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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not visit my parents again?

58 replies

Youcanbuymeflowers · 27/12/2025 10:08

Left home at 18 and have never lived there since. I’m now in my 40s with DH and DC. My mum is extremely controlling, always has been. Very overprotective helicopter parent with very right wing views. She has rigid house rules that apply to everyone, including us and the kids: we’re only allowed to use one bathroom, can’t take drinks out of the kitchen unless they’re in plastic cups, and there’s no privacy—if DH and I try to have a private conversation she interrogates us until we explain. She constantly monitors what everyone is doing, comments on behaviour, corrects the children, and insists we all sit in one room because she’s anxious if people move around the house. It feels like sitting in a waiting room, not a home. She has expressed views in the past that she doesn't like my husband and that she thinks we judge her because our lifestyle is very different to hers - we are a lot more left wing. We give money to charities and she has told us she thinks that if we have enough money to waste then she will give my sibling more - which she followed by giving us £40k of house deposit, but giving my brother £80k. She has no idea what we give to charity as this is personal to us and we don't discuss finances.

When we are visiting she’s very on edge, talks constantly, repeatedly asks if everyone is OK, and won’t allow quiet or rest. Our autistic DC finds this overwhelming and dysregulating. Despite her insisting her home is “relaxing,” it really isn’t, and I’ve tried explaining this—dad dismisses it as “that’s just mum.”

My parents refuse to visit us (we live 4 hours away) and haven’t been to our home in 6 years. Mum says she won’t ever travel and frames everything as my fault (“you moved away,” “you chose to live far away”). When we don’t visit, she tells others “you didn’t come to see us.”

After Christmas and years of this, I feel drained and anxious at the thought of visiting again. The long travel, staying over, lack of psychological safety, constant control, and impact on DC makes it feel not worth it. I've always tried to be the nice child and put my family before myself, but I just don't think I have the energy to do it anymore and quite frankly my mum feels like a toxic person.

Am I being unreasonable for not wanting to visit again simply because I don’t want to? At any time of year, let alone Christmas? I know mum will make me out to be the bad guy if I do this.

Thanks if you got this far!!!!

OP posts:
PennyLaneisinmyheartandmysoul · 27/12/2025 10:10

Sounds stressful! Put the ball in her court, make the invitation to your home for Christmas, if they turn it down (which sounds they will!) they can’t say you wouldn’t see them over Christmas!

Floatingdownriver · 27/12/2025 10:11

If you were to view her through the same lens as your autistic child, how would you act with her? This might help…

Floatingdownriver · 27/12/2025 10:12

Ps.spare the rest of you family and at best visit her on Boxing Day on you own.

Helpwithdivorce · 27/12/2025 10:12

Can you stay in a hotel? Then you can just pop in for lunch or dinner. Or even go out to a restaurant. Then it wouldn’t be so difficult.
The rigidity and inability to relax and the fact that your own child is autistic makes me think your mum is neurodivergent also

PomandersandRedRibbon · 27/12/2025 10:15

It sounds awful op !
Btw people more in the right of politics are also people who give to charity and many people on the left don't....it's not a thing for either side ?
I'm in the middle but my friends who are the most generous are on the right not the left

Aside from that....don't go op and id be explicit as to why and be honest. Then she can chose to modify her behaviour and be more relaxed or not and not see you. If she doesn't know then she can't do anything about it.

However it's not something id put up with.

Youcanbuymeflowers · 27/12/2025 10:18

PomandersandRedRibbon · 27/12/2025 10:15

It sounds awful op !
Btw people more in the right of politics are also people who give to charity and many people on the left don't....it's not a thing for either side ?
I'm in the middle but my friends who are the most generous are on the right not the left

Aside from that....don't go op and id be explicit as to why and be honest. Then she can chose to modify her behaviour and be more relaxed or not and not see you. If she doesn't know then she can't do anything about it.

However it's not something id put up with.

Sorry thanks. I didn't want to make it a political post. I was just trying to find a way to describe the vibe that my mum and I are very different. It doesn't really fuss me who thinks what, but for my mum she sees it as a big problem that my husband and are how we are.

OP posts:
Youcanbuymeflowers · 27/12/2025 10:20

Helpwithdivorce · 27/12/2025 10:12

Can you stay in a hotel? Then you can just pop in for lunch or dinner. Or even go out to a restaurant. Then it wouldn’t be so difficult.
The rigidity and inability to relax and the fact that your own child is autistic makes me think your mum is neurodivergent also

I have wondered if she is autistic/ND.

OP posts:
PennyLaneisinmyheartandmysoul · 27/12/2025 10:21

Floatingdownriver · 27/12/2025 10:11

If you were to view her through the same lens as your autistic child, how would you act with her? This might help…

Is that the new mn way of the atypical “have you considered she is autistic too?”….

Youcanbuymeflowers · 27/12/2025 10:22

PennyLaneisinmyheartandmysoul · 27/12/2025 10:10

Sounds stressful! Put the ball in her court, make the invitation to your home for Christmas, if they turn it down (which sounds they will!) they can’t say you wouldn’t see them over Christmas!

