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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to invite my mum over more than MIL?

213 replies

mumtoegt · 22/01/2026 14:32

I’m a SAHM with three children aged 6, 3 and a newborn. Since my first child was born, my mum has been very involved, both in a “fun grandma” way and in a very practical and supportive way, especially around births and during particularly intense periods. My husband runs his own business, works long hours.

Around the time each baby was born, she was the person who came over to support me. She cooked, cleaned, did laundry, held the baby so I could rest, and made sure I ate. When my second was born I had a difficult and quite scary birth, struggled with breastfeeding, was bleeding a lot, leaking milk, and walking around bra-less most of the time. My mum was the one who dealt with the messy realities, washing bloody sheets, cooking while I fed the baby, and generally helping me get through that phase. I simply would not have felt comfortable with my MIL doing that, and realistically she would not have offered anyway.

Outside of those periods, my mum still comes over more often, largely because we have a close relationship and we want to see each other. She also tends to come with the intention of taking some of the load off me. That might look like coming over to do some cooking so I can take the kids to the park for longer, helping out on a rainy day during holidays when looking after three kids indoors feels like a lot, or doing the school run if one child is teething or unwell. It is very much about practical help rather than being hosted.

Because of this, my mum has naturally spent more time in our home and, by extension, with the children. She is not coming over specifically to see the kids. She is coming over to see me and help out, and the kids are part of that. This is also not something that started because I had children. Even before kids, my mum would come over to see me, although less to help out and more to just hang out, see her daughter. My MIL never really did, and the relationship has always been more formal and distant.

In contrast, my MIL tends to come over expecting to be hosted. She expects a cup of tea, biscuits, and conversation. She wants the visit to be pleasant and sociable for her. She likes the kids to engage with her and perform a bit, showing her things, playing nicely, and interacting on her terms (ie she’ll sit on the sofa and want the kids to play around that sofa, keep telling them to be careful around her hot tea and not to bring anything mildly messy near), but she does not come over to take pressure off me. I generally find her visits more work than help.

Recently my MIL has started making comments that the kids are closer to my mum than to her, and implying that this is because I have not made enough effort to foster that closeness. I find this upsetting and unfair. I am already stretched thin with three small children, and I do not feel it should be my responsibility to engineer a relationship when the difference seems to come from fundamentally different approaches. My husband is also taking MIL’s side because in his eyes he provides very well financially (which is true) but at the expense of working very long hours and he simply doesn’t have the time to come home at 3-4pm so that MIL could have a decent length visit before bedtime. He sometimes works on weekends, and when he doesn’t we try to enjoy family time or squeeze in activities that we’d like to do as a whole family, like a short holiday or an event.

I also feel that, particularly with young children and a newborn, it is reasonable to prioritise support over entertaining guests, and that it is natural I gravitate towards the person who genuinely helps and the person I’m comfortable to be myself fully around.

So am I being unreasonable, or is my MIL being unfair by blaming me for a dynamic that has largely been shaped by her own behaviour?

OP posts:
RestartingForNY · 22/01/2026 14:42

I suggest detailing all the things your mother does when she comes over to your husband and telling him if he can get clear agreement from your MIL that she will do the same things and not just sit on the sofa and expect everything to revolve around her then you are happy to host more. Make it clear that even if he has the chat (seems unlikely), and she agrees (even more unlikely) that if she comes over and doesn't act that way the invites will go back to being only when it works for you as it is an extra burden for you.

Livelaughlurgy · 22/01/2026 14:43

Start inviting her places and asking her to babysit or help with lifts. We're heading to the library and playground today if you want to come? We're going to drop Suzie to swimming if you'd like to join us. Hopefully she won't cause much extra work. Or if you have her in your house start ironing or tidying or whatever you'd do if she wasn't there. Ask her to make the tea. Or could she keep an eye whilst you leg it to the shops. You don't have time to host people.

hahagogomomo · 22/01/2026 14:47

Have you actually suggested to your mil that you need help, said she’s welcome to come over but could she help with making dinner or simply watching the children whilst you do chores? She might need it spelt out

WhatNoRaisins · 22/01/2026 14:48

I don't blame you for not feeling up to hosting at this stage. How do you think it would go down if you were to tell her to help herself to tea, the teabags and biscuits are over there, milk is in the fridge etc?

Babyboomtastic · 22/01/2026 14:52

This bit stuck out to me:

"he simply doesn’t have the time to come home at 3-4pm so that MIL could have a decent length visit before bedtime"

is there any reason why your in laws couldn't cover topics whilst your husband is at work? I've seen the in laws plenty of times without my husband. Better though to invite them out places - or MIL, "we are heading for the park, do you fancy joining us?"

