Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To ask my SIL to not bring her “therapy dog” to our family BBQ?

492 replies

AshNice · 31/07/2025 11:24

SIL has recently started bringing her spaniel everywhere and now refers to it as a “therapy dog” (not officially trained or registered - just something she says helps with her anxiety apparently). For clarity - this is a bouncy, not-particularly-well-behaved spaniel, not a calm guide dog type.

We’re hosting a family BBQ on Saturday, just something small in the garden with immediate family. I told her I’d prefer she didn’t bring the dog, as we’ll have three toddlers running around (mine, my sister’s and my cousin’s) and not everyone is keen on animals around food and little ones.

She got really upset and sent a long message saying I’m “disrespecting mental health” and that I’m making her feel excluded. She says if the dog’s not welcome, then she’s not coming either, which feels a bit… much?

I feel like I should add - this dog came to a family birthday in May, jumped up on the table, and ate sausages straight off the serving platter. It also chased the kids and kept trying to nose into the nappy bin. She laughed it off at the time and said “oh he’s just excitable.”

It’s not that I hate dogs. I like dogs. But this one is a bit much and I feel like I’m being forced to host someone’s pet out of politeness when it genuinely makes things harder. It’s not a public event, it’s just our back garden and a few burgers.

DH thinks I’m being a bit rigid and should just let it go to avoid drama, but I don’t think it’s fair that I have to stress about a dog around toddlers and food just so someone else can feel comfortable.

AIBU? Or is this just what we do now - dogs come everywhere no questions asked?

OP posts:
HAL200 · 31/07/2025 12:40

Out of interest, is she a Millennial?

stayathomer · 31/07/2025 12:40

Did you have a similar post to this recently? Because if not it’s definitely come up before! As someone with a crazy spaniel I can’t think of anything worse than having one at a barbecue!! I don’t think I’d be as ready to jump on her as some are on this thread, no need for a rift over it

sillymsmoppet · 31/07/2025 12:41

Your sister is delulu

YANBU

What is it with entitled idiots these days?

Imisscoffee2021 · 31/07/2025 12:42

Because its not a trained service animal then I agree with you, and you've not made the boundaries, she has. She is unable to go anywhere without her dog and therefore she has made some places no go's for herself (though those will be very few and far between as we live in a very accepting time for dogs in places).

Makes me think of my brother and his fur babies, when my baby was crawling and he hadn't met him yet we asked if the huge (lovely) retriever and the very bouncy (lovely) spaniel could be in the kitchen at first (which was where they spend alot of time anyway as the TV is in there and a sofa), and if we could just have the front room (a sort of front room used for best situation so dogs rarely in there) for my baby to crawl about in and meet his uncle etc etc. You'd think I'd have asked him to euthanise the dogs! Apparently it's not fair on them, to be left out of a 30 minute family event like that. So I ended up holding a squirming baby grumpy as he wanted to crawl while stopping a jumping spaniels claws scratch him and a lolling retriever tongue licking him constantly, was mayhem and chaos and uncle barely interacted with nephew.

TitaniasAss · 31/07/2025 12:42

'Oh I'm sorry you won't be here, you'll be missed. However, I know you don't expect us to prioritise your lovely dog over the children. See you soon.

Passive aggressive? Yep. 🤣

I love dogs and have two of them, but I can't abide poorly trained animals, particularly around children.

sillymsmoppet · 31/07/2025 12:42

thestudio · 31/07/2025 12:31

How serious are her mental health issues?

Although the dog sounds infuriating and I completely get how stressful it will be for you, I think I'd base my response on the above.

How can a crazy bouncy untrained thieving spaniel be a therapy dog? She's made that one up for sure.

KoalaBlue1 · 31/07/2025 12:43

Her dog sends your ‘anxiety level’ through the roof on these occasions.
Your Mental Health matters too.

AnneLovesGilbert · 31/07/2025 12:43

Cheeky mare. And I’d have no time for DH being a wet blanket. He’d rather upset you than her, he needs to have a think about why that is.

“Okay SIL, catch up another time” and don’t engage further.

luckylavender · 31/07/2025 12:43

Ask your DH whether his sister or the toddlers are more important.

RampantIvy · 31/07/2025 12:44

"We are happy to host guests with well behaved dogs who don't try and steal the food or chase the children, which your badly behaved dog did last time and spoiled our barbecue. If you can't control your dog then please keep it on a lead. Your "mental health" needs don't trump the safety of our children or the enjoyment of our guests who don't want to fight off a badly behaved dog to enjoy their food"

tillyandmilly · 31/07/2025 12:44

Not the dog’s fault - its the owner can’t control her dog jumping on the table etc - training is the key - She will have to pay the price of not training the dog - the dog should be able to sit and socialise without running amok getting into nappy bins - jumping on the table, chasing your kids around etc -

Redhairandhottubs · 31/07/2025 12:45

Could you compromise and say she can bring him if she keeps him on a lead and under control?