Yes we invite them many times and she always declines because she point blank refuses to travel.

OP posts:
Mischance · 27/12/2025 10:30

I could put up with a fair few foibles for a gift of £40K!!!
She is who she is. Never visiting again is a bit extreme.
My in laws were totally eccentric .... you simply cannot imagine! ... and right wing. We kept visits to a minimum but never stopped contact. That would have been wrong and a bad example to our children .... it was also a lesson to them in tolerance and an opportunity to discuss political differences.
We all have to tolerate the foibles of those around us.

Thepeopleversuswork · 27/12/2025 10:33

Honestly I wouldn’t put my family through that if it were me. Go and spend an hour with them on Boxing Day. Spare your DH and DCs.

Daygloboo · 27/12/2025 10:39

Floatingdownriver · 27/12/2025 10:11

If you were to view her through the same lens as your autistic child, how would you act with her? This might help…

Yes your mum sounds like she might have a ND. It's a bit sad really.

Daygloboo · 27/12/2025 10:41

Youcanbuymeflowers · 27/12/2025 10:20

I have wondered if she is autistic/ND.

Im sure she is

Glennponder · 27/12/2025 10:43

I have very little time for those who weaponise money
She sounds awful
Protect your dc from this behaviour

MyLimeGuide · 27/12/2025 10:45

Go on your own next time, she's your mum not theirs u dont need to put your husband and kids through it

PomandersandRedRibbon · 27/12/2025 10:46

@Mischance there is a big difference between foibles and going into a mentally and physically restrictive environment where you have to remember the extreme rules.
That's unfair to ask anyone to do.

I wouldn't expect my DC to visit me if I made them all hop on one leg.

Re difference in political views isn't foibles that is a healthy democracy.

Youcanbuymeflowers · 27/12/2025 10:55

Glennponder · 27/12/2025 10:43

I have very little time for those who weaponise money
She sounds awful
Protect your dc from this behaviour

They lied about it too. They only told me the truth when I questioned how my sibling could afford such an expensive first home (because mum being the open book that she is had told me in detail about his mortgage rates, amount he was borrowing, what savings he'd accrued himself etc, what properties he was viewing... then suddenly a few days later he'd secured a house 40k over budget and it eventually came to light that they were giving sibling more than me).

I think my mum ultimately has a problem that I'm not the child she raised, because I flew the nest as soon as I could and carved my own life.

OP posts:
fashionqueen0123 · 27/12/2025 10:58

Youcanbuymeflowers · 27/12/2025 10:55

They lied about it too. They only told me the truth when I questioned how my sibling could afford such an expensive first home (because mum being the open book that she is had told me in detail about his mortgage rates, amount he was borrowing, what savings he'd accrued himself etc, what properties he was viewing... then suddenly a few days later he'd secured a house 40k over budget and it eventually came to light that they were giving sibling more than me).

I think my mum ultimately has a problem that I'm not the child she raised, because I flew the nest as soon as I could and carved my own life.

Shame your brother didn’t give you 20k of it to make it fair!

I wouldn’t visit after what you have described. I’m intrigued to know how she keeps people in one room though! When we’re at my family or friends people are naturally moving around ? Especially the kids!!

Cat1504 · 27/12/2025 10:58

Happy to slag your mum off on here ….and yet you equally happily took 40k from her for your house purchase🙄

Driftingawaynow · 27/12/2025 10:59

You just don’t have to engage with this op, it sounds hideous. Find a way that works for you, it may end up being a zoom call if she won’t budge. Being nd is not an excuse to control and make others uncomfortable

LightUpLavender · 27/12/2025 10:59

It sounds toxic as anything OP. I’d scale things back, visit on my own, stay in an hotel etc. It sounds to me like your mother dosnt really want you there, if she was to be entirely honest. From what you say she sounds neurodiverse but never recognised or diagnosed. I have the same with my dad and those behaviours get no better with age. Just more entrenched, more toxic.

Mrsclausemunchingonamincepie · 27/12/2025 11:01

Haven't seen my dm since 2012. Neither have my dc. Our mh is better for it.
Def can recommend going nc..

popupandsayhi · 27/12/2025 11:04

Cat1504 · 27/12/2025 10:58

Happy to slag your mum off on here ….and yet you equally happily took 40k from her for your house purchase🙄

I give my DD money, doesn’t mean I own her and she has to slavishly follow my opinion and choices. I’m glad she’s her own person!

EchoedSilence · 27/12/2025 11:05

Did you refuse the 40k?

Eyeshadow · 27/12/2025 11:19

YANBU

I wonder how long you stay when you do visit.

If it was me and I didn’t want to go NC, then I’d go for a couple hours max or meet her outside somewhere.

My mum doesn’t allow anyone in her home and so we’ve always met outside somewhere - go for a walk, garden centre, shopping mall, museum, chips in the car etc - it works well because then she’s less in control and we can leave earlier than planned.

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