Fairyliz · 22/01/2026 14:53

I can understand that you don’t want to host her, but have you actually asked her to do anything? I have friends that I see regularly but I wouldn’t just start doing their ironing or hoovering even if I could see it wanted doing.
Start small with something like the washing up and then move onto other jobs. She will either learn that’s it’s okay to just pitch in or she won’t like it and back off.

WallaceinAnderland · 22/01/2026 14:54

You don't need to explain or defend yourself and I'm surprised that you feel you need to.

It's perfectly fine to say yes, I do spend more time with my mum. She's my mum and we're very close.

Laiste · 22/01/2026 14:54

Your relationship with your own mother is your and her own business.

If anyone sees it with some kind of 'competition' element then that's their own problem to solve.

If your husband wants x y z to happen with his mother and his kids he needs to facilitate it himself.

You can spell out the blindingly obvious to him if you want. ie: That your mother is your blood family and you are close and she does personal help and care which you wouldn't ask for or be comfortable with from anyone else (which is perfectly normal and fine) .... but he probably already knows and understands this very well unless he's stupid.

He doesn't want the convo with his own mother i suspect, so he's pushing the onus into you.

mumtoegt · 22/01/2026 14:54

@LivelaughlurgyI have tried this, but she just does not really help in that way. When she comes along to outings, she tends to sit down and relax rather than get involved. At the playground she will usually sit on a bench watching, often on her phone, while I manage the kids.

If one of the children needs something and I suggest “Grandma will help you”, she tends to redirect them back to me. For example, if a child needs a wipe or help with shoes, she will say “just wait a minute, mummy will do it”, even when my hands are full with another child. It is a bit like having an extra adult there who is visiting, rather than another pair of hands.

OP posts:
HappyTomato · 22/01/2026 14:56

OP I could’ve written this post!
I expect many others could’ve too.
the simple fact is you like your mum, she is supportive of you and you want to spend time with each other.

you don’t have the same relationship either your MIL, how could you? She didn’t raise you from birth. If you break it down, she is a woman that you are obliged to spend time with even though she is neither a friend nor a relative.
no amount of making the tea or doing the dusting will make you have a better relationship with her.
I suggest your have very clear chat with your DH to explain this.

Invite your MIL around when you have an activity - such as a sports match to watch, a swim, outing to the park etc. then you won’t need to host an she won’t need to be entertained by you.

Gustavo1 · 22/01/2026 14:56

Unless you want it to be, I don’t think managing your MIL is your responsibility however much your DH brings home financially. He’s not paying you to run his familial relationships! He may work hard, long hours but that shouldn’t excuse him from maintaining his relationship with his mum. If his mum being involved in your family is important to him, he can involve her.

Don’t let this become your responsibility. Don’t enter into arguments. Don’t justify your time with your mum. It wouldn’t matter whether she was cooking for the next week or whether you sat gossiping and painting your nails. You can have whatever relationship you want with your mum. Parity in the relationships between the grandparents and the children is not your responsibility.

takealettermsjones · 22/01/2026 14:56

It's not your responsibility, and of course the kids prefer Grandma who rolls her sleeves up and plays in the mud kitchen to Nana who sits on the sofa and tells them not to be messy 🤣

On the other hand though I don't think she should have to "earn" her visits, so to speak, by doing chores. I agree with @Livelaughlurgy in that I would just carry on with life, even while she's there. Hi MIL, we're just in the kitchen, come through. Etc

SarahAndQuack · 22/01/2026 14:59

Since you've tried to get her involved with helping and she doesn't - which is fair enough - I think all you can do is keep repeating to her 'yes, DH works long hours doesn't he; have you tried pinning him down for a visit?'. And repeating to him 'yes, I see my mum lots; when do you plan to get your mum over?'

You could even try with 'DH, I'd love to go to x on Saturday in three weeks' time; would you and your mum fancy taking the kids to y?'

I think he does need to realise that you are not his social events manager. You see your mum a lot because 1) she is your mum and you are socialising as mother and daughter and 2) she helps with the children. It's not a problem if your MIL doesn't want to be a hands-on grandmother, but she can't expect you to be the person organising her and her son's social life.

MyGreyQuoter · 22/01/2026 14:59

I would explain very clearly to your DH that no one is owed a relationship with their children or grandchildren. There is a very natural process of getting out what you put in. If you put in helpfulness, consideration and generosity you will get a good, positive relationship. If you make demands and give basically nothing, you will get nothing.

There are some options based on what you are comfortable with. I would suggest just continuing as you are. If DH wants the relationship with his mother to be different, he has to facilitate it. Unfortunately that is one thing he cannot outsource to you. In working and providing as he is, there are sacrifices and time with his own parents is one of them. If it really matters to him, there are a whole range of changes he could choose to make in his life. Alternatively you could consider inviting your MIL over more often and just continuing life as normal. Eg hand her the baby and go off and hang up the washing or whatever. Just because she prefers to be hosted, it doesn't mean you have to go along with that.

