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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to feel uncomfortable about my MIL's behaviour around food?

440 replies

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 13:06

Sorry, this ended up being quite a long post.

I don’t know what advice I am looking for and simply wanted to share this with other people to see if anybody else has ever experienced anything like this?

MIL, who is past retirement age, has a not so healthy relationship with weight and food. There are reasons I say this which I won’t go into, but let’s just say it is off topic for this thread.

I put on weight recently, but my BMI is in the green, right in the middle. This comes after years of being underweight, at times dangerously so, and struggling to put weight on, for reasons that are also off topic here.

MIL is now constantly asking me how the weight loss is going, measuring me up with her eyes, essentially fat-checking me… she does try to be discrete about this but I’ve seen it happen. She will ask whether I have managed to lose any weight since the last time she saw me. She then confirms “but the weight is going down right?”

She herself is not underweight for her age but is on the thin side.

In her fridge and cupboard, she keeps lots of out of date, expired food. Often mouldy. She will tell anybody who listens how she doesn’t gain weight and how proud she is of it, then going into details about how she manages to do that. For example, if she has eaten a lot one day she will try to not to eat very much for several days thereafter.

Unless she eats out, she’d does not eat “real” food, instead snacking on things like tomatoes or biscuits or nuts, or if she decides to have a meal, it will be something like canned soup. My understanding is she doesn’t really know how to cook, but that isn’t something you can judge her for because not everybody does.

She will often go out of her way to make sure her son (my husband) gets food when we are there, but will essentially do the opposite with me. This used to happen even when I was very thin. If we would go out for a meal she would order something “healthy” then try to eat my food and actually verbalise that she won’t take any from her son’s plate because he needs it. She would encourage her son to get the most expensive and substantial option on a menu, and although it has never explicitly been said I always feel that I am supposed to pick something cheap, sometimes based on suggestions she makes but mostly it’s based on experience from eating out with her and the sort of obvious conclusion you can draw from the behaviour when I do get something that isn’t the very cheapest option (she tries to eat my food). Of course it is possible this is all in my head but I am fairly sure it is not.

I feel like there’s an aspect to this which comes from a need to hoard food because food costs money. Or making sure you get your money’s worth (since she paid for the meal). So her son eating is getting your moneys worth, me eating is not. This behaviour extends to other situations but again it’s a bit off topic.

She does offer me what is in her cupboard and fridge but as I say it’s all expired and mouldy. In the same breath she will talk about how to ensure you don’t get hungry by snacking on small amounts of food like sweets and nuts.

On our most recent visit she made her son some food (tinned soup). She did not offer me the same. She then told me to join her while she ran some errands, in what felt like an attempt to distract me from eating. At this point it was late afternoon and I had not had anything to eat all day. She later offered me tomatoes and crackers.

I don’t think I will ever try to “set a boundary” because to some degree it is a lost cause and I don’t want to make her cross, I mostly try to eat before and after seeing her, but sometimes there isn’t time to do that.

OP posts:
illtellyouwhat · 03/06/2026 13:42

godmum56 · 03/06/2026 13:12

you can get out of both of those. say "I AM NOT GOING" rinse and repeat.

I know, I am trying.

Seems like part of the control comes from making people aware that if you don’t participate she gets more control…

Not to make this political - I didn’t vote and can sympathise with both sides so don’t make me regret using this analogy 🙄- I remember how for the Brexit referendum one argument for remaining was “to have a seat at the table [to be able to influence decisions]”. The table being a metaphor for control and also literal. Which is why “take back control” was such an effective slogan.

Anyways please let’s not get dragged into the politics of Brexit I think you can probably appreciate the parallels I’m drawing without seeing it as me taking one side or the other it’s just an observation about how both sides used very effective political messaging.

OP posts:
godmum56 · 03/06/2026 13:49

illtellyouwhat · 03/06/2026 13:42

I know, I am trying.