Imisscoffee2021 · 31/07/2025 12:46

TitaniasAss · 31/07/2025 12:42

'Oh I'm sorry you won't be here, you'll be missed. However, I know you don't expect us to prioritise your lovely dog over the children. See you soon.

Passive aggressive? Yep. 🤣

I love dogs and have two of them, but I can't abide poorly trained animals, particularly around children.

I love dogs too but I've found since having a child there's alot of people who have way more patience for untrained dogs than children being children.

My brothers favourite phrase is "your choice" or he acts like its a pain and I'm being a diva if I decline meeting him at a restaurant at 6pm with my toddler as that's bath time and he won't want to sit for two hours over a meal anyway, yet when he complains he never has a holiday abroad because he has dogs to love and care for he cant see that's a choice too 😆

WigglesMadness · 31/07/2025 12:46

Sounds like your husband just wants an easy life and giving in to his sister seems the easiest option to him.

Of course he should have your back on this.

Radioundermypillow · 31/07/2025 12:46

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

AdoraBell · 31/07/2025 12:46

Your DH can deal with this, either explain it’s not appropriate to bring the dog or he can stop the dog chasing DCs, stop it taking food and stop it jumping.

His family, his responsible.

UpDo · 31/07/2025 12:47

I wouldn't be offering compromise options, because they rely on the other person being reasonable.

You don't want to be put in a position where you need to have words with a guest, or throw them out.

TitaniasAss · 31/07/2025 12:47

thestudio · 31/07/2025 12:31

How serious are her mental health issues?

Although the dog sounds infuriating and I completely get how stressful it will be for you, I think I'd base my response on the above.

Regardless of this, I would still put the children first. Toddlers and dogs are a recipe for disaster, especially if it's a dog not used to children.

AshNice · 31/07/2025 12:48

Thanks so much everyone - genuinely appreciate the replies and the reassurance. I was starting to feel like I was being a bit heartless but it’s really helped to see that others would feel the same.

I ended up texting her something simple like “Sorry we won’t see you this time - hope to catch up soon,” and just left it there. She’s read it but hasn’t responded, which is probably for the best. If she wants to sulk, that’s on her.

For a bit more context - she only started calling the dog a “therapy dog” about 6 months ago after she saw something on TikTok, and now brings him literally everywhere. Supermarkets, hair appointments, her Pilates class (not even joking). He’s a sweet dog in theory, but he’s constantly jumping up, barking at birds, and begging for food. He once weed on my MIL’s hallway rug and she just said “oops, anxiety!” like that explained it.

I really don’t think she’s doing the dog any favours either - he clearly has zero boundaries and is completely overstimulated most of the time.

I would absolutely understand if this were a properly trained support dog or a genuine medical need - but I just can’t see how “my dog keeps me calm” automatically means he gets an invite to everything. Especially when there are going to be toddlers, open food, and a paddling pool involved.

DH did try the whole “can’t you just compromise?” angle last night, but I pointed out that we did try that before - and it resulted in the dog nicking a cheeseburger and sticking his head in the trifle. So no, I think I’m done compromising.

Anyway, thanks again - some of the replies had me howling (the sausage monster comment will live in my head forever). Much needed.

OP posts:
notacooldad · 31/07/2025 12:48

Here to vocalise my support for Zero Tolerance for Shit Dog Owners
As an owner of three muppet dogs im here to show support.

Mine would be kept at home when there is a bbq. They know not to steal food but there would so much tasty food smelling good to them and lots of people around , their mood would be heightened so why put temptation there and then have to tell them off. Its not fair.

UpDo · 31/07/2025 12:50

notacooldad · 31/07/2025 12:48

Here to vocalise my support for Zero Tolerance for Shit Dog Owners
As an owner of three muppet dogs im here to show support.

Mine would be kept at home when there is a bbq. They know not to steal food but there would so much tasty food smelling good to them and lots of people around , their mood would be heightened so why put temptation there and then have to tell them off. Its not fair.

Yes, it seems a lot to expect of a dog who, through no fault of its own, hasn't been properly trained.

Especially with multiple toddlers present. That's not going to be a relaxing afternoon.

TitaniasAss · 31/07/2025 12:51

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

You don't think these situations happen?

RhododendronFlowers · 31/07/2025 12:51

ZippyPeer · 31/07/2025 11:31

Here to vocalise my support for Zero Tolerance for Shit Dog Owners

A group I will happily join.

RhododendronFlowers · 31/07/2025 12:52

UpDo · 31/07/2025 12:50

Yes, it seems a lot to expect of a dog who, through no fault of its own, hasn't been properly trained.

Especially with multiple toddlers present. That's not going to be a relaxing afternoon.

Yes, it's not the poor dog's fault. The sister seems just very self absorbed.

PlacidPenelope · 31/07/2025 12:52

I ended up texting her something simple like “Sorry we won’t see you this time - hope to catch up soon,” and just left it there.

Perfect.

Enjoy your bbq on Saturday.