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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think visiting DP’s family doesn’t count as a holiday?

510 replies

RhiannonTheFlorist · 10/05/2025 12:54

Been with my partner for 5 years and we have a 2 year old daughter. He is from a country in Central Europe. Every August we go for a week, and every other Christmas (we alternate between my family and his). This Christmas we are due to go there.

Before the baby we would have 2 holidays a year (not including the semi-annual Christmas visit) one to visit his family, and one to a nice resort type place. Since the baby, we can’t afford to do this. The Summer trip and Christmas trip are in the budget, but another holiday on top of that isn’t doable, and we couldn’t get the time off anyway.

I have nothing against his family but the trips to the village my partner grew up in aren’t particularly relaxing for me. We fly into the airport in the capital city, then have a 5 hour train and bus journey to get to his village, and I get motion sickness from buses. We also often have a late flight and end up waiting at the dodgy city train station until early morning when the trains start running and last time I got harassed by beggars on the platform when I was heard speaking English, DP gave them short shrift thankfully but it was still scary. DD is also starting to develop bus motion sickness so I’m dreading that part of the journey.

His family don’t speak any English, which is fine, I shouldn’t expect them too. But their language is notoriously hard to learn (please no comments about me needing to learn it, it’s literally known as one of the hardest languages in the world and I have a toddler and work full-time) and despite my efforts I have really struggle to have conversations with them beyond basic politeness. The past 2 times we’ve been they have pestered DP that I need to hurry up and learn the language. His father is a smoker and alcoholic and the house stinks of smoke, so since the baby we stay with his aunt instead, and DP’s father always argues with DP about it as he gets offended that we won’t bring the baby in his house. Also, the first time we took DD at 4 months she developed a temperature and had to be taken on the bus to the hospital and everyone was talking around me in their own language (doctors, DP and family) and I was distraught not knowing what was going on, having to wait for DP to translate. I’m scared of this happening again. DD is also a picky eater and the village shop is tiny and won’t have any of her ‘safe’ foods.

On the other hand, there are some positives.They are very hospitable and they cook for us etc, we have BBQs and days out in the nearest city (though this does require long bus trips). But in the village there is not much phone signal and once they start drinking and having a laugh I am completely excluded and don’t understand a word that is being said.

I understand that DP needs to maintain a relationship with his family and that I signed up for this when committing to him, but I must admit I’m dying for a proper holiday this Summer where I can relax, beachfront walks, play with DD in the pool etc. Just the 3 of us. I raised the idea to DP of doing this instead as we’re going to his country for Christmas anyway, and he was horrified. He also pointed out that his country gets hot in the Summer (it does, can reach 30 degrees), and therefore it still counts as a sunny holiday. He also points out that going to his country we only pay for flights and spends (probably around £1000 for the 3 of us). I found some lovely all-inclusive for £1800, and we could afford that extra £800 but we couldn’t afford that AND the Summer trip to his country AND the Christmas trip.

I’m tempted to tell him that me and DD will swerve the trip to his country this year, and may invite my sister to come somewhere with me and DD instead. But I’m worried this will upset him and his family who absolutely adore my DD.

AIBU?

OP posts:
HamptonPlace · 13/05/2025 19:43

RhiannonTheFlorist · 10/05/2025 14:41

I know so many people can’t afford to go abroad at all and I should be grateful to travel even if it’s the same destination every time, but I work damn hard for my spare money.

I went to uni and slogged it through unpaid placements in an NHS hospital, and worked my arse off to become a Band 6 in my role and get the pay increase. I get abused, spat on and called every name under the sun by patients and supervise students. I could work a minimum wage job with a lot less stress but then only afford 1 UK trip a year. But instead I work a stressful job with better pay for the quality of life I want us to have as a family. And for me, a nice quality of life includes a nice relaxing abroad holiday once a year and ticking places off the bucket list. I’d love to go to the Greek islands. But all of the holiday budget instantly gets swallowed up by the Hungary trips before it even hits my savings account. We live in an expensive part of the country so despite my hard work (and DH’s), we can’t stretch to 3 trips, so if we continue to do Hungary twice a year we’ll literally never do anything else. And if we have another child and he still insists on Hungary twice a year, god knows what else may end up sacrificed to fund it. Days out, the gym?