SarahAndQuack · 22/01/2026 15:01

Btw, it's not necessarily the case the children won't bond with her because she isn't 'fun' granny - could well be that in a few years they will get more out of a relationship with her; some people's forte isn't small children.

Letmeloveyou · 22/01/2026 15:03

l totally agree with you! Your mum has helped the most and continues to do so, MIL can piss off!

DrinkFeckArseBrick · 22/01/2026 15:04

Yes working long hours and making money absolves him from responsibility of a lot of day to day parenting and household chores etc. But it doesn't absolve him of everything e.g. responsibility for maintaining relationships, being an active parent when he is around etc. You shouldn't be hosting your mother in law because he hasn't got the time, just because she feels jealous of your mum.

I would make it very clear to him that your mum visit to help you manage the kids. When she is there, your workload is lessened. With three young kids you wont be doing anything to increase your workload. If he wants them treated more equally then he needs to make it clear to her she is welcome to come and help and list some things that your mum does that she could feasibly do (eg she might not feel comfortable cooking in your house, or might not be able to do school run without a car seat but she could take eldest to the park, or sit with two of them while you take one to the doctors etc. Ske it clear that you dont sit and chat with your mum so wont be doing so with his mum either - she will have to make her own drinks, snacks etc. Give him a list of tasks and ask him what he would like you to do. Or ask her to come with you to park / soft play / swimming lessons etc so it doesn't feel like you've lost time at home when you could be doing something else.

ImSweetEnough · 22/01/2026 15:04

Why does your MIL care if she has a loving relationship with her grandchildren? That should be enough for her. It's all that actually matters.

And why has this only just come up now?

Because it's envy; probably instigated by your children talking about things they do with your mum to her ('we did that with our other grandmother type thing). Ignore it.

And ignore your husband as well. He may well work a lot of hours but there surely there are plenty of times that he could take your children to see his mum.

Tulipsriver · 22/01/2026 15:07

Can you deliberately misunderstand?

"Oh MIL, I had no idea you wanted to help out more like my mum does. You seem to have such a lovely busy social life I never wanted to impose. Of course I'd love the help with the kids so you can build a closer relationship. Do you want to come and watch the little ones whilst I do the school run on Tuesday? Or maybe look after them all on Wednesday whilst I pop to the dentist? This is so lovely, I'm sure the children will love having you help with their homework/take them to the park/do bedtime like my mum does when she's over!".

Notmycircusnotmyotter · 22/01/2026 15:12

Not remotely unreasonable.

Namenamchange · 22/01/2026 15:15

It’s not unreasonable, but I guess she just a wants to be part of the family. Maybe she doesn’t help because she’s worried about over stepping. Maybe ask her to help, give her jobs. If she’s not awful, try to include her in somethings

Redcandlescandal · 22/01/2026 15:25

WallaceinAnderland · 22/01/2026 14:54

You don't need to explain or defend yourself and I'm surprised that you feel you need to.

It's perfectly fine to say yes, I do spend more time with my mum. She's my mum and we're very close.

I agree with this. Don’t get dragged into a negotiation about this.

Ignore her. If DH is taking her side, he can take the older DC/or all of them to visit her whilst you have a nice nap on the sofa or go and have lunch with a friend (or your mum!)

ChavsAreReal · 22/01/2026 15:25

Push it back on her. "You want to be closer to the children? How do you want that to happen?"

ThirdStorm · 22/01/2026 15:26

I am much closer to one grandparent than the other and it is for all those things you describe. I'm close with the grandparents who played board games with me, taught me how to play card games, asked me about school (then were interested in my jobs), helped me do some DIY in my home. I'm not close with the grandparents who said I was making too much noise, jumped about too much/was too rough playing, complained I ate too many biscuits and never asked me a single question about me at any stage of my life.

A relationship is two way and kids realise very early and we do remember this as adults. Of course I am respectful and polite but we'll never be close. Sad really.

Ell099 · 22/01/2026 15:29

Fairyliz · 22/01/2026 14:53

I can understand that you don’t want to host her, but have you actually asked her to do anything? I have friends that I see regularly but I wouldn’t just start doing their ironing or hoovering even if I could see it wanted doing.
Start small with something like the washing up and then move onto other jobs. She will either learn that’s it’s okay to just pitch in or she won’t like it and back off.

My in laws loved to help but I needed to ask them, think they were worried about offending me or getting in the way. My dad just gets the ironing board out and cracks on 😂

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