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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 · 25/01/2026 21:09

phoenixrosehere · 25/01/2026 14:25

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.

Honestly, never mind the MIL. The real problem is the DH.

You can analyse the grandmother dynamics all day long, but none of it matters if the other parent is effectively absent as a functional adult. When a woman has a newborn and two other children, the baseline expectation is that the children’s father steps up in a meaningful, competent way. Not vaguely “helps” but actually carries the load.

A competent DH changes everything. He reduces the pressure on OP. He removes the need for emergency support. He creates space for balanced grandparent relationships.

So yes, the MIL is unfair, but she is also irrelevant. The core issue is that OP is parenting three children with a partner who is not pulling his weight. Until that is addressed, every other argument is just rearranging the furniture while the house is on fire.

phoenixrosehere · 25/01/2026 21:18

HazelMember · 25/01/2026 21:09

Honestly, never mind the MIL. The real problem is the DH.

You can analyse the grandmother dynamics all day long, but none of it matters if the other parent is effectively absent as a functional adult. When a woman has a newborn and two other children, the baseline expectation is that the children’s father steps up in a meaningful, competent way. Not vaguely “helps” but actually carries the load.

A competent DH changes everything. He reduces the pressure on OP. He removes the need for emergency support. He creates space for balanced grandparent relationships.

So yes, the MIL is unfair, but she is also irrelevant. The core issue is that OP is parenting three children with a partner who is not pulling his weight. Until that is addressed, every other argument is just rearranging the furniture while the house is on fire.

MIL isn’t irrelevant if she is causing stress and more work for the OP.

I absolutely agree that her husband should step up more, I have repeatedly said that. I simply disagree that they are not both a problem.

MIL AND her husband are BOTH a problem.

Bimmering · 26/01/2026 07:51

HazelMember · 25/01/2026 21:09

Honestly, never mind the MIL. The real problem is the DH.

You can analyse the grandmother dynamics all day long, but none of it matters if the other parent is effectively absent as a functional adult. When a woman has a newborn and two other children, the baseline expectation is that the children’s father steps up in a meaningful, competent way. Not vaguely “helps” but actually carries the load.

A competent DH changes everything. He reduces the pressure on OP. He removes the need for emergency support. He creates space for balanced grandparent relationships.

So yes, the MIL is unfair, but she is also irrelevant. The core issue is that OP is parenting three children with a partner who is not pulling his weight. Until that is addressed, every other argument is just rearranging the furniture while the house is on fire.

I agree with this

I do "host" both sets of grandparents - as in, I make them a cup of tea, I don't expect them to do chores or childcare, this feels normal and natural to me. But thinking about it, part of it was that I didn't need to lean on them to do these things because I married a functional adult.

fruitfly3 · 26/01/2026 10:18

Honestly OP, YANBU and I just wouldn’t take this on as your problem. I’ve toyed with other responses, and having been through this, nothing will work. Ultimately, your mum is there to support you directly, and sounds like she is warm, loving and mothering to your children. Your MIL is welcome to take the same approach, but hasn’t and doesn’t want to - which is fine. It’s your job to keep your own sanity in check and to look after your children. It’s not your job to orchestrate and manage her relationship with the children. It’s her job to consider how to build relationship with them and not be a passive bystander with the tag of ‘grandma’ and expect the children just to like her as she is. They don’t - they like people who play on the slide, gently wipe their nose, feed them cake and don’t nag. You don’t need another person to look after. Tell your husband that, crack on as things are and just ignore her whining.

Luckyforsome23 · 27/01/2026 19:08

How did your husband and MIL get on looking after the children this weekend?

Morepositivemum · 27/01/2026 19:11

While I get your mum is totally the right person to have over more because she helped and you needed your person, my kids barely know my mum because of distance and it’s horrible hearing then talk like they only have one granny. Your dh should have her over whenever he can though, but it must be a bit tough on her when they probably run to your mum but think of her as a person who visits every so often

HazelMember · 27/01/2026 19:43

Luckyforsome23 · 27/01/2026 19:08

How did your husband and MIL get on looking after the children this weekend?

OP is unlikely to come back. She stopped responding on 23/01.

Her husband can't cope with more than one child despite fathering 3 and MIL is not interested either. So if it did go ahead, it was probably a disaster.

mumtoegt · 28/01/2026 13:49

Luckyforsome23 · 27/01/2026 19:08

How did your husband and MIL get on looking after the children this weekend?

So by way of update…
i had a lovely time with my sister, although I’ve got to admit I missed the children! Went out for the whole morning, baby slept through most of it, but had 1 feed with some milk I pumped before leaving. That’s the only thing MIL helped with, and only because I think it was a “fun” thing to do. As in, here I am feeding my grandchild, posing for a picture (I know this because there’s a picture of it she’s posted everywhere possible).
from what my husband said she didn’t help at all, but he also didn’t expect her to because “it’s not her job”. I wasn’t there so can’t say who made the cups of tea, but I know tea was consumed.
They did manage to take the children out to the playground, DH looked exhausted and said it was hard but apparently they all had a good time. Although I don’t think he’d say to me “we had a terrible time, don’t go out ever again” as he’s generally quite positive and wouldn’t make me feel bad for going.

OP posts:
JayJayj · 28/01/2026 14:01

No it’s not her job to help. But there is a big difference between one morning of “fun” and normal life.

You don’t have time and shouldn’t have to add another burden of hosting your MIL. It is your husband’s responsibility to do that. Your mum helps YOU first and enjoy’s her grandchildren after.

Pasta4Dinner · 28/01/2026 15:04

I agree it’s not her job to help or do things. But I also think it’s not their place to sit and be entertained and waited on hand and foot.
I think if OP is busy and needs a drink she should go and get one etc.
But if she wants a relationship with the children she has to find a way to engage with them.

Contrarymary30 · 28/01/2026 15:14

I am the dreaded MIL . We seem to get a very bad press on MN ! I've always helped , baby sat , cleaned , pickedbup from school, taken to playgroups stayed over when my DIL was an exhausted new Mum to feed the baby through the night . Not all MILs are useless !

HazelMember · 28/01/2026 15:34

Contrarymary30 · 28/01/2026 15:14

I am the dreaded MIL . We seem to get a very bad press on MN ! I've always helped , baby sat , cleaned , pickedbup from school, taken to playgroups stayed over when my DIL was an exhausted new Mum to feed the baby through the night . Not all MILs are useless !

Nobody is saying all MILs are useless.

Look how many people have piled on the DH.

The two posts above yours both say it is not MILs job to help.

Lovely that you helped your DIL but were you not helping your DS too or was it only her who needed help?

Luckyforsome23 · 28/01/2026 18:48

I think that’s a great outcome. You can go out or have some time to yourself and he can look after his children and facilitate their relationship with his mother. Ask him how frequently he plans to do it and whether his mother thinks that is enough.

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