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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to be hurt by my drunk MIL's comments?

230 replies

Sophsholli · 11/04/2026 14:28

I’ll start with some context, DH and I have been married for 3 years, I generally get on well with his family and this is the first time we have had any issues. We have a 2 year old and a 3 month old.

Anyway, last night was MILs 60th birthday party, I think I was one of very few who didn’t drink and certainly the only one in the immediate family who didn’t. Part way through the evening I would say MIL was fairly drunk, she doesn’t drink much so I haven’t seen her like this. We were chatting and out of nowhere she said some things that really hurt me.
First of all MIL took early retirement and decided to go back to university and get a masters degree, I think good for her! But she made a comment along the lines of “ah you’ll be the only person in the family without a masters soon”. I laughed it off, as well she is technically correct, DH, his dad, his brother, his brothers girlfriend and soon to be MIL all have masters. I wouldn’t have cared if the conversation ended with that. She then asked me if I felt “insecure”, I said no why would I? And she said well you know our family is quite academic and you are not, again I laughed it off and say no it doesn’t bother me and I don’t think degrees are all that important if you have a different path to a good and fulfilling career planned. She continued wittering, insulted the university I did go to, and implied I wasn’t as “bright” as the rest of the family.
I tried to divert the conversation away, but she went on to complimenting BILs girlfriend, her intellect, her beauty etc. She then said at the end “ah you must be a bit jealous of her, with her being so lovely and smart and stunning”. I simply didn’t reply to this and tried to move away to socialise with others.

However this morning this has left me very hurt. On the education front, I grew up in a very working class family and was the first to attend university at all. To me that is a massive achievement, irrespective of how highly sought after the university is. On the other hand DH and his brother were both privately educated, BILs girlfriend went to an international school abroad and comes from a family of professionals and academics.
Second of all, and perhaps more painfully, I feel her last comment was implying that I am not as “stunning” or “lovely” as BILs girlfriend. I’m not blind to the fact that she is objectively a very attractive woman, and she is rather lovely and clearly intelligent. However I’ve never felt insecure around her as a result. I won’t pretend I’m some sort of model but I wouldn’t say I’m unattractive so it felt like an unnecessary comment.

I told DH this morning and he asked if I wanted him to talk to her about this. I said I’d like him to mention it as it’s not comments I want to receive again in the future. He said he would but he felt I shouldn’t take it to heart and she only compliments BILs girlfriend so much because she is foreign and his mother views her as “exotic” (she’s French-Italian). He seemed shocked that I am hurt, and thinks I should brush it off as MIL being too drunk and loose with her words and not allow it to sour our relationship with her, but to me it was her been unfiltered and honest and she clearly views me as slightly unattractive and not very intelligent.

AIBU to be hurt?

OP posts:
Menonut · 13/04/2026 11:13

She really did show her true colours. Although as others have said she could be reflecting her own feelings of inadequacy and explaining why she is doing a masters post retirement.

My son had a fairly similar experience recently. He is state educated and at a top university.

One of his privately educated housemates did a placement in a local school and came back and said something along the lines of “what a horrific place, I certainly won’t be sending my kids to a state school to mix with people like that!”

She had no idea why he and one of his other housemates were offended!

Unintentionallycausingoffence · 13/04/2026 11:25

It sounds as if she was pushing you and trying to upset you with her comments. When you say you aren’t jealous of BIL girlfriend or insecure around MIL family why not accept it and leave it there.

tommyhoundmum · 13/04/2026 19:08

BiddlyBipBipBeeBop · 11/04/2026 15:00

“She then said at the end “ah you must be a bit jealous of her, with her being so lovely and smart and stunning”.”

Wouldn’t a delicious response have been “Not at all, but you clearly are!”

I never think of the right reply until well after the event! 🤣

She’s projecting. She did her degree later in life because the rest of her family made her feel inadequate academically.

I am always astonished by how competitive people can be about academic qualifications. Some of the best people I've met in my life have been highly intelligent but with few educational qualifications. As for me, my 2 GCSEs have taken me all over the world working for government ministers. A strong work ethic, commonsense and an education at the university of life are sometimes all you need. Your in-law is jealous of you, too. After all, her son loves you.

SemiRetiredLoveGoddeess · 13/04/2026 19:36

As she obviously doesn't think.much of you and deep down is a grade one arsehole and total butch. I would just cut her off completely.

Tell your husband you don't want an apology from.het. But would adore it, if you never saw of heard from her again.

Being rat arsed is not an excuse for her hateful rantings what she said to you.

It's a pity you didn't get a chance to record what she said to you as a lasting momento.

Good luck and just get on with our life.
😻
X

whittingtonmum · 17/04/2026 17:55

I think her comments were insulting and MIL should be asked to apologise for them.

If she chooses not to I'd take a giant step back from the relationship and only have the minimum interaction necessary. What a snob.

Only doing a Masters degree in your sixties isn't really anything to be snobbish about. I am currently doing my second Masters degree and it would not occur to me to look down on or imply that anyone without one might feel insecure. So ridiculous. Clearly a chip on her shoulder not on yours.

Still: rude, rude, rude.

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