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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:
HazelMember · 22/01/2026 17:37

mumtoegt · 22/01/2026 16:12

@Scout2016They’d meet maybe a few times a month for a nice lunch? Not something you can exactly do with 3 young kids.
As I’ve mentioned MIL is just not a hands on granny, and I genuinely think DH would struggle with 3 kids on his own, or even 2 kids. He could take the 6 year old over no problem, but the 6 year old doesn’t particularly want to see her unless there’s an incentive (like “if you see granny I’ll buy you xyz) which to me seems wrong to bribe kids.
Just to add, no shade at all to DH for struggling to manage 2 or 3 kids at once, I would equally struggle to run his business, work the hours he works…

Just to add, no shade at all to DH for struggling to manage 2 or 3 kids at once, I would equally struggle to run his business, work the hours he works…

This is so sad - a father who can't manage his own 2 or 3 kids at once. Why have them then?

It is hardly any kind of comparison running his business 🙄

Unexpectedlysinglemum · 22/01/2026 17:39

I am totally on your side.
however it’s quite tactless if anyone has been telling the mil about how much your mum sees the kids , why does she know this she is ok to feel a little jealous (but not ok to confront you about it). If she was smart she would offer help eg take the baby out in the pram or pop by with a lasagne for everyone.

my parents are also super lovely like your mum. My ex mil would have been the same but luckily I don’t deal with her anymore (‘aibu to reduce contact with ex mil’ explains it!)

Unexpectedlysinglemum · 22/01/2026 17:40

Ps your DH could invite her over on the weekend while you take a nap

Redcandlescandal · 22/01/2026 17:40

How much time does DH spend on his own with your parents?

Iamsotiredandfedup · 22/01/2026 17:40

Your MIL needs to adjust her expectations, it’s not about how much she does or doesn’t help rather that she isn’t particularly involved with the children when she is there

Your mum though, god what an absolute angel of a woman. I wish we all had a mum like this to support us

Newgirls · 22/01/2026 17:42

It gives me the rage that a young mum with such young kids is having to worry about this.

Where is the self awareness from this MIL? Why isn’t she offering to help/take food etc?

Surely she knows she won’t be as known as the ops own mum. It was probably the same for her.

DH too - just adding another task to ops list.

op when you are older like me and many others on here you will lose your lovely caring oestrogen and think ‘why the fxxx am I the one trying to make this lovely for everyone?! I’m the one with 3 kids!’

tokennamechange · 22/01/2026 17:47

mumtoegt · 22/01/2026 16:12

@Scout2016They’d meet maybe a few times a month for a nice lunch? Not something you can exactly do with 3 young kids.
As I’ve mentioned MIL is just not a hands on granny, and I genuinely think DH would struggle with 3 kids on his own, or even 2 kids. He could take the 6 year old over no problem, but the 6 year old doesn’t particularly want to see her unless there’s an incentive (like “if you see granny I’ll buy you xyz) which to me seems wrong to bribe kids.
Just to add, no shade at all to DH for struggling to manage 2 or 3 kids at once, I would equally struggle to run his business, work the hours he works…

what in the self sacrificing sorry-is-that-the-1880s-calling crap is this?

You should shade him for not being able to cope with his own children for a few hours! that's pathetic. They aren't some random children that have been foisted upon him, they're his kids! Ones he presumably had input in creating...

You might struggle to do his job because you haven't been at the company for years, received the relevant training or applied for that specific job because you found it interesting and matched your skillset! Even then I'm sure you could actually do at least part of it semi successfully for a few hours a week.

I was going to suggest you just kept referring it back to them "Good idea DH, why don't you take them to see your MIL on the weekend?" "I know MIL, I'm always telling DH to invite you over - in fact I'm out with my friends tomorrow evening, why don't you come round and look after them then?" but tbh it sounds like you like playing the victorian wife martyr.

CantThinkofaNam · 22/01/2026 17:47

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.

So I would keep inviting her to these things and keep telling your dh that she doesn’t enjoy it. Eventually she will get tired and not bother anymore. I don’t have time for useless people like this.
Dh and I have a simple rule in our home. Those very close family members like your mil who expect to be hosted and cause more of a hinderance and annoyance, then get invited over on our terms and when we have the time to do so regardless of who is the relation. So MIL in this scenario wouldn’t be pandered to.

