move on. You need to model this for them.

It takes time to find your feet and gain confidence in your mothering. It’ll come. As I tell friends in this situation: with rights come responsibilities. She doesn’t get the right to criticise or correct if she can’t take responsibility for the outcome (which she can’t as she’s not the parent). Let her witter on with her “insights”: they’re meaningless. Just carry on as you are.

Truetoself · 04/04/2025 19:15

hmm maybe I am wrong but you seem to be a person who can’t handle a lot of stress and you like your life simple with not much to do. Why motherhood is challenging when the kids are little is the juggle and the dependency and your DH has taken those pressures off you. You did not enjoy working - why? Was it too stressful dealing with others?
Perhaps you need to work on your self esteem and assertiveness?

Truetoself · 04/04/2025 19:15

I mean you can’t change MIL but you can change the effect it has on you

clrd · 04/04/2025 19:50

@Onlyonekenobe @Needlenardlenoo
Thank you both—really lovely replies and you’ve honestly hit on a lot of what I’ve been feeling. Of course, I am learning on the job and doing everything for the first time (at least with my eldest), like all parents, but I don’t think for a second that MIL is right (and her parenting definitely isn’t what I’d want to mirror based on the things DH’s shared about his childhood). But the way she says things—with such force and this weird confidence—throws me off every time. It’s not that I doubt myself, it’s that I wasn’t raised in a family where people act like this. I grew up with warmth and kindness and support, and this kind of… point-scoring, passive-aggressive tone just feels really foreign to me.

I loved the suggestions—especially turning her comments back on her with stuff like “oh is that what your friends do with their grandchildren?” I’ll definitely try it next time.

@LAMPS1
You’re completely right—it’s actually creepy when I replay some of her comments. At the time, I just freeze or try to move on quickly, but when I think about it calmly, it’s not okay. I’m not her daughter, and she absolutely shouldn’t be speaking to me like this in my own home.

I’ve started putting boundaries in place—no more surprise visits, and DH has backed me on that. It’s a small win but it’s made a huge difference already. I’m also building up the courage to practise a few phrases so I’m not always scrambling for words. “That’s inappropriate and I don’t want to hear it” might become my go-to. It feels clear without being dramatic.

@Truetoself
No offense taken, but I think you might be a bit off the mark. I actually handle stress well—I’m juggling three kids under 5, a household, and a husband who travels for work. That’s not exactly the slow lane. It’s just that I like peace, I like calm, I like people being kind. That doesn’t mean I can’t handle stress, it just means I don’t go looking for drama.

As for work—I didn’t enjoy the job I had before kids because I didn’t find it rewarding. I got no real pleasure from the day to day. Whereas with motherhood, even though it’s definitely more full-on and chaotic, I enjoy it, because I’m spending all day with the little people who are my world. It’s hard, but it’s so rewarding—seeing them grow into lovely little humans makes me feel proud every single day.

I do think I could work on assertiveness though—that’s fair. It’s not about low self-esteem, but I struggle when people are aggressive or sly with their words. I freeze, then spend hours thinking of what I should have said. I’m getting better though, and honestly, this thread is helping more than I can say.

Thanks again to all of you. It honestly feels like I’ve stumbled into the world’s most qualified group chat—sharp, no-nonsense, and somehow more helpful than Google, therapy and three coffees combined. I’m saving half these responses to re-read before her next visit.

OP posts:
Cognacsoft · 04/04/2025 20:10

I’d be tempted to put on a pair of headphones every time your mil is rude.

Realistically though I think mil knows she’s upsetting you and gets a kick out of it.
If she begins a sentence that you know will finish with eg. If you have another baby then trying saying the end of the sentence before mil does. Or sigh loudly and say
‘she’s off again.’

whistlesandbells · 04/04/2025 20:18

Just see her less. Share less. Grey rock.

MrsAga · 04/04/2025 21:44

You’ve had some great advice so far.
I agree you need some stock phrases to use on her. Practice conversations in your head so it doesn’t sound too alien to you.

Reframe her in your head. She’s not some matriarch that you are trying to impress. Think of her as a child that needs educating.

“oh Beryl that’s a bit unkind, we try to practice kindness in this house, do think about your words before saying them out loud”
“that’s an interesting thought, not how we do things here though”
”hmmm, ok”

or just grin at her whilst thinking “can’t wait to tell the MN crew that corker”
or maybe a big MIL bingo card on the fridge that you can enthusiastically tick off every predicted put down she comes out with (maybe just have it in your head)

It'll take time, if you can get one or two practiced retorts in each time, you’ll soon feel better about her comments. Good luck.

Onlyonekenobe · 04/04/2025 21:52

It’s not that I doubt myself, it’s that I wasn’t raised in a family where people act like this. I grew up with warmth and kindness and support

In which case you should just use the language you heard at home growing up!

inthekitchensink · 04/04/2025 22:03

You’ve got this. I think you seem wonderful and your kids & husband are very lucky to have you. You have much more patience than me, I would be pulling my hair out - she sounds dreadful. I know you don’t wish to discuss with your friends as it may come across as speaking against your husband, however, I would gently suggest a good friend or two as a sounding board could be very helpful for you - I’m sure they love you and will help you come up with myriad ways to respond to her vile little comments and I bet you end up feeling a lot better for it.
If not, consider a counsellor, even if it’s under the guise of ‘therapeutic self actualisation’ or some such bullshit if you don’t want to tell him you need somewhere to spew about how toxic his bitch of a mother is- everyone needs a space to vent and come to conclusions about things, and it could help save your sanity.

In conclusion, you’re a saint for putting up with her. And for defending your kids in front of her. But the adrenaline & cortisol firing up when she visits must be decimating your peace of mind and that makes me sad for you 💐

Annoyed123456 · 08/04/2025 13:32

„she glanced at my toddler’s snack and went, “You give them packet snacks??! You know, when DH was little, I made everything from scratch. You should just tell me you’re not coping and I’ll bring over real food for my grandkids, I love them and can’t bear to watch them eat junk. Oh dear! My babies! … etc”“

It will never be good enough for her. It isn’t about what they eat, it is a power trip. My MIL visited and binned food I had made - freshly spaghetti bolognese, broccoli gratin, fruit crumble, etc. Then… went out and bought processed crap so DH and DC had some ‚proper food‘. He doesn’t stand up against it and we are close to divorce.

Hols2024 · 08/04/2025 16:42

I would ask DH if he expects you to be bullied in your own home as that is just how she is and if he would expect his children to put up with that behaviour. It’s also teaching your children bad manners!
I won’t spend time with people that treat me badly I really hope he helps you navigate limiting time with her and continues to help you stop her rude comments. Good luck

MikeRafone · 08/04/2025 18:40

https://vm.tiktok.com/ZNdN6tyDR/

sadly this has been life’s and used

Witchcraftandhokum · 08/04/2025 18:48

I know I'm missing the point of the thread but you've "always" wanted to be a stay at home mum? Really? You never aspired to be anything else?

MikeRafone · 09/04/2025 20:14

Witchcraftandhokum

what did you aspire to be?

Onlyonekenobe · 10/04/2025 18:54

Witchcraftandhokum · 08/04/2025 18:48

I know I'm missing the point of the thread but you've "always" wanted to be a stay at home mum? Really? You never aspired to be anything else?

Wow. That's breathtakingly rude! And shockingly ignorant.

Christmaschildcare · 16/08/2025 22:03

How are you @clrd x

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