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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

FIL incredibly rude - do I stop seeing him?

63 replies

GemJam86 · 26/02/2026 20:29

DH and I both had hard upbringings. My late dad had health and money troubles, and DH was estranged from his dad for 5 years as a child.

In a way, it’s been useful that we’ve been able to understand each other’s complex histories. We’ve been together 8 years, and now have two young kids, and we’ve managed to carve out a new normal with a well functioning family life, and our senses of humour intact (just about).

We live near my mum, who has some mental health challenges but loves us and the kids and helps where she’s able.

We visit his dad about once every 6 months. And when we do, at best he almost completely ignores me (I don’t think he’s asked me a single question since I met him). But often he’ll say something I can only assume is intended to be inflammatory (for example that he’s ’spending the inheritance’ on first class flights to his holidays).

He seems obsessed with bragging about money. And he’ll often mock us for flying economy on our one holiday a year. It wouldn’t grate as much if he’d been more forthcoming on the rare occasion we’ve asked for help, for example a contribution towards the wedding. He was reluctant and left anything substantive to my mum who’s much less well off.

Warmth and friendliness are far more important to me than money. But those are hard to come by. I’ve tried hard over the years and still try to find things to ask him that he’ll want to talk about (usually his latest holiday). But I have to say I’m struggling. On occasion, he’s been incredibly rude to me (he once threw a menu across the table at a restaurant I chose because he didn’t like it - he apologised after his partner made him but it stuck with me). And I find it hard that he’s never seemed curious about me, my family, my work… anything.

DH says I shouldn’t take it personally because he’s like this with everyone, even him. Which is broadly true. He says having a relationship however flawed is better than not having one. And I don’t want to interfere with that.

But he doesn’t even engage the kids when he sees them - he says hello but then puts on the TV almost immediately when he’s with them.

I want them to have a relationship with him as their only GF. But it feels so masochistic visiting when it makes me feel horrendous every time.

I’m wondering if I should just stop going. DH has half-suggested this, as he says he’s always on tenterhooks that I’ll be offended by something his dad says. But then I think maybe I should swallow my pride and show up. It’s really hard to know.

OP posts:
GemJam86 · 28/02/2026 13:57

I’ve realised I phrased the finance aspects badly. We actually didn’t outright ask for a contribution from either. I didn’t expect it from either him or my mum. She offered, sweetly, what she could afford. He didn’t despite him boasting about money all the time. It wasn’t an extravagant wedding and I’d much, much rather have had warmth than money. It forms most of my post because it’s all he ever talks about.

OP posts:
budgiegirl · 28/02/2026 13:59

If you don't like him, and you find him rude, then don't visit him. Let your DH visit with the kids. He does sound rude if he doesn't engage with you. Could there be a reason for this? Undiagnosed autism, or similar? Probably not, but always a possibility, especially for older people for whom autism was much less recognised in their youth.

However, the example you give about spending the inheritance, doesn't really sound inflammatory, more like a bit of a joke. My mum used to go on expensive cruises, and we used to joke that she was going skiing (Spending Kids Inheritance). And you do sound a bit rude yourself, asking for help with the wedding, surely this is something that is offered, rather than asked for?

LightUpLavender · 28/02/2026 14:14

Stop going. He doesn’t sound very nice. Let DH take the kids although hopefully he’ll decide he didn’t want them round that kind of negativity.

Uticary · 28/02/2026 14:27

Absolutely stop going.

WallaceinAnderland · 28/02/2026 14:30

I don't know why you would even consider going to see him and I also would not subject my children to his awful behaviour. You don't want them growing up thinking this is normal or acceptable. Your DH can go on his own if he likes.

pikkumyy77 · 28/02/2026 14:36

YourOliveBalonz · 28/02/2026 09:00

YANBU to reduce contact with someone who is rude to you, but YABU to conflate this with financial matters. Despite what you have said about money not being as important as other things, it forms most of your post.

I bristled a bit at your wording around him leaving the major costs of your wedding to your mother. If you asked and let your less-well-off mother to pay that was your arrangement, HE left the costs to the couple getting married which is a standard expectation I would say.

It doesn’t form “most of the post.”

IhadaStripeyDeckchair · 28/02/2026 14:40

What exactly do you think your children will gain by having a relationship* with a man who seems to no positive qualities?

  • relationship - also, given they see him only a couple of times a year, he has the TV on a lot & doesn't engage what does the "relationship" consist of ?
GemJam86 · 28/02/2026 15:02

IhadaStripeyDeckchair · 28/02/2026 14:40

What exactly do you think your children will gain by having a relationship* with a man who seems to no positive qualities?

  • relationship - also, given they see him only a couple of times a year, he has the TV on a lot & doesn't engage what does the "relationship" consist of ?

It’s a good question. I suppose it actually means having any form of contact. As mentioned DH feels that having contact is better than not, having been estranged for 5 years as a child. It’s quite a loaded issue for him.

OP posts:
Definitelynotagladiator · 28/02/2026 17:49

Hi OP could you compromise and go once a year? And if DH wants to go more he can go by himself? I reckon DH is just as wound up anyway and is taking it out on you as his safe place (not that that is ok).

I’m torn between you needing to be there for the mental safety of the children (if DH insists they go) and you needing to show the children you don’t put up with being spoken to like that. I’m sure someone can answer the second part better than I.

Family obligations…. Who’d have em

RawBloomers · 28/02/2026 19:08

Not going is definitely not unreasonable! You get nothing out of it and your DH doesn't need you there.

I think it's even more important that you stop exposing your children to his behaviour, though.

TheNoisyGreyLion · 28/02/2026 20:23

He sounds like an insufferable twat and I’d stay away from him.

marginallyawake · 28/02/2026 20:38

I was taken to visit a deliberately unpleasant grandparent every week of my childhood until I started refusing around age 13. Utterly miserable experience.

StripedVase · 28/02/2026 21:06

I had a really similar situation - mine is vile to me and only borderline nice enough to my kids. I don't go to visit him anymore; my DH understands. If he was to come here (unlikely as he can't be arsed), I would be broadly civil but would absent myself a lot and not cook for him. No need to feel guilt about this. You don't owe him anything and you'll never regret not spending your precious time on him!

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