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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Mum annoyed because of what I said about ds

123 replies

Doyouknowsurely · 17/01/2026 20:20

I am despairing today. I welcome brutally honest opinions here.

I’m a single parent. I took dc 3 to a large park/play area/walk today and met my niece (4), my parents and my sibling’s in laws. So there was me and two sets of grandparents.

My dc’s dad is involved but for context his parents have died so for DC it is nice he has my sibling’s in laws to be ‘grandparents’ too. My dc refers to them as granny and grandpa as they refer the same to my parents.

Anyway… we (me and my parents) arrive first and went to grab and drink. While sitting and chatting and waiting for nephew and nephew’s grandparents, my mum tries to hug dc. Dc is having none of it and won’t sit on her knee and keeps moving away. I should be clear here that my mum adores dc and both my parents are good to us and they are always buying presents and wanting to see us. But, dc 3 can sometimes be like this, just didn’t want to move off the chair and didn’t want a hug right then. When he’s done this to me I just say oh ok maybe later then? And he’ll either say yes later or just ignore me and carry on with what he’s doing. I was starting to get a bit irritated with mum as she was making an unhappy face and saying please, I want to hug you and dc was getting more annoyed. I said to her just leave him alone a bit he doesn’t like it and he’s said no so just leave it now, he will come to you if you just leave him a bit. I don’t know exactly what tone I said it in, perhaps I was offhand. I just wanted dc to be able to chill and bit and drink his drink. She responded sort of shocked as if she wasn’t doing anything wrong and she just wanted to hug him.

So… then nephew and nephew grandparents arrive. Again for context they’ve met my family a lot and we were all together for Christmas for example. Dc is excited to see his other ‘grandparents’ and immediately runs over and is holding their hands and so on. Obviously this is because they are more of a novelty as they don’t see them as much as my parents.

What happens after that is my mum seems to descend into a huge mood. Very sulky, barely speaking to anyone. chatting when she has to be not really engaging. Kept going off to the toilet for long periods of time. I asked what was wrong, she said nothing but continued to be very off and cold.

Nephew’s grandparents are very energetic (slightly older than my parents by a couple of years). They are very involved with nephew and both are hands on, they’ll basically be a huge help when they are around, you don’t really have to ask anything they just help with ordering food, getting the kids to eat, getting coats on… my parents do help but it’s often if they are in the right frame of mind or aren’t feeling too tired ie you can’t rely on the help if that makes sense. As my mum was being so withdrawn and as they are quite full on, the kids were running and playing with them rather than my mum, it was a perfect storm (so to speak!).

Eventually we get to the cars and say goodbye to them and it all comes out…im awful for telling my mum to back off a bit because it’s made my DC go off her (!!!), i was very cruel, dc isn’t interested in my mum because i said what I said in front of him. My mum was visibly upset so she obviously genuinely feels hurt, however she didn’t really say goodbye to ds properly like she is usually does and instead got in the car (dad came round to the window to say bye to him like usual).

I since messaged her and said it was really unpleasant to behave like that and I hadn’t meant to do anything to put Ds off her, in fact it was the opposite, I was trying to tell her how to best make him want to come to her. She’s now not speaking and neither is my dad by the looks of it either. They’re usually always on their phones in the evening and they’ve not even read my messages. I feel exhausted by it all. Welcome honest opinions on this. I don’t want to hurt my mum but it’s not the first time something like this has happened where I get silent treatment. Sorry for the essay.

OP posts:
NearawayTree · 18/01/2026 10:05

Doyouknowsurely · 17/01/2026 20:45

@MapleOakPine thank you for making me feel less alone. I feel anxious and upset my mum is clearly upset and the fact she won’t even reply to me or call me back means I definitely won’t sleep well tonight!

The behaviour of your mum is cruel. She knows exactly what she is doing. Making you worry. My mum is the same.