Seems like part of the control comes from making people aware that if you don’t participate she gets more control…

Not to make this political - I didn’t vote and can sympathise with both sides so don’t make me regret using this analogy 🙄- I remember how for the Brexit referendum one argument for remaining was “to have a seat at the table [to be able to influence decisions]”. The table being a metaphor for control and also literal. Which is why “take back control” was such an effective slogan.

Anyways please let’s not get dragged into the politics of Brexit I think you can probably appreciate the parallels I’m drawing without seeing it as me taking one side or the other it’s just an observation about how both sides used very effective political messaging.

How does she get more control OF YOU if you don't participate? To be clear, you have zero control over the choices that your partner makes. This is not a Brexit situation where you must stay involved to have any control. The only control you can have in this situation is control over what you do and what you allow others to do to you. What your partner allows or doesn't; does or does not do is entirely up to them. If they decide to remain under the control of theor parent, there is nothing NOTHING that you can do about it unless they choose to change.

illtellyouwhat · 03/06/2026 14:04

godmum56 · 03/06/2026 13:49

How does she get more control OF YOU if you don't participate? To be clear, you have zero control over the choices that your partner makes. This is not a Brexit situation where you must stay involved to have any control. The only control you can have in this situation is control over what you do and what you allow others to do to you. What your partner allows or doesn't; does or does not do is entirely up to them. If they decide to remain under the control of theor parent, there is nothing NOTHING that you can do about it unless they choose to change.

This is what i mean with her getting more control through non-participation (not always, but sometimes)

Participate
MIL: I want to [something, e.g use your house on a specific date]
Me: No/Will need to check if that works and get back to you

Don’t participate
MIL: I want to do [something]
DH: Ok!

OP posts:
ToSayYouHaveNoChoiceIsAFailureOfImagination · 03/06/2026 14:44

I think you've made some huge steps forward. You've been honest about the situation with your family and they're coming to visit. You can see more of the issues you have with MIL and DH more clearly than you could. You're self esteem is increasing. These are big deals. And you should pat yourself on the back.

I do want to push back on a few things you've said. The first major one is your own therapy. That is the single biggest change you can make to improve your life. When a PP asked about that you said you hadn't found a therapist yet, then you spoke about putting yourself in a 'better place' for therapy. That's a nice thought, but really you are creating excuses and kicking the can down the road. I get it. Therapy is hard and difficult, but there will never be a perfect time to start. What have you done so far to find a therapist? Have you visited any of the websites suggested up thread? Have you emailed or phoned anyone to discuss availability? A good therapist will most likely have a waiting list. If you make a phone call today, you might not have regular sessions for a few months. Take some meaningful action on this. Break it down into chunks so it doesn't feel overwhelming and scary.

Your planned family gatherings with MIL

  1. Your UK wedding celebration. Are you interested in this? If you, the bride, the important one at the wedding, want this then organise it yourself. It's your party. It belongs to you. Don't let it be stolen. If you don't want this, then tell MIL "Actually Barbara, we've thought some more and are choosing not to go ahead with this" no reason is needed and you just don't show up to whatever happens on the day.

2.MILs important announcement party. Well that's just narcissistic nonsense isn't it. Don't go. "Sorry Barbara, we won't be able to make it afterall, don't worry though, I'm sure we'll hear all about it later" Again don't give any excuses. Just state your intention.

Asking MIL for advice
You say you "think it might be necessary to let her have an outlet for her bizarre fixations. So not to piss her off".
You're just continuing to play games. You don't need to do that. Why does her potential anger scare you? You have previously been giving her the power to emotionally hurt you, but you are doing better at protecting yourself from that. Her being pissed off is an uncomfortable feeling that she's going to have to deal with. It's your choice if you let that affect you.

On continuing to participate
Your version of not participating is
MIL: I want to do [something]
DH: Ok!

