Help end medical misogyny. Sign our petition.

Help end medical misogyny.
Sign our petition.

Sign the petition

Please or to access all these features

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:
Choochoobutho · 11/04/2026 15:23

What an old cowbag she is!!

also why has she done a masters after retiring? Probably because she wants to elevate her own standing within the family as it clearly wasn’t done for professional development.

How do you think she will react if she’s pulled up on this? Is she likely to be mortified and apologetic or likely to deny or minimise? I’d be thinking about that before doing anything else tbh.

If she’s likely to dismiss it then I’d probably leave it but be frosty from now on.

Rhaidimiddim · 11/04/2026 15:23

Hamserfan · 11/04/2026 15:20

I think next time you are out for a meal with them I would remind her about how she loses her filter when drinking and suggest she lays off the sauce. I would be disappointed in your husband trying to minimisse it too. Is he happy with her implying that his brother has better taste or “pulling power” than him?

If there is a next time.

Endofyear · 11/04/2026 15:23

Just goes to show having academic qualifications doesn't make you a nice person! I would keep my distance from now on and just be polite when you see her. She's shown her true colours now and you won't forget what she said.

WilfredsPies · 11/04/2026 15:25

She’s shown herself to be, underneath it all, a bit of an arsehole. That’s on her and is no reflection on you.

You’ve got nothing to feel hurt about because you know that having a Masters doesn’t make you a better class of person. It doesn’t improve your personality or guarantee that you’ll do better in life. And you know that you’re not jealous of your SiL, so for that thought to have even occurred to her, speaks volumes about her own insecurities (another thing that having a masters isn’t going to help her with).

I think I’d probably speak to your DH again and try to make him understand why it hurt your feelings. How would he feel if he thought he got on quite well with your dad, and your dad then made a couple of very cutting comments that made it clear he didn’t think your DH was quite up to standard in terms of achievements or appearance? If he claims he wouldn’t even be slightly taken aback by it, then I’d be a bit suspicious of that.

Re MiL, I don’t think I’d bother pulling her up on it; she’s told you what her opinions are. Those aren’t going to change and if she apologises it’ll be because your DH has asked her to. It won’t mean anything. I think I’d just accept that my relationship with her wasn’t what I’d thought it was, she wasn’t who I’d thought she was, and withdraw. So still perfectly polite at family occasions but no closeness. And if she noticed and asked why, I’d be very honest and tell her that her values made me uncomfortable.

GetOffTheCounter · 11/04/2026 15:26

Ooof. That;s awful. I can't think of anyway that any of that can be dressed up.

I hope she feels fucking awful today.

I'm sorry.

Rainbowdottie · 11/04/2026 15:26

I’m the sort of person who would have to address it. It’s hurtful what’s she said. Even if you could laugh off the masters bit, comparing DILs is horrible, it would never ever cross my mind to compare my DILs lets alone say it. I’d probably ask her out for coffee and explain it to her there. That way there’s no big dramatics, no one else involved. You don’t need to fall out with her, but I can’t see what’s wrong with saying that it was hurtful.

queenofwandss · 11/04/2026 15:29

Can you talk to her and say “I know you were quite drunk, but the things you said upset me. If you could be mindful of that in the future we can put it past us and move on”? I bet she will be mortified when she finds out what she said.
i do think it’s important to stick up for yourself though OP, rather than H say anything.

Firesidechatter · 11/04/2026 15:30

Yeah she owes you an apology however I’m not a fan of sending my husband into do it. You’re not a child.and it’s behaving like one to ask him to. Speak to her, tell her you found her comments offensive. Don’t say childish things like does it mean you think I’m not attractive or intelligent. Just say you admire them all, are not envious and her comments were unfounded and Hurtful she’d think like that about you.

Picklelily99 · 11/04/2026 15:30

"Good God mother, lay off the vino if you can't control your mouth! You must be mortified" is what your husband needs to be saying. And pretty damned sharpish too.

AnotherCuppaWillDo · 11/04/2026 15:31

She’s clearly a snob and was trying to hurt you. I wouldn’t be forgiving her in a hurry and would take a massive step back

overnightangel · 11/04/2026 15:31

That would be me 100% done and no contact. Tell your husband anywhere she is, you won’t be. If that means her not getting to see her grandchildren, well that’s too bad for her. What a vile woman.

dapsnotplimsolls · 11/04/2026 15:32

DH definitely needs to say something. I'd be tempted to avoid future events where she's likely to get drunk.