NearawayTree · 18/01/2026 10:15

Happyher · 17/01/2026 22:44

Oh for gods sake! It’s her Mum! She sounds like she’s close to her parents, probably relies on them for childminding. Her mum obviously felt jealous and left out. Why does mumsnet always want families estranged.

Why do you think it’s ok for her mum to ignore the OP’s messages and not sort it out. Leaving the OP stressed and in limbo. That is certainly not the kind of parent I want to be.

5128gap · 18/01/2026 10:22

Your mum is behaving very badly. It's extremely immature of her to be 'hurt' by the fickle nature of a 3 year old, as she should have the wisdom to understand that its not personal. Sulking because she's jealous, blaming you with no justification and not saying goodbye to a child is terrible behaviour. As is causing you upset by 'not speaking'. I feel for you that you have a mum who'd do this.
I imagine in time she'll come round, and then you've a choice whether to let it go or tell her it was unacceptable. Neither option is great, as one doesnt address it and the other risks further sulks. So you need to decide which on balance would feel better to you.
Certainly I'd not be doing outings with her and the other GPs again.

OchonAgusOchonOh · 18/01/2026 10:23

ExtraOnions · 17/01/2026 20:29

Just leave them be for the evening, they are upset, give them a bit of space.

I think it’s a bit odd that your DC called your siblings in-laws “grandparents”.. they aren’t grandparents, you parents are.. and I get why they might be a bit jealous.

It's not really that odd. That's what he hears his cousin calling them. Our next door neighbours' dc used to call my dh daddy around 2ish because that's what my dc called him. She eventually stopped.

OP - your mother is acting like a toddler. Treat her like one. You've explained what went on. Don't reward her bad behaviour by running after her.

Snipples · 18/01/2026 13:31

I think it’s lovely that he calls them grandparents. Your mum is being jealous and she chose to sour the afternoon by acting childish and huffing. You’ve explained and apologized, the rest is up to her. I wouldn’t pander further and buy flowers as it’s just justifying her poor behaviour. You’ve done nothing wrong. Children are not there to be forced to do certain things. My inlaws blame me if my DD acts out and say similar things about it being my fault. Believe me if I could influence my daughter the way they think I can, I would! If only 😆

Gahr · 18/01/2026 13:36

ExtraOnions · 17/01/2026 20:29

Just leave them be for the evening, they are upset, give them a bit of space.

I think it’s a bit odd that your DC called your siblings in-laws “grandparents”.. they aren’t grandparents, you parents are.. and I get why they might be a bit jealous.

I don't agree. OP's mother is behaving like a spoiled child and OP shouldn't pander to her one bit.

dottiedodah · 18/01/2026 14:14

I dont think you have done anything wrong here TBH.I think Mum will come round and maybe leave a few days to let it settle.Young children should not be made to cuddle to order(I remember as a child having to kiss all the Uncles and Aunties goodbye and hating it!) Maybe shes feeling a bit under the weather anyway and this was just the last straw!

Doyouknowsurely · 18/01/2026 20:28

Spoken to them. Apparently I’ve alienated my mum because ds heard me telling her to stop asking him for a cuddle and accept he’d said no, so that tuned him against her. This apparently meant he didn’t interact with her for the rest of the day… nothing to do with the fact she was sulking of course!!! I do accept I should have probably said it out of his earshot but to be honest I was getting quite stressed myself with her going on at him.

I also think it’s very shit of her to have ignored me and not turned up this morning to a planned occasion with ds!

OP posts:
Soonenough · 18/01/2026 20:45

She probably felt really embarrassed. First you told her off in front of people . Then your son willingly showed affection and was happy to see your sister's in laws . A bit hurt too. Her behaviour wasn't great and she needs time to kick her wounds . Let her call you when she's ready . In the meantime tell yourself you did nothing wrong and try to move on . Hopefully this is just a blip in your relationship.

quarrybanks · 18/01/2026 22:30

ExtraOnions · 17/01/2026 20:29

Just leave them be for the evening, they are upset, give them a bit of space.