Fine, then what do you do after your DH says yes. You could

  • tell DH to text or phone back, "actually I've just realised that's not going to work for us"
  • you could text that message
  • you could just not attend and/or physically do nothing to facilitate the thing from happening

You can't control your DH, equally you don't need to mitigate for him. He does not speak for you without your permission

Please go email or phone a therapist. Now. Today. Please

CordeliaNaismithVorkosigan · 03/06/2026 14:44

But the key point is that your DH can speak for himself, but not for you. He agrees to visit her and you would have said no - you can still say no, he goes without you. She can't control you.

godmum56 · 03/06/2026 15:07

all of what the above have said. You have zip nada zero control over what your partner does or says. Equally he has no control over what you do or say.
Consider this
"On continuing to participate
Your version of not participating is
MIL: I want to do [something]
DH: Ok!"
You to them both: I am not doing that.

godmum56 · 03/06/2026 15:18

PS Continuing to do the same thing but calling it something different is not change.

DuckbilledSplatterPuff · 03/06/2026 15:49

illtellyouwhat · 03/06/2026 14:04

This is what i mean with her getting more control through non-participation (not always, but sometimes)

Participate
MIL: I want to [something, e.g use your house on a specific date]
Me: No/Will need to check if that works and get back to you

Don’t participate
MIL: I want to do [something]
DH: Ok!

I sometimes look at situations like this, in the following way. (usually on the long car journey's home from similar outings!)

When a person leaves it up to a DH who is in this situation... to say OK ( which he is more comfortable doing because standing up to his mum is much harder than just making his DW have to go along with it) He is playing the role of "The Good Guy" the one who does what he is told. No one can argue with this, approval all round. So he doesn't mind the inconvenience, or lack of control over his time and labour. (Often, because it will involve DW in using more of her time and labour - and also he doesn't mind sacrificing other plans if he can remain The Good Guy. Its comfortable because this is how its always been.

His DW isn't used to this. They have their own plans for how they want to spend their time and labour with their DH.

Normally this is worked out between all three parties and everyone rubs along, when all three are reasonable people and then no one minds a bit of give and take. That's the ideal situation.
But if the Matriarch's demands start to become overbearing and even illogical or inconsiderate and eventually intolerable. The pressure on DH to comply gets tougher.

In your case, this puts you in the position of doing things ( and I think a UK wedding reception when you were married in US is quite a big "thing") that you really don't want to do, that are being imposed on you in a way you don't appreciate, making you follow rules/traditions that you don't agree with or make you uncomfortable. When you start opposing these unworkable plans - you are (gasp) The Bad Guy!

If you don't have a good relationship with your MIL (who sounds v difficult) then you need to realise you are already The Bad Guy.. and that's a difficult label to shake off. You can't really appease her as that will be put down to DH's good influence prevailing. You are the opposition.

Remember that saying "You can't please everyone so you might as well please yourself"? So if you are The Bad Guy anyway whatever you do - then you might as well organise your own life as you please, not as your MIL wants you to. Once you start thinking... "I don't care if Im The Bad Guy!" and you embrace the role, and can live with the disapproval ( especially if all you've had is disapproval) it's so much easier to just calmly and firmly say No, I'm not going to do that. And also to not feel guilt tripped into it by your DH. (MooHooHaHa)

I'm not ever suggesting that people should always counteract anything a MIL says or requests, but where its unreasonable and illogical or you feel you are being pushed around... stand your ground.

DuckbilledSplatterPuff · 03/06/2026 16:01

Another way to look at it is.. What's the worst that can happen if I say no.
The other person throws a tantrum - let them - you wouldn't give in to a toddler would you?
The other person refuses to speak to you - result! (In my opinion) They won't be able to believe you've said no and will keep coming back to ask you again - just to make sure you mean it.
The other person is annoyed with you - well they probably are any way so no loss there.

Again, this isn't a recommendation for dealing with reasonable people, only the unreasonable ones.

CraftyYankee · 03/06/2026 16:47

illtellyouwhat · 03/06/2026 12:23

You know what…. “duck it” 😉I’ll try to cancel this. It’s not like she’s made a deposit anywhere or made commitments to caterers 🤣 so won’t be that hard to cancel just have to tell people sorry it will have to be another time.

Thank you.

Edited

Good luck with that. I think you will be creating a whole new world of issues by trying to cancel the event but I hope I am wrong.

