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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:
Bimmering · 24/01/2026 14:57

wizzywig · 24/01/2026 14:22

He appears as hands off as his mum is

What I find a bit mad is that the OP seems absolutely fine with her DH being useless with the kids but is weirdly more bothered that her MIL isn't doing her chores and looking after her kids when she comes round- when they aren't her kids!

phoenixrosehere · 24/01/2026 15:06

pottylolly · 24/01/2026 14:18

This isn’t difficult - your husband’s paying and working very hard for you to stay at home & he’s telling you to make more of an effort with his mum because he physically doesn’t have the time. So you absolutely should. Even a weekly visit over tea would be enough to give her the access she wants.

Also, I actually think it’s a bit shit that you seem to value your mum’s presence in your kids’ lives by how much she does for them even now when you’re way past post-partum. It isn’t appropriate to expect so much from a grandparent. If you need childcare / cleaning support buy them in and prioritise quality time with both sets of grandparents

How old do you think a newborn is?

Also, her mother chooses to help her and if you read all of OP’s post MIL isn’t even frail. Even the six year old needs incentive to want to visit her. That’s actual shit.

Glad I wasn’t raised thinking behaving the way MIL is is acceptable. Behaving that’s way even as a guest in someone’s home was considered rude, even more when you’re actual family.

Moaning over closeness to a grandchild when you do very little with them is stupid.

Sadworld23 · 24/01/2026 15:32

I'd have them both over at the same time.
Either they would entertain each other or mum might just get mil to help.

HazelMember · 24/01/2026 16:04

Sadworld23 · 24/01/2026 15:32

I'd have them both over at the same time.
Either they would entertain each other or mum might just get mil to help.

The DH can't manage more than one kid at a time. Why should the MIL help when the DH is so hands off?

phoenixrosehere · 24/01/2026 16:47

HazelMember · 24/01/2026 16:04

The DH can't manage more than one kid at a time. Why should the MIL help when the DH is so hands off?

Maybe because she is the one complaining about the level of closeness in the first place…

Marble10 · 24/01/2026 17:02

YANBU women are mostly closer to their families, it just happens.
My in laws recently moved to the same city and complain they do not see DC as much as my family. It’s draining but it is so much easier with my family, there’s no ‘fluff ‘ they don’t expect tea and cake every time and a casual drop off is fine. In-laws expect me to sit round theirs for hours on end or host if they visit us.

HazelMember · 24/01/2026 17:42

phoenixrosehere · 24/01/2026 16:47

Maybe because she is the one complaining about the level of closeness in the first place…

That is more of a concern than a father who now has 3 kids but can't manage more than one at a time?

femfemlicious · 24/01/2026 17:52

Offer for her to take the kids out. Maybe the kids can be dropped off with her for the day?. Does she only want to see them while sitting on your sofa?

femfemlicious · 24/01/2026 18:03

Sounds like the victorian Times, did she grow up in Downton abbey🤣. Look don't listen to people regarding your husband. He is what we call in my culture an odogwu. He is not always available but he provides very well. Don't rock the boat with him. Different families work in different ways. So what if he can't handle the 3 kids alone?!.

I think you should use the money he provides to buy yourself more help so that your mum doesn't have to do so much. Invite his mum round once a week. It's hard but see it as a sacrifice. Get a cleaner to handle more of the chores so that you have the mental bandwidth to tolerate her.

HazelMember · 24/01/2026 18:21

femfemlicious · 24/01/2026 18:03

Sounds like the victorian Times, did she grow up in Downton abbey🤣. Look don't listen to people regarding your husband. He is what we call in my culture an odogwu. He is not always available but he provides very well. Don't rock the boat with him. Different families work in different ways. So what if he can't handle the 3 kids alone?!.

I think you should use the money he provides to buy yourself more help so that your mum doesn't have to do so much. Invite his mum round once a week. It's hard but see it as a sacrifice. Get a cleaner to handle more of the chores so that you have the mental bandwidth to tolerate her.

So what if he can't handle the 3 kids alone?!.

Your bar is low. It is not that he is not always available but when he is, he can't look after the children he fathered.

cantthinkofagoodusername1 · 24/01/2026 18:23

Toadstoollover · 24/01/2026 14:09

Op, I could have written something similar years ago. Do not invite them both over at the same time otherwise you’ll get competitive grandmothers!