I think it’s a bit odd that your DC called your siblings in-laws “grandparents”.. they aren’t grandparents, you parents are.. and I get why they might be a bit jealous.

I grew up calling my cousins’ grandparents mine for various reasons, I never considered it odd, it was just the way it was and circumstance.

Fairyliz · 18/01/2026 22:52

Well yes your mum is being silly and young children shouldn’t be made to hug if they don’t want to.
However how would you feel if your son called one of your friends mummy and seemed to want to spent more time with her? Would you be all cool and say how lovely he has more people who love him, or would you feel a teeny bit jealous?

TheRuffleandthePearl · 18/01/2026 23:09

Happyher · 17/01/2026 20:46

You’ve unintentionally upset your mum. Best to make up with her. Call on her with DS and flowers or chocolates and she’ll come round

Fuck that. It’s OP’s Mum who should be apologising for being an immature jealous sulky twat. Don’t pander to her little tantrum OP.

TheRuffleandthePearl · 18/01/2026 23:14

youalright · 17/01/2026 21:00

I think its hard because its something that has changed over the generations. Years ago it was seen as rude if a child didn't hug people hello/goodbye etc so they where forced to now its very much if the child says no you step away and leave them alone. Older generations haven't all caught up with this yet

Her parents could be in their 50’s or 60’s for heavens sake - hardly old. And everyone should know the concept of consent and bodily autonomy for kids anyway, it’s hardly new.

youalright · 19/01/2026 07:26

TheRuffleandthePearl · 18/01/2026 23:14

Her parents could be in their 50’s or 60’s for heavens sake - hardly old. And everyone should know the concept of consent and bodily autonomy for kids anyway, it’s hardly new.

Well clearly not hence the issue

8Daphne · 19/01/2026 07:40

Doyouknowsurely · 17/01/2026 20:32

@ExtraOnions this is an interesting perspective, I just thought it was nice he could do that as he’s very close to nephew and obviously nephew calls them that

We had a similar situation, and my parents were somewhat placated when we changed the name of the not-biological 'grandparents' to uncle-grandad and aunty-granny. My parents felt they were the people with the proper honorific, and my kids enjoyed the novelty.

Sterlingrose · 19/01/2026 07:44

It's emotional abuse. On you.

Also on your little child because he didn't want to be hugged, he got to watch everyone get that behaviour off her because he didn't hug her. It won't be long before he connects the dots, and starts hugging her to avoid granny getting angry. Eroding his own boundaries to placate an old woman who should know better.

My mum's like this. My dc are audhd and don't like physical contact. Not from me, not from anyone, unless on their terms. My mum has had to get over it . You did the right thing stepping in and telling her to leave him alone. So what if she's upset. She can learn a boundary.

Sterlingrose · 19/01/2026 07:46

however she didn’t really say goodbye to ds properly like she is usually does and instead got in the car (dad came round to the window to say bye to him like usual).

I missed this bit. What a bitch. How dare she?

Doyouknowsurely · 19/01/2026 07:48

Fairyliz · 18/01/2026 22:52

Well yes your mum is being silly and young children shouldn’t be made to hug if they don’t want to.
However how would you feel if your son called one of your friends mummy and seemed to want to spent more time with her? Would you be all cool and say how lovely he has more people who love him, or would you feel a teeny bit jealous?

@Fairyliz this is a most bizarre post. Firstly it’s not the same and secondly how was it my fault he didn’t want to engage with her because she decided to sulk?!

OP posts:
thepariscrimefiles · 19/01/2026 07:52

Doyouknowsurely · 18/01/2026 20:28

Spoken to them. Apparently I’ve alienated my mum because ds heard me telling her to stop asking him for a cuddle and accept he’d said no, so that tuned him against her. This apparently meant he didn’t interact with her for the rest of the day… nothing to do with the fact she was sulking of course!!! I do accept I should have probably said it out of his earshot but to be honest I was getting quite stressed myself with her going on at him.