CraftyYankee · 03/06/2026 16:54

To clarify, I think you need to think about what YOU want and advocate for that. If you want to have a UK wedding reception and would like it to be at a venue, catered, etc then advocate for that. If you don't want to have one at all then say that.

If you really, truly don't care if it happens and don't care what it looks like and are happy to have MIL orchestrate the event and show up like a hired actor cast in the role of Bride, then go along with it.

But whatever you do make it intentional.

CraftyYankee · 03/06/2026 16:55

Also I have a great therapist I see remotely, feel free to PM if you want her info 😁

illtellyouwhat · 03/06/2026 22:32

ToSayYouHaveNoChoiceIsAFailureOfImagination · 03/06/2026 14:44

I think you've made some huge steps forward. You've been honest about the situation with your family and they're coming to visit. You can see more of the issues you have with MIL and DH more clearly than you could. You're self esteem is increasing. These are big deals. And you should pat yourself on the back.

I do want to push back on a few things you've said. The first major one is your own therapy. That is the single biggest change you can make to improve your life. When a PP asked about that you said you hadn't found a therapist yet, then you spoke about putting yourself in a 'better place' for therapy. That's a nice thought, but really you are creating excuses and kicking the can down the road. I get it. Therapy is hard and difficult, but there will never be a perfect time to start. What have you done so far to find a therapist? Have you visited any of the websites suggested up thread? Have you emailed or phoned anyone to discuss availability? A good therapist will most likely have a waiting list. If you make a phone call today, you might not have regular sessions for a few months. Take some meaningful action on this. Break it down into chunks so it doesn't feel overwhelming and scary.

Your planned family gatherings with MIL

  1. Your UK wedding celebration. Are you interested in this? If you, the bride, the important one at the wedding, want this then organise it yourself. It's your party. It belongs to you. Don't let it be stolen. If you don't want this, then tell MIL "Actually Barbara, we've thought some more and are choosing not to go ahead with this" no reason is needed and you just don't show up to whatever happens on the day.

2.MILs important announcement party. Well that's just narcissistic nonsense isn't it. Don't go. "Sorry Barbara, we won't be able to make it afterall, don't worry though, I'm sure we'll hear all about it later" Again don't give any excuses. Just state your intention.

Asking MIL for advice
You say you "think it might be necessary to let her have an outlet for her bizarre fixations. So not to piss her off".
You're just continuing to play games. You don't need to do that. Why does her potential anger scare you? You have previously been giving her the power to emotionally hurt you, but you are doing better at protecting yourself from that. Her being pissed off is an uncomfortable feeling that she's going to have to deal with. It's your choice if you let that affect you.

On continuing to participate
Your version of not participating is
MIL: I want to do [something]
DH: Ok!

Fine, then what do you do after your DH says yes. You could

  • tell DH to text or phone back, "actually I've just realised that's not going to work for us"
  • you could text that message
  • you could just not attend and/or physically do nothing to facilitate the thing from happening

You can't control your DH, equally you don't need to mitigate for him. He does not speak for you without your permission

Please go email or phone a therapist. Now. Today. Please

Edited

To all of you who left short and snappy and hilarious comments today: I wish I could react to some of your comments with a laughing reaction because they have brought me a lot of joy. I used the ❤instead. Thank you!

@ToSayYouHaveNoChoiceIsAFailureOfImagination you are of course right. I am making excuses to allow myself to kick the can down the road. I sometimes take a long time to adjust to new realities, but I have taken some steps to explore the path I’ll need to take, including (but not limited to):

  • browsed the 2 websites where I can find accredited psychotherapists
  • done a bit of google research to better understand what the process could look like
  • tried to make some plans around how I could finance this and when to fit it in with everything else happening in my life at the moment
  • working on neutralising what I’m going to call distractions which can interfere with/derail therapy once I start with. This includes MIL.

Last time I had therapy she was very in my business doing all sorts of weird stuff and it sort of ruined the experience and it ended with me stopping the sessions.

