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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

I’m pregnant but don’t want to tell my parents because my mum is so judgmental

64 replies

TheNewCat · 25/12/2025 20:19

I’m currently pregnant with our third child, and we’re back in the UK for Christmas. I live in Santa Barbara with my American husband and our two boys, 8 and 6. We’ve been here for eight years and have built a life we love, with good jobs, a house, friends, a community. The boys are happy and thriving. This is what they know, not the UK.

Visiting my parents is emotionally exhausting, and this trip has been especially hard. My mum is extremely judgmental. She criticises everything, how I parent, what the kids eat, how I discipline them, even small everyday things. She has joked repeatedly over the years that I’m a “terrible mother,” which has made me anxious about nearly everything I do around her. Honestly, I don’t even want to tell her I’m pregnant yet. It’s still early days, but my bump is slowly showing. I’ve been trying to hide it with loose clothing and pretending to sip wine at dinners, just to avoid her criticism or subtle digs.

This Christmas is particularly tricky because it’s the boys’ first time here in winter. We normally visit between April and October, so they aren’t used to the cold. We’ve been out a lot for walks, which they’ve enjoyed, but they’ve occasionally mentioned that it’s cold, just small, innocent comments. My mum immediately called them “spoilt”.

She also complains that the boys have American accents and says I’ve “failed” to give them any British culture. Nothing I do seems enough. She criticises the smallest things, how they use cutlery, how they greet people, the schools they attend, even what they eat for breakfast. Even innocent comments like asking for a jacket or saying it’s chilly get framed as “spoilt” or “disrespectful.”

I’ve even had a miscarriage around this time last year and I didn’t want to tell them about it. It’s not that I didn’t want their support, it’s that I didn’t want to be judged, criticised, or made to feel I’d done something wrong.

Growing up, I went to boarding school and felt abandoned, which left long-lasting scars. I grew up very very privileged but also with a lot of lingering issues. I’ve only recently started therapy to process feelings of inadequacy and rejection. I’ve always been seen as the “failure” compared to my three siblings, who I get on very well with. They seem to manage our parents without the same anxiety or judgment, which makes me feel isolated. I love my siblings and we are close, but it’s hard not to feel like I’m the one constantly being scrutinised.

The emotional weight has been overwhelming. Most days I’ve spent trying to hold myself together for the boys and my husband. This is kind of normal when visiting my parents, but pregnancy hormones make me more emotional and sensitive, and everything feels amplified.

A few days ago, during dinner, my mum launched into a full lecture about how “dangerous” it is raising kids in America, politics, school shootings, healthcare, and said we should “put family first” by moving back to the UK. She even mentioned houses she’s found in Surrey, saying we would “see sense one day.” My dad added that life would be easier in England and that we’re “making it unnecessarily hard” for ourselves. I tried to explain that the boys are happy, safe, and thriving here, but nothing I said mattered. I ended up just leaving it and letting them have their say.

My husband helps me navigate all of this as best he can. He hates coming to see my parents, he finds the constant criticism exhausting, but he does it because he cares about me and wants us to try, at least for the sake of family relationships. He supports me emotionally during arguments, helps buffer the kids from criticism, and reminds me that it’s not my fault my parents behave this way. Even with him, the tension is exhausting and the sadness feels constant.

Even outside big arguments, the micro criticisms make every day stressful. Little things, sideways comments about how the boys eat their food, jokes about my “bad choices,” sighs at the way we do things, make me feel like I’m constantly under a microscope. She says we’ve become to America and hates how American her grandkids are. Apparently it makes her very sad. The boys notice the tension too, and I worry about how it will affect them. I feel guilty for exposing them to it. They absolutely adore their grandparents and they have a good time with them, my parents do love them boys and make the effort I guess maybe it’s just me that’s the issue.

I love my parents and want the boys to have a relationship with them, but I also need to protect my mental health and my family’s happiness. I’m torn between wanting to share the joy of this pregnancy and shielding myself and my family from unnecessary stress and criticism.

AIBU for wanting to keep my pregnancy to myself for now? Or am I overreacting and should I just tell them and accept that this is how they are?

Has anyone else had judgmental parents who make it impossible to share good news or feel relaxed around them? How do you cope with sadness, anxiety, and constant judgment while still trying to maintain a relationship?

OP posts:
SoftBalletShoes · 26/12/2025 09:18

There are so many parents in the world who are pretty horrible in some way to their children, even if it doesn't rise to the level of abuse. I don't have kids, but I simply cannot understand parents who criticise their children this way. You grew them, nurtured them, saw them grow. Half of them IS you. I had a very critical father, and I know so many other people who have critical parents. I simply do not understand how people can criticise their own children so much.

I do wonder if it's some kind of weird, fucked-up projection thing. If the parent deep-down dislikes themselves, I wonder if the endless criticism is really an outer expression of their inner critical voice that talks to themselves. And their child is a target because they are subconsciously seeing their child as themselves. If so, constantly criticising their child may even provide psychological relief. There must be something this weird going on, because it's such irrational behaviour.

Whatever's going on, it's something deeply disturbed, because it's unnatural to be so needlessly critical of your own children, imo. We're wired to adore our children, not to look at them and see a mass of flaws. Unless that's what these critical parents see when they look in the mirror...

Sorry you have such difficult parents, OP. 💐

PersephonePomegranate · 26/12/2025 09:49

Your mother is horrible, OP! Sounds like you've moved away for a very good reason. Keep it yourself and enjoy your lovely family life away from this toxic bullshit.

The excuse of a small baby makes the perfect excuse not to come back snd subject yourself to the abuse any time soon.