Edited

greek islands: don't waste your (limited) days...

LivingDeadGirlUK · 13/05/2025 19:59

I totally get it OP, yes its important your DP sees his family but its also important you get a holiday when you are also working full time. You are looking down the barrel of eternity with no actual holiday, and I totally get why you are so upset.

I would say if he wants to go twice he needs to take one of those trips by himself so you can have a proper family holiday as well. Absolutely do not have another child with him unless he can bring himself to understand that you need a proper break. Stop 'paying into the pot' for the second trip.

Plumnora · 16/05/2025 20:40

rookiemere · 11/05/2025 17:31

Yeah check your privilege OP. Apparently many people would love the opportunity to travel for hours to the middle of nowhere to watch a bunch of people getting drunk and talking in a language you don’t understand. Personally having British relatives that live in the middle of nowhere was bad enough, I would honestly rather stay at home.

Gosh yes, how very thoughtless of me! You're right! How DARE OPs partner (and father of her child) want to see his parents! And the very nerve of his parents wanting to see their granddaughter - who they 'adore'- once, maybe twice a year! I mean, some people?!!! God, what a drain for poor OP!
My sister married a man from Central Europe and goes back a couple of times a year. Her parents in law arent in great health and she knows they so t be here forever. In fact it sounds like an eerily similar situation ; no English, chain smoking, alcoholic FIL... and she finds it hard going. But she also knows nothing's a given and grandparents are on borrowed time- especially in a country where the healthcare system isn't so great.
Time goes quickly and kids grow up quickly. There'll be other opportunities for holidays but as the OP says, she signed up for this. It's fine to resent going - completely understandable- but actually bailing on her partner's family because she doesn't like where he came from reeks of entitlement.

BruFord · 16/05/2025 20:51

@Plumnora But does she need to go on every visit? Saving on her airfare would enable her to gradually save up for another holiday.

Hi family mainly wants to see their son and grandchild, not her. Why doesn’t her DP stick to the current schedule and she accompanies him every other trip, for example?

As I said upthread, my DH has visited the UK twice in the last few years, whereas I’ve been multiple times with/without the children. He’s visiting his parents without me this summer and I’ll see my family without him. Sometimes that’s the best compromise with limited leave and money.

Plumnora · 16/05/2025 21:17

@BruFord no she doesn't have to go but she doesn't want their daughter to go either. It's one week. One week and then back to normal. I'm also wondering why they go in August when air fares are ridiculously expensive.

BruFord · 16/05/2025 21:33

@Plumnora I think everyone posting, regarding of opinion, agrees that they need to find a compromise. And yes, going in August is so expensive!

MoodSwingSet · 16/05/2025 21:53

She said that DP insists they go in August, because a cousin is there

reluctantbrit · 17/05/2025 09:46

@Plumnora my mum is 87, my PIL 86/93.

If I would wait until they die we would never have family holidays, DD is turning 18 this year and will be at uni from September onwards.

Do I miss family - yes but luckily we all realise that annual leave is only limited and some years just one visit is ok. I may go on my own/take DD to see my mum and DH went on his own/with DD without me.
They live too far away from each other to combine a visit and see everyone in one go.

They also made the effort to come to us as they knew that a visit with a small child and all the stuff needed is complex and expensive.

MoodSwingSet · 17/05/2025 09:49

that's the thing - for many people, if they wait until GPs are gone then that would mean no family holidays until kids are teens/adults and not even interested in coming with you. Also what about kids themselves - will they always enjoy the rural Hungarian village twice per year? While they could be discovering the world.

WearyAuldWumman · 17/05/2025 12:31

MoodSwingSet · 16/05/2025 21:53

She said that DP insists they go in August, because a cousin is there

Yes, I think it was to fit in with the school holidays for the sake of the cousin?

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