But everything you said is valid and I have taken it onboard. I especially appreciate you pointing out the issue around waiting lists, which was not something I was considering. So I will try to make some calls tomorrow to see what the situation is like in my area. There might be some free initial consultations too.

In terms of the two events and questions you raised there:

  1. I agree. In line with yours, @DuckbilledSplatterPuff and @CraftyYankee comments I ended up first telling DH of intention to cancel and then said you know what let’s restore the original plan (at a venue) and make it our event not MILs, since she had hers when she got married. But to your point: do I want to do this event at all? No not really. But DH wants to have a chance to celebrate with members of fam who are on the way out, so to speak, and who have committed to travel far for this event (even more reason to not use “by MILself” catering…) this also leads me to the next point
  2. why am I scared of her anger/what is there to lose? well, for me nothing because as I mentioned many pages ago I don’t care about money/worldly possessions (which a poster - will try to go back to find out who and edit this post it was @BingoJingo - who pointed out I should care about it to some degree) but despite knowing MIL for as long as I have, I don’t have a complete grasp of how volatile she can be or how she might retaliate against me via DH/financial means. I make new discoveries every month, sometimes every week. And although we discussed upthread that I can’t constantly try to please people I also think I have a responsibility to at least not intentionally make DHs life hell in relation to his DM.

What I can’t work out is if I’m a tool (used against DH) or the target in this game, as you put it. Of both.

She once screams at me in a totally crazed way, instead of directing her anger at DH, an incident worthy of several therapy sessions alone, and I could have screamed back at her, it’s something I am very good at doing if I really want or need to, but I didn’t because I knew that would have made everything worse and most importantly (to me) upset my DH (made him very very sad, which he was anyway due to her behaviour that day).

So yeah I mean I could fight fire with fire but I reckon that would kill our marriage one way or another.

OP posts:
CraftyYankee · 03/06/2026 23:03

Where is your DH in all this? He sounds very passive. Is he putting a fraction of this thought and effort into making the situation better for you?

illtellyouwhat · 04/06/2026 01:24

DuckbilledSplatterPuff · 03/06/2026 15:49

I sometimes look at situations like this, in the following way. (usually on the long car journey's home from similar outings!)

When a person leaves it up to a DH who is in this situation... to say OK ( which he is more comfortable doing because standing up to his mum is much harder than just making his DW have to go along with it) He is playing the role of "The Good Guy" the one who does what he is told. No one can argue with this, approval all round. So he doesn't mind the inconvenience, or lack of control over his time and labour. (Often, because it will involve DW in using more of her time and labour - and also he doesn't mind sacrificing other plans if he can remain The Good Guy. Its comfortable because this is how its always been.

His DW isn't used to this. They have their own plans for how they want to spend their time and labour with their DH.

Normally this is worked out between all three parties and everyone rubs along, when all three are reasonable people and then no one minds a bit of give and take. That's the ideal situation.
But if the Matriarch's demands start to become overbearing and even illogical or inconsiderate and eventually intolerable. The pressure on DH to comply gets tougher.

In your case, this puts you in the position of doing things ( and I think a UK wedding reception when you were married in US is quite a big "thing") that you really don't want to do, that are being imposed on you in a way you don't appreciate, making you follow rules/traditions that you don't agree with or make you uncomfortable. When you start opposing these unworkable plans - you are (gasp) The Bad Guy!

If you don't have a good relationship with your MIL (who sounds v difficult) then you need to realise you are already The Bad Guy.. and that's a difficult label to shake off. You can't really appease her as that will be put down to DH's good influence prevailing. You are the opposition.

Remember that saying "You can't please everyone so you might as well please yourself"? So if you are The Bad Guy anyway whatever you do - then you might as well organise your own life as you please, not as your MIL wants you to. Once you start thinking... "I don't care if Im The Bad Guy!" and you embrace the role, and can live with the disapproval ( especially if all you've had is disapproval) it's so much easier to just calmly and firmly say No, I'm not going to do that. And also to not feel guilt tripped into it by your DH. (MooHooHaHa)

I'm not ever suggesting that people should always counteract anything a MIL says or requests, but where its unreasonable and illogical or you feel you are being pushed around... stand your ground.