You need to change the narrative. Yes, your husband provides financially for you all but he can only work the long hours he does because you look after everything else including the kids.
If he is expecting you to facilitate a relationship with his mum it will only get worse when she’s older and needs care. My mil was going to move nearer to us but I made it absolutely clear that I would not be the one running round doing caring duties when I had the kids/house to run.
It sounds like he needs to step up as a dad. Working long hours and bringing in the money is not an excuse to check out of everything else. He needs to realise that if you weren’t there or at work that he would need to juggle childcare and all the other stuff that goes with children.

I know this isn’t the point of the thread but please protect yourself financially as a sahm. No one thinks that divorce will happen but it does and suddenly your pension is tiny and you have been out of the workplace with limited earning power.

This 100000000%. Don’t get yourself trapped.
Also, DH should be embarrassed, what kind of parent can’t even look after their own children? So embarrassing.

thepariscrimefiles · 24/01/2026 18:37

mumtoegt · 23/01/2026 18:34

@90sTriflegoing to MIL’s is almost worse I think. It’s constant “ooh don’t bring that near the sofa” “please eat only when seated on that specific chair” “no, don’t touch those”. I’m running around the 3 kids still either on my own or with DH but it’s just we aren’t in our own home, don’t have our usual supplies unless we’ve brought them along. The kids don’t really like the meals she cooks (as she travels a lot at home the meals are more like steamed fish and asparagus or plain baked chicken breast with avocado) so at best would eat a bit before stopping, if I try to bring their meals we get criticised “so… they eat shepherds pie but don’t want a piece of potato next to a chicken breast? Tastes better that way, cleaner rather than all mushed up. Really would benefit them to diversify their palate” “why do you have to blend their vegetables into a pasta sauce? Just serve them a plate of meat and veg, and say it’s either this or nothing”

Tbf she sounds pretty unbearable. Her behaviour would make me want to spend less time with her, not more. She expects small children to slot seamlessly into her lifestyle, making no adjustments or accommodations for them.

Visits from her are the opposite of enjoyable and relaxing. Don't pander to her.

NotThisShitAgain121 · 24/01/2026 19:32

You are not a performing monkey and your mil needs to back off and your husband needs to get his head out of his arse. Of course you are going to invite your mum over as she wants to help you and because you have a closer relationship.

Changingtimes81 · 24/01/2026 19:45

Flatandhappy · 24/01/2026 08:20

I voted YANBU and I am a MIL. I have looked after DGD one day a week for over four years, certainly never expect to be hosted (we generally don’t get invited over because we have a much larger house so they come to us) and I accept that my DIL is super close to her mum and I will always be number 2 grandma. Doesn’t bother me in the slightest - DGD obviously enjoys spending time with us and I love her company but she will always spend more time with her other grandma because that’s where her mum wants to be.

That's lovely & an excellent family dynamic. My DIL is understandably closer to her own mum too. If I was to count the hours the maternal Grandparents spend with our Grandchildren it would be more or less the same, possibly slightly more on the maternal side but that doesn't bother me in the least. It gives DH & I a break 😂

CaptainMyCaptain · 25/01/2026 01:26

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.

This. Tbh I didn't read the whole post because YANBU to want to see your Mum more than your MiL.

Maisey1991 · 25/01/2026 01:35

Your DH needs to have a word with MIL! so happy for you to have such a wonderful mum it’s a beautiful relationship! Don’t feel guilty x

HazelMember · 25/01/2026 08:28

Maisey1991 · 25/01/2026 01:35

Your DH needs to have a word with MIL! so happy for you to have such a wonderful mum it’s a beautiful relationship! Don’t feel guilty x

Like a pp said, her mum is a skivvy.

Her DH can't manage more than one child at a time but OP is fixated on MIL and criticising because she won't help.

Making excuses for a useless man while attacking the woman.

pouletvous · 25/01/2026 08:44

dont let it bother you

theres nothing you can do to change the situation and neither should you have to

Maisey1991 · 25/01/2026 11:55

HazelMember · 25/01/2026 08:28

Like a pp said, her mum is a skivvy.

Her DH can't manage more than one child at a time but OP is fixated on MIL and criticising because she won't help.

Making excuses for a useless man while attacking the woman.

I’m not making excuses for the man? I’m saying he should step up and speak to his mum about the expectations of being served in his home this wife. He should be sticking up for her.

HazelMember · 25/01/2026 11:58

Maisey1991 · 25/01/2026 11:55

I’m not making excuses for the man? I’m saying he should step up and speak to his mum about the expectations of being served in his home this wife. He should be sticking up for her.