Comtesse · 11/04/2026 15:32

She was out of order - the demon drink has a lot of answer for….

JustSawJohnny · 11/04/2026 15:34

Sounds like DH will go to his Mum and make you the problem.

If he's already telling you you're being sensitive, which you're not - she was being a bitch -then he will go to her and say the same thing.

What he needs to say is 'Do not compare our partners like that again and stop it with the academic shaming'. End of.

She sounds horrible.

HoppityBun · 11/04/2026 15:34

Picklelily99 · 11/04/2026 15:30

"Good God mother, lay off the vino if you can't control your mouth! You must be mortified" is what your husband needs to be saying. And pretty damned sharpish too.

Yup. And with the best will in the world, a Masters degree depending on the subject isn’t much indication of anything at her age except the time and the money to be able to study. All credit to her if it’s in chemical engineering or nuclear physics or something like that, but it seems that she’s studying Applied Attitude.

Eclipser · 11/04/2026 15:35

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.

It says far more about her than it does about you. You know you have nothing to be insecure about.
It’s pure projection.

EmeraldShamrock000 · 11/04/2026 15:35

I hope she was mortified afterwards although I’m a firm believer that these things were on her sober mind.
I would phone her to remind her, just incase she has a hazy memory but I would not accept her apology as genuine.
You saw her true feelings. Stuck up witch.

RawBloomers · 11/04/2026 15:36

YANBU but at the same time I would say being hurt is a poor response. It’s such an ignorant point of view (ironically) that it’s not worth taking to heart. Let it inform your opinion of your MiL, you know now what she values and how false her previous treatment of you has been. I would be cool but civil to her in the future and not go out of my way for her at all.

Toober · 11/04/2026 15:38

HatAndScarf33 · 11/04/2026 15:07

@Tooberbut don’t you think there’s a chance that she’ll just feel like she got away with it and avoided an uncomfortable confrontation? Or she may minimise it and conclude she wasn’t ’that bad’ if nothing gets said?

No, I think she'll be squirming! Knowing what she said, that her DIL obviously knows, that there's a distinct possibility she's told her husband...wondering if/when the axe will fall...

I totally get what you're saying, I think it applies to situations where the relationship is already prickly/MIL has form for this behaviour and thinks she can say what she likes. From the OP I think this has come out of left field and MIL had no intenion of letting her nasty inside thoughts out into the open!

Lillers · 11/04/2026 15:39

I agree with the pp who said she’s projecting. She’s effectively revealed her own insecurities to you - not being as highly educated as her family has bothered her so much for her whole life that she’s now studying more in her retirement. Like you say, good for her, but it’s a shame that it clearly comes from a place of deep insecurity rather than a love of the subject etc. This probably also then extends to her comments about your BIL’s gf, she probably looks at her with nothing but envy. What a sad way for her to live.

UnctuousUnicorns · 11/04/2026 15:39

It's a pity that having a masters hasn't stopped your MIL being rude and pig ignorant.

HyacinthsAndPeonies · 11/04/2026 15:40

She's obviously projecting and is insecure herself if she feels the need at her age to get a Masters to keep up with everyone else. If she mentions it again, maybe say that there's plenty of time and you likely won't leave it until you're almost a pensioner until you study for yours.

WonderingWanda · 11/04/2026 15:41

She was so rude and incredibly bitchy. I think I wouldn't be able to stop myself telling her so.

disturbia · 11/04/2026 15:43

She is not a nice MIL ...is she overweight and ugly by any chance? She could be jealous of you. I personally would not give her the satisfaction nor the power to think her unkind comments had hurt me. Rise above it if possible. Wish you well

AlphaAndOmega777 · 11/04/2026 15:47

YANBU at all, she sounds vile! You may not have a masters, but don't worry, sounds like you have the manners she doesn't

Are we sure that she isn't the one who is jealous of the 'pretty, stunning' DIL? Sounds like a weird comment to me 🤷🏻‍♀️