Edited

@CraftyYankee He is a bit passive, yeah, but I think he’s been ground down quite hard from experiencing this his whole life… he does try as best he can, I think… but feels very pulled in different directions.

Occasionally causes breakdowns/intense sorrow.

There is very obvious friction between me and MIL, despite my best efforts to lubricate by being a doormat… **

Also think the first couple of paragraphs in @DuckbilledSplatterPuff post i’ve quoted above is a good description of the dynamic sometimes.

** wonder if the reason is she doesn’t like me/wanted him to pick someone else

OP posts:
AnnaMagnani · 04/06/2026 07:45

I think it's totally obvious that she wanted him to marry herself.

illtellyouwhat · 04/06/2026 09:50

AnnaMagnani · 04/06/2026 07:45

I think it's totally obvious that she wanted him to marry herself.

shudders

OP posts:
CraftyYankee · 04/06/2026 10:08

I realize we're getting a very biased view of your life and relationship because you posted here about issues with your MIL. How often do you see her? How much influence does she have on your everyday life? Is it that the vast majority of your time with him is good? Or is she a factor in your day to day life, happiness, peace of mind?

illtellyouwhat · 04/06/2026 10:35

CraftyYankee · 04/06/2026 10:08

I realize we're getting a very biased view of your life and relationship because you posted here about issues with your MIL. How often do you see her? How much influence does she have on your everyday life? Is it that the vast majority of your time with him is good? Or is she a factor in your day to day life, happiness, peace of mind?

At the moment seeing her once every couple of weeks. Sometimes months go by without a face to face interaction, but there are weekly calls between her and DH, sometimes more.

Every now and then she will ask me to do personal assistant type stuff for her, and will contact me for that (book me this, book me that, find this or that out for me).

She recently suggested to DH that since I don’t have a job at the moment (and she was “impressed” by my organisational skills on the most recent task she had given me) perhaps I’d like to “work for her” as a PA?

Unclear what the pay would be but I doubt she pays market rates…

She also suggests to her contacts who need cheap labour that I might be able to help them (for free). The argument being I’ve been out of work for so long now that it will be hard to get a paid role in my field, and therefore if I work for free for one of her acquaintances/friends (don’t even know the exact relationship tbh) then I can leverage that to get a paid role.

She rarely makes these suggestions to me directly (when it’s essentially trying to exploit my labour for free) and instead says it to DH during their weekly calls and he then pitches it to me.

Beyond the above, she also has an unreasonable amount of influence on our lives, including on career paths, what home improvements we should make, when to do them, trades people to use… the list goes on.

The majority of my time with him is good but better when I have a job because then he’s not under so much financial pressure and I feel better about myself because I can be more independent. But MIL influence is the primary cause of friction/stress in our lives imo.

OP posts:
user1492809438 · 04/06/2026 11:31

All your posts lean towards supporting and showing love for your DH. 'I also think I have a responsibility to at least not intentionally make DH's life hell in relation to his DM.' What about his support, love and responsibility to stop his mother making your life a hell? I don't see any evidence of that, yes he has been trained and conditioned, but he is an adult. It is not for you to endure this misery so he doesn't have to face up to his weakness and address it.

Mulledjuice · 04/06/2026 11:36

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 13:15

Nothing really… He eats his food. Sometimes chuffed, if it’s at a restaurant, or something he likes. Sometimes in despair because it’s awful/gone off.

If it’s about the weight he just doesn’t say much, she does the same to him. Other times we both just appease her by essentially agreeing she’s very clever to have come up with such fabulous weight loss tricks…

You have a DH problem as well

BuckChuckets · 04/06/2026 14:02

user1492809438 · 04/06/2026 11:31

All your posts lean towards supporting and showing love for your DH. 'I also think I have a responsibility to at least not intentionally make DH's life hell in relation to his DM.' What about his support, love and responsibility to stop his mother making your life a hell? I don't see any evidence of that, yes he has been trained and conditioned, but he is an adult. It is not for you to endure this misery so he doesn't have to face up to his weakness and address it.