CantThinkofaNam · 22/01/2026 17:51

Newgirls · 22/01/2026 17:42

It gives me the rage that a young mum with such young kids is having to worry about this.

Where is the self awareness from this MIL? Why isn’t she offering to help/take food etc?

Surely she knows she won’t be as known as the ops own mum. It was probably the same for her.

DH too - just adding another task to ops list.

op when you are older like me and many others on here you will lose your lovely caring oestrogen and think ‘why the fxxx am I the one trying to make this lovely for everyone?! I’m the one with 3 kids!’

Exactly! I’ve had this energy from early on and my IL wouldn’t even dare. If I had 3 kids and especially a newborn I wouldn’t even feel an ounce of anything for not making this woman a cup of tea! I would go have a nap with the baby if I could. Useless woman sitting like a lump there, when you have your hands so full.

Wakemeupinapril · 22/01/2026 17:52

Your dh should be ashamed he can't manage all of his own dc alone...
When I had my youngest premature we were kept in a week. Dh had the 3 other dc alone.
9,8 and 6..
And they weren't even his dc. Just mine...

1apenny2apenny · 22/01/2026 17:53

It’s not your job to entertain your MIL, frankly I think its normal for women to have a closer relationship with their own mothers after children (although I don’t because my parents were a bit sit there rules too and weren’t proactive in supporting me).

Your DH is being unreasonable- does he think because he earns well and supports you financially he owns you and can expect you to do everything including managing his family relationships and get his mother off his back? Does he understand that you being a SAH parent means he is free to pursue his business etc.

I’d be telling him to jog on. If his mother wants to see more of her grand children he and her need to put the effort in.

lunalovegoodsradishearrings · 22/01/2026 17:54

I don't know what I would do without my Mum & Dad, they help out so much. On the other hand we have lived in the same house for eight years, 5 minutes drive away and my MIL & FIL have never ventured into our house.
Their other children my Husband is 1 of 5 one lives within spitting distance of us they go see and were in the house within 2 hrs of them moving in.
They are all interested when the kids are young but once out of the cute phase haven't really made an effort. It hurts but at the end of the day we prioritise the people who want to be there and help out.
If your MIL wants to be there she needs to be willing to meet you half way. You have small children and as they say it takes a village to raise them. Keep your village close and leave the rest.

kohlrabislaw · 22/01/2026 17:56

Naturally, you spend time with your mum while your kids are with you. He needs to spend time with his mum while the kids are with him. Easy.

Didimum · 22/01/2026 17:58

It’s your husband’s problem, not yours. You’re not being paid to manage his family’s expectations. I’m side-eyeing your husband big time here.

Littlejellyuk · 22/01/2026 17:58

What on earth did I just read? 😨

You don't have a MIL problem. 🤦🏻‍♀️
You have a husband problem. 👎

If he wants HIS mother, to be close to HIS children, then he needs to take ALL 3 children over to HER house, on his day off, and put a shift in. 💯

He can have HER help, managing HIS OWN 3 children, and he can witness with his own eyes how little she actually helps with them. 👀
Let him take all 3 children over and struggle for a while.
He would soon change his tune. 👊

You are not there to host and make some old bat feel included. 😠 😡 😤

You are (mostly) doing the full load, of parenting 3 children, and if HE wants HIS MUMMY to be involved, then HE can facilitate it in his OWN time and give you a break! 💥
@mumtoegt

Tableforjoan · 22/01/2026 17:58

I’d just keep making in perfectly clear that your mum comes around and basically acts as a free cleaner, maid and baby sitter plus friendly eat to chat with. It’s not actually about the children she’s visiting her daughter and helping the house the children happen to be there.

Mil comes around to be entertained by the children and be waited on by yourself.

Say you are more than happy for Mil
to take a child or two, to the park. More than happy for her to come do some baking or painting with them. You just don’t have time to play host and if she wants hosting she’s going to have to come when his home or when your mother is also there to help 😉

And of course dh can take all three children to hers anytime he wants.

HazelMember · 22/01/2026 18:02

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.

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.