OP is making excuses for her useless DH.

phoenixrosehere · 25/01/2026 14:25

HazelMember · 24/01/2026 17:42

That is more of a concern than a father who now has 3 kids but can't manage more than one at a time?

It is what the OP is about though.

You choose to focus on what the DH is and isn’t doing towards his children when the whole thread was started by OP over MIL complaining in the first place about how close OP’s mum is to her own grandchildren.

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

OP literally is asking:

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?

Yet you rather post constantly about her DH not being able to handle his children when OP also needs help with them since she has a newborn and two other kids and that person is her mum while they transition into going from 2-3 children.

Most would be happy to have the help that OP’s mum has nor is it out of the ordinary for family to help if willing to do so.

No reasonable, decent grandparent would expect a mum with three young children, especially a newborn to host them and most wouldn’t put up with someone like that especially one moaning about lack of closeness.

Woodfiresareamazing · 25/01/2026 15:38

mumtoegt · 23/01/2026 14:15

@Hmmmnmmn
I’ve actually done a version of what you’ve suggested - messaged the group chat (myself, DH, PILs) saying that I’ve thought of an idea, would MIL like to come over and bake with the oldest 2, whilst I go out for a walk with the pram one afternoon after school when eldest finishes early. MIL came back, privately to DH, saying that she’s happy to come over for a coffee and cake or “to dip in and out of the activity” (by which she means she will observe, take a few pictures, maybe do 1 cookie cutter with the 6 year old so it isn’t too messy, before sitting back down so I can clean the mess, wash the hands, calm any tantrums or stop them throwing the flour at each other etc) but she’s not at the stage of her life where it’s reasonable for her to look after both kids fully. In those words pretty much. She’s in her early 70s for context, very fit, does 2 dance classes a week, constantly doing things or visiting friends, travels the world, walks everywhere as opposed to driving / public transport.

I also suggested to DH that I can go out for a brunch with my sister over the weekend, leave a bottle of pumped milk for the littlest (in all honesty I think the baby would sleep through most of the time I’m out), and his mum can come over to bond. He said that’s fine (because I don’t think he’d ever decline my suggestion of me going out) but I could tell he’s nervous about it (in fairness, as was I, when I had all 3 of them completely solo for the first time)… let’s see how it actually plays out. I can guarantee 100% she wouldn’t lift a finger but she may surprise us.

So DH is aware that MIL doesn't want to be hands-on like your mum is (she sounds lovely, by the way!).
He's obviously an intelligent person, so should be able to extrapolate from that, that she naturally won't be as bonded with the children as your mum is.
I think you'll just have to continue with what you've been doing - inviting her over, then carrying on with your activities with the kids (preferably while she makes both of you tea!).
Or, as a PP suggested, get her over at the same time as your mum, and have an activity planned that they can do together with the older two children. Maybe making mini pizzas for dinner, or making ornaments out of quick dry clay (for Valentine's, Easter, whatever). It shouldn't be so daunting because she's not in sole charge of 2 kids. Maybe when she sees your mum getting stuck in it will inspire MIL to do the same. Or it might actually dawn on her that this is how to build relationships with her dgc. Worth a try!

2chocolateoranges · 25/01/2026 19:21

Just because your dh is the main earner doesn’t mean he gets to dictate how you spend your days, he should maybe spend more time with his own children and when doing so facilitate a relationship with his mum, that’s not your job to do.

I have never facilitated our children’s relationship with in-laws, that’s dh’s duty to do that. However my dh is a very hands on dad and looked our childrens while I worked 2/3 evenings a week from dd being 4 months old. (Maternity leave was much less when I had our children)

he doesn’t sound like he spends much time with the children. Any parent who can’t manage all their children at once really should try harder!

Nearly50omg · 25/01/2026 19:53

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…

Your husband can’t PARENT his own children?!?! 😳🙄 can you see how batshit that is? What happens if you get ill/have to go into hospital and your mum isn’t available to help/parent/do what your dh should be doing? HE needs to be allowed to take over at the weekend and encouraged to parent his own children!! You need to learn to let go and let him!! It’s very unhealthy for both of you and also damaging to the relationship between him and your children too

Wakemeupinapril · 25/01/2026 21:07

Mil wants to be an equal dgm without behaving like an equal dgm.
Family means pitch in imo.

She wants hosting like she's royalty.
Unacceptable imo.