Indeed! And, @illtellyouwhat , just because he's been damaged by his upbringing, it doesn't mean you have to just accept it and live with it.

It's not your responsibility to rehabilitate him, especially if it means you continuing to suffer because of it.

99bottlesofkombucha · 04/06/2026 14:14

illtellyouwhat · 21/05/2026 13:47

Based on current poll numbers, there are roughly 40 people who think I'm being unreasonable.

If we assume some people have voted that way with the logic of "you're being unreasonable because you're allowing this" - which is a fair point and it did make me laugh to read that when someone said that here - it still leaves a fair number of people who we haven't heard from.

I do really appreciate all the responses so far and I would be really interested to hear from someone who genuinely thinks I'm being unreasonable. Why do you think that? Do your recognise yourself in MILs behaviour? Insight into this thinking might help with how to frame things with DH and/or MIL.

Edited

I think you’re being unreasonable because I would never fucking ever leave my dc with this woman. When my dc3 was a few months old mil was supposed to be looking after her so I could go to an appt, and sil wanted help that morning so mil canceled on her. She felt bad about letting me down and offered fil to come instead. Dh urged me to accept it. I said have any other babies ever been left with fil? No, but he’s great (which he is with kids). So he never looked after you as babies, has never looked after a baby, and over my dead body does he start at the age of 75 with my 3 month old. i don’t care if anyone was offended, my child’s wellbeing is the most important thing. That’s normal, and you need to stop worrying about upsetting your dh.
dh: upset blah blah. You: it literally takes me a couple of days to psych myself up to cope with your mum, and then I need to recover, why don’t you care about that? If you care about my wellbeing so little then I will clearly have to look after myself and I will do that by not going anymore since you don’t have my back.
dh: they accepted you immediately. You: I need you to stop with that. Mil starves me and non stop says things designed to make me feel like shit. Your sister is horrible to me. They have not accepted me and it doesn’t become true by you saying it. I’m with you despite your family not because of them and it’s not getting any easier.
dh: my nieces and nephews stayed there.
you: you’re. Not. Listening. To. Me. If you want your baby to stay with your mum, find some woman who doesn’t prioritise her child’s welfare and have babies with them. My babies won’t be. I won’t risk them being exposed to those comments, and you’ve not stood up for me in 7 years so I don’t trust you to shut it down to zero body shaming zero starving zero teaching to cope with hunger zero eating off food, I couldn’t possibly trust you based on the behaviour you’ve shown me.
him: I was distracted by my work call. You: yes there always does seem to be a reason why my welfare wasn’t a focus while your mum starved and bullied me. Does that seem like a good marriage to you?

99bottlesofkombucha · 04/06/2026 14:20

illtellyouwhat · 22/05/2026 14:45

I don’t know. It’s possible that one parent (SIL) is aware. May also be unaware. Unclear if these lessons have been given during supervised or unsupervised MIL/GD childcare. DH doesn’t wan’t to find out as worried SIL will perceive that as having her parenting policed if she is aware of these comments/permits them…

@ToSayYouHaveNoChoiceIsAFailureOfImagination also asked

You haven't suggested that your husband has a current recognised eating disorder or current disordered eating. Does he?

Not sure what is recognised/not. But he does sort of do, it’s just not your “regular” type of disorder, it’s more of an obsession with food/unable to stop thinking about food.

If there’s food around he has to eat it. I can leave things in the fridge and revisit another time, but he is not able to do the same.

If you leave kids with her they will be very high risk for eating disorders. Your poor niece most certainly is going to have challenges with food from her exposure to your fucked up mil.

HellyR · 04/06/2026 15:16

Beyond the above, she also has an unreasonable amount of influence on our lives, including on career paths, what home improvements we should make, when to do them, trades people to use… the list goes on.

Come on, dear... it's exhausting just to read this! Definitely needs to change!
At least if she's just suggesting your free labour to DH he can just be non-commital and you can ignore.

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