She sounds like your DH. An extra adult who is there but can't manage his own kids 😂

Soonenough · 22/01/2026 18:05

My MIL was a lot younger and fitter than my own mother . She was great at taking them out alone as she wanted to show them off. Fine with me . But my mother would fold clothes , rock the crying baby , make me tea. Both did what they could . My MIL who I didn't like very much but was respectful to once said she wanted to be like a mother to me as my own mother didn't live in the same country. But I told her that I had a very strong bond with my mother who was always there for me all my life so surely it's only natural I'd gravitate towards my own family . Just like she probably preferred her son to me .

DrossofthedUrbervilles · 22/01/2026 18:22

AndyMcFlurry · 22/01/2026 17:04

Do you tell your husband who he can get to help him at work ? Do you tell him who he can see in his free time ? Im guessing not.

you are inviting your mother to help you with your job , which right now is bringing up the kids . You get to decide how you do that .

he seems to think that he is your boss and gets to tell you how to do your job and who you can have coffee with etc .

if he wants his parents to see your children more then HE needs to do it in HIS free time .

Remrnber they are NOT your family , they are his . Yes even if you are married . If your husband leaves you , I promise you will never see your IL again . Because they don’t care about you. Sorry to be harsh but that’s true ,

Agree!

FinallyHere · 22/01/2026 18:27

Is it possible that the length of time MiL spends sitting with cup of hot tea on sofa chatting

is significantly longer than the time your own mother does that.

Fair enough, Horses for courses.

DrossofthedUrbervilles · 22/01/2026 18:34

I would also point out to DH that even if she is visiting more often the kids are still unlikely to bond with her as much as your mum, because of the way MIL interacts with them. All on her terms. So really noone will benefit from increasing the visits. At least as things stand she can tell herself that you're the problem, if you facilitate her nonsense visits, who is she going to blame for the lack of a bond then? I'd suggest to DH it might leave her feeling worse about herself.

Although I do think your existing rationale - that she makes your job harder, not easier - is sufficient.

I think the idea of inviting her when your mum is visiting is a good idea. I would also consider booking a day out (even if you have the youngest with you) and let DH look after kids and he can invite his mum if he wants. If she is as useless when he's in charge he might get a glimpse of how frustrating it is to be struggling while a fellow adult looks on and doesn't help.

Cyclebabble · 22/01/2026 18:34

I think it is generally quite usual to be closer your own mum rather than your MIL and from what you are saying, she does sound quite hard work. I think that if DH is discussing this with you, I would push the solution in his direction, i.e. absolutely MIL can spend more time with the DCs but DH needs to take them over and facilitate this. I would also ask him to raise with her that as a young mum you should not be "hosting". If she needs a cup of tea and biscuits then she should be making this herself and making you one while she is there.

Pasta4Dinner · 22/01/2026 18:37

Is he seeing her with rose coloured glasses as thats what DH is like. MIL died years ago but he will tell me what a great granny she was and how much helped around the house when she visited.
She did nothing of the sort, never even made her self a drink. DH told me she used to clean our house? She would sit on the sofa with the remote and she very much believed children should not be seen OR heard from.
She was still insanely jealous that others had better relationships with GC even though she wanted to spend no time with them, she wasn’t happy DD used to help our neighbour water every evening.

Sometimessmiling · 22/01/2026 18:38

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.

Spot on reply. You have maybe caused her to feel like this. She feels excluded and I would feel the same. Change your relationship. Ask her to the park or to babysit while you do a bit of shopping etc.

phoenixrosehere · 22/01/2026 18:44

DrossofthedUrbervilles · 22/01/2026 18:34

I would also point out to DH that even if she is visiting more often the kids are still unlikely to bond with her as much as your mum, because of the way MIL interacts with them. All on her terms. So really noone will benefit from increasing the visits. At least as things stand she can tell herself that you're the problem, if you facilitate her nonsense visits, who is she going to blame for the lack of a bond then? I'd suggest to DH it might leave her feeling worse about herself.

Although I do think your existing rationale - that she makes your job harder, not easier - is sufficient.

I think the idea of inviting her when your mum is visiting is a good idea. I would also consider booking a day out (even if you have the youngest with you) and let DH look after kids and he can invite his mum if he wants. If she is as useless when he's in charge he might get a glimpse of how frustrating it is to be struggling while a fellow adult looks on and doesn't help.

If she is as useless when he's in charge he might get a glimpse of how frustrating it is to be struggling while a fellow adult looks on and doesn't help.

Or she’ll suddenly decide to help because it is for her son alone with the kids.