I also think it’s very shit of her to have ignored me and not turned up this morning to a planned occasion with ds!

She has deliberately missed a planned event with her grandson in order to punish him and you for him not wanting a cuddle from her and showing her up in front of your niece's grandparents.

She is currently shunning both you and your son to prove a point. That is absolutely not the behaviour of a loving mum or grandparent. It's the behaviour of a selfish narcissistic person who cares more about the optics of her relationship with her grandson than she does about the actual relationship.

CordeliaNaismithVorkosigan · 19/01/2026 07:56

Back off a bit, OP - she’s enjoying having you anxious and stressed and feeding the drama. Leave her to it for a day or two and see what happens. It’s shit she didn’t turn up, I’m sorry about that.

Doyouknowsurely · 19/01/2026 08:01

CordeliaNaismithVorkosigan · 19/01/2026 07:56

Back off a bit, OP - she’s enjoying having you anxious and stressed and feeding the drama. Leave her to it for a day or two and see what happens. It’s shit she didn’t turn up, I’m sorry about that.

@CordeliaNaismithVorkosigan thanks, I have left them to it now as there’s not much more I can say. I was quite shocked she didn’t turn up to be honest. I said ds was expecting her to be there and he would be sad about it but she said she was too upset to see him (and it was an early start anyway which she hates). I’m really surprised shes not even responded to my message, i can’t imagine doing that to my sibling even if they’d done to me what i did to mum… but then I wouldn’t ever expect nephew to do what I demanded like that and would understand if sibling stepped in!

OP posts:
firstofallimadelight · 19/01/2026 08:03

Your mum shouldn’t try to force/guilt your child into hugs. I’d try to have a stock response of oh he’s doing xyz I’d wait until he’s ready for a hug. Said in a nice voice. Then try to distract her by changing the subject .
i can’t see any issue with him seeing his cousins grandparents as grandparents how lovely he has so many people who love him. The fact your mum is jealous is ridiculous.
id ignore the silent treatment it’s emotional manipulation to make you think you are wrong. Leave it a few days and then either get in touch as usual or if you feel comfortable to say you could address it and say that DS is a person he can decide if he wants to hug someone or not and surely they don’t want to force him to do it.
You need to be clear with boundaries it will help you feel less frustrated in the moment

CanIbeRio · 19/01/2026 08:07

You've done nothing wrong. Your mum needs to accept that kids aren't always receptive to cuddles and that will manifest itself in the biggest, bluntness brush off. Nothing personal about it, they aren't articulate enough or tactful enough to express it any other way. Your mum needs to check her emotions. Take a leaf out of my MILs book - when dd was similar age, after her birthday party both sets of grandparents came back for coffee. She turned to mil and said "you can go home" then pointed at my mum and said "you can stay". Mil laughed and brushed it off, but could have been so hurt. Kids don't have a filter at that age.

TheBlueKoala · 19/01/2026 08:11

Doyouknowsurely · 19/01/2026 08:01

@CordeliaNaismithVorkosigan thanks, I have left them to it now as there’s not much more I can say. I was quite shocked she didn’t turn up to be honest. I said ds was expecting her to be there and he would be sad about it but she said she was too upset to see him (and it was an early start anyway which she hates). I’m really surprised shes not even responded to my message, i can’t imagine doing that to my sibling even if they’d done to me what i did to mum… but then I wouldn’t ever expect nephew to do what I demanded like that and would understand if sibling stepped in!

Your mum is emotionally immature. Treat her as the toddler she's acting like:
"OK mum, sorry you don't feel well. Too bad you missed out. We will be happy to see you soon when you feel better."
Be detached and don't let her suck you in with emotional manipulation. You did nothing wrong! Don't let her gaslight you in to believe you did. Just stay calm and detached and take a step back
The Ball is in her court.

WhyamIinahandcartandwherearewegoing · 19/01/2026 08:13

W/o your mum is being really really childish. Don’t get sucked in. Keep your communications light and relaxed. Don’t feed this!

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