Purpl · 26/12/2025 10:12

The best advice given ti me by a much younger colleague at work whi had only recently left uni when i was being bullied by another colleague was what would you tell your children to do if they were in that situation. It really brought me clarity.
dont know of you are atcually stsying with them but next time stay for less time and in a separate hotel. Tell them you going to Edinburgh york lindon wherever during your trip to show your boys more of uk and do it especially if you have cone over for a holiday x

FeistyFrankie · 26/12/2025 10:35

Your mother sounds very controlling and all the digs and criticisms seem designed to paint your entire life in a negative light. The fact they want you to move back to the UK is also telling. You're not following their script for you, and they hate that. So they are punishing you, bullying you, with the expectation that eventually it'll wear you down to the point that you cave in and give them what they want.

Parents like this don't change. If you DID move back, they might play nice for a brief time - but then they'll slip back into their old, controlling, hyper-critical ways. This is who they are. They drain you. They upset you. They put you and your family down.

I think it's great that you're having therapy. Keep doing that. I also think you need to tail off the visits. Skip a year. Lengthen out the visit times, and if they ask - be honest and tell them that all they do is criticise, and you're sick of hearing it. I'm guessing you don't actually tell them how their words make you feel? This would be worth exploring in therapy too. Finding your voice, standing up for yourself.

But whether or not you choose to address your issues with them directly, you have a responsibility to your DH and children to protect them from their toxicity. So put some distance in place. None of you deserve to be treated in the way you have described.

Sunshineo · 26/12/2025 11:07

We have this with my family. We don’t have the distance to separate us but I’m very protective of my children and my mental health. We are very low contact and news is shared only if they need to know. I don’t need their opinion or judgement so I would inform them of the pregnancy but nothing more.

Your children are more important than your parents. Don’t let them be sat in therapy in twenty years time talking about the same struggles.

Congratulations on your pregnancy.

MrsFruitbat · 26/12/2025 11:10

It seems that your mother is dominating and is deliberately making comments (critiscisms) to upset you . And she is succeeding .She would like you to return to the UK under the guise of good advice and being the best thing but actually so that she can control and influence you more and maybe even to unsettle and break up your family .
My own mother was like this and my whole life I longed for her love and approval .And I would have done anything to get them .She wanted to control and dominate me including my thoughts and opinions . She was manipulative in what she said and did under the guise of being a good person who knew best and had a valid point of view .
When she died I was relieved although I loved her enormously and she was always near the centre of my life .
It is only now after she had been dead 20 years that I can see how truly toxic she was. And it was deliberate . She resented that I had an independent and happy life away from her .And her advice was truly harmful . She was elegant all her life and appeared loving on the surface .
You are imagining that she has the power to cut you out of the family .But you can keep your feelings hidden and remain connected to your siblings .
I think it would be dangerous to be honest because she would use anything you say to manipulate you and suck you in closer again.

Miranda65 · 26/12/2025 11:16

So don't tell them, and also spend less time with them. You live in a different country, for goodness sake, this should be very easy to do!
Use the choices you have and be responsible for those choices.

TheShiningCarpet · 26/12/2025 11:43

Be careful that you are not telling yourself the kids want and,need a relationship with her because you are just repeating everything you have done to be accepted by her - history repeating itself. Why would you want your children to have a relationship with someone who is manipulative and frankly nasty? Break free! You dont have to keep to keep trying to get her love, hard as it is to realise this, she can't give you anything more or different. So craft a dynamic that is safe for you and your family. I'm sorry, it's hard.

Sartre · 26/12/2025 11:47

Stay in the US where you have a lovely life and don’t have to put up with your arsehole parents criticising your every move. There’s absolutely no point in putting yourself through this.

firstofallimadelight · 26/12/2025 12:06

You have three options if you want things to change
1, Tell her/call her out every time. “Did you mean that to sound rude?” “Yes you often say I’m a failure, luckily not everyone agrees with you “ “ don’t call my children spoilt it’s rude” She will get use to you calling her out and start to think before she speaks.
2, make the situation more manageable, don’t stay with her stay in a hotel or with a sibling and do visits/ meet ups.
3, Reduce contact so you don’t have to deal with it as much
But yes leave it a few weeks and then mention the pregnancy.

blubberyboo · 26/12/2025 12:26

Time you started treating her the same. Everytime she opens her mouth say some judgey or contradict her.

Mix56 · 26/12/2025 17:33

Can you not say, “my boys love you so much, can you please stop criticizing , them, me, our lives ?
I’m finding coming home so sad, I just want to be happy, & enjoy being together.”
As you leave, say oh btw I’m pregnant, due in X, I didnt tell you as you just rip me apart”

Darkdiamond · 26/12/2025 17:38

I guarantee your parents are critical of your parenting because deep down they know you are a better parent than they were. Stay in the US and enjoy your life. You would probably consider moving home if they weren't so horrible. This all comes from a place of control. Go low contact and do not move home. Your mother is angry you've escaped her clutches.

NadjaofAntipaxos · 26/12/2025 17:55

It's because they view you parenting very differently from them as your rejection of their self-proclaimed wisdom and excellent life choices and their egos can't handle that. They sound like insufferable, judgemental snobs. They probably look down on most other people, (other than a few they suck up to in a dreadful social climbing-type of way). So it's no surprise they look down on you too.
Please, please don't consider moving back to be under their control. You will always be in the wrong about something.
And your boys are still little now. As they get older they really won't want to see their grandparents and will wise up to them being the dreadful people they are. Why put them through more contact with such horrible people?

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