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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?

328 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In her fridge and cupboard, she keeps lots of out of date, expired food.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:
gamerchick · 19/05/2026 14:38

You have a weird husband problem OP and your pandering to her hasn't helped either.

Stop eating out with her or pay. Take a packed lunch with you when you go to visit and wave it at your husband when he's eating something gross and not sticking up for you.

Or stop seeing her completely. Have the row.

HazelMember · 19/05/2026 14:38

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.

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.

Your DH just sat and ate while all this happened? Does not care about you at all? Yes MIL's behaviour is appalling but I would be more disappointed in my DH if he behaved like this.

Sassylovesbooks · 19/05/2026 14:40

Your husband needs to step up here. Instead of sitting there stuffing his face, he should be telling his Mum to stop. You should be ordering what you want off a menu when you're out...if it's too much for your MIL, then pay for your own meal!! When you're at her home, your husband should be the one to tell his Mum that she needs to stop, leave you alone and let you eat what you want.

Is your MIL the sort who feels a woman should be thin as possible 'for her husband'???? It's a very old fashioned view point, but a possible one.

Your MIL has a distorted view of food and her relationship with it is poor. However, she shouldn't be pushing her views onto you.

Tabarnak · 19/05/2026 14:42

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 has a very unhealthy relationship with food, you and DH are supporting it, and she is extending it to you by proxy by restricting what you eat.

She has no right to carry on like this and I really hope you do not have Dc listening to it.

If she starts just say "I'm a healthy weight and that's all that matters and all I have to say on the subject" and change the subject
"We've had that conversation - nothing more to say"
"Oohh, missus, how very personal!" and change the subject
"Personally I don't find it useful to discuss weight - mine or anyone elses"

And where the hell is your DH when she is feeding him and not you? I would be mortified and horrified if my Mum treated my DH like that and would either say "Here - share mine if there isn't another tin" or "DW needs lunch too, Mum, she doesn't live on scotch mist!"

Out for dinner? ick what you like, say "this sounds delicious and I'm looking forward to it all to myself" Or have DH say "Are you having a steak? - its your favourite"

I know you said you don't want to set boundaries but bloody hell, you are going hungry, being subjected to her own food issues, it must be seriously affecting your relationship with her. Just be you, do your thing and don't put up with being pigeonholed as her unhealthy eating wing woman.

VanquishedColston · 19/05/2026 14:42

I can't believe your husband sits there eating food she's made him knowing that she's offered you nothing?!! That's bizarre behaviour from him, how rude.

I think if you're not going to call it out in some way then all you can do is always make sure you've eaten before you see her and don't see her over mealtimes.

AnnaMagnani · 19/05/2026 14:43

My DM is very elderly now but loves nothing better than to talk about how much she wants to lose weight and how revolting her friends are for eating cake, ever. Despite knowing i have zero interest in the subject.

My MIL does the same living on snacks, saving half a piece of carrot thing as OP's MIL. She also does the male and female portion thing.

DH notices some but not all of her behaviour. He has noticed she starts every restaurant meal with a long spiel about whether she can eat that much. He hadn't noticed she will always have the chicken or fish as they are suitable lady meals while encouraging him to have steak.

If it's normal to you it is harder to notice. But someone really did a number on generations of women and their relationship with food.

Elsvieta · 19/05/2026 14:45

She asks you how the weight loss is going... when you've never said you're trying to lose weight? Bloody hell. I'd just say "Huh? I'm not trying to lose weight". Repeat as necessary, perhaps peering at her as if in concern that she's getting forgetful and mixing you up with someone else, and don't answer any other weight questions. Ick.

Crunchymum · 19/05/2026 14:51

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

Well for a start you make sure you take your own food if you know she isn't going to feed you. Going hungry all day seems unnecessarily martyr-ish given you know how she behaves.

As for the restaurant behaviour, order what you want (offer to pay - that might shame her) or better still leave your DH to go with his mum.

Any time she makes a comment on your weight or feed shut it down. "I don't want to talk about weight / food" should suffice.

Next time she takes your food (or tries to) tell her no - like a bloody toddler.

I can't believe the amount of nonsense you have already put up with, if kids are planned in the future then you either sort this out now with clear, firm and unwavering boundaries or you go very low contact to ensure she doesn't pull this shit with any DC you have.

Your DH also needs to get his act together and you need to present united boundaries.

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 14:53

HazelMember · 19/05/2026 14:35

What does your husband do when she tries to eat your food?

@HazelMember
"What does your husband do when she tries to eat your food?"

I think @LetsMakeThisMomentLast covered this a bit:

"I can’t believe your husband just gets stuck to his food without wondering whether you are being fed! Then again, he grew up with this woman"

@Feis123
"The most shocking thing of it all is that 'since she's paid for the meal'. You and your dh allow your MIL pay for the meal? Seriously? Why can't YOU and your dh pay for the meal and then order all you want and some more?"

This gets a bit complicated and will quickly take us off topic, but in short, the reason for going out for the meal is so that she can buy us a meal. I think she sees this both as her way of being motherly to her son - taking him out for a meal - and also a way of spending time with us in an organised manner so that "that's done".

@titchy

Do you stay with her? Why did you go all day without food? If you know what she’s like surely you take your own food? And order what the hell you want from a menu. Obvs pay for it, don’t expect her to. She is welcome to her issues but you don’t have to go along with them, so why do you?

We sometimes stay, but very rarely now. More so in the past. Made the food stuff even more difficult to deal with and plan.

There's a tendency to change plans a lot, often at a whim, and also not be totally upfront with what the plan is. So we went there to do [something] and planning for that meant that after that was done there would be free time for me afterwards to get food. But as I mentioned in my original post, once that was done suddenly I got dragged to something else which put a spanner in my lunch plan. I also want to make it clear I don't expect her to pay but it's sort of the expectation/rule here. It is a transactional dance that we all do which is quite frustrating. I think it's important that my husband spends time with his mum, and to some degree that we have times where she gets to spend time with "her son and his wife" as a unit. The alternative here is I become someone who appears to be avoiding her and then it's easy to end up being scapegoated and I don't really fancy being the awful daughter in law who never attends events. She can also be quite amusing to be around so it's not all bad. And of course my husband loves his mum and I want to help make his relationship with her easier.

So it is quite complicated but theres an unwritten rule that she takes us out for a meal and we take that meal from her and then we express thankfulness. Sounds so odd as I type this out but it is what it is.

OP posts:
HelenHywater · 19/05/2026 14:54

My ex MIL was the same - she used to pile my H's plate up and leave mine empty. She'd give my H and his brothers food off her plate. She was obsessed with my weight. (and I think her own, although her sons just used to think she had a bird like appetite I think). Like your husband my exH just used to sit there and accept the extra food and never challenge her (and in fact he and his brothers used to moan about the number of potatoes etc they had).

It was a nightmare.

I don't have to see her now but my children do. I just talk to them about how ridiculous she is so hopefully they don't think she's normal.

Itsseweasy · 19/05/2026 14:56

GreenCandleWax · 19/05/2026 13:33

I voted YABU but that is because you have failed to set a boundary between yourself and her crazy and unhealthy behaviour towards you. Be assertive. If she tries to talk about you and food, tell her you don't want to discuss it. Repeat each time. If she tries to take food from your plate, absolutely do not allow it. You could sit as far away as possible from her at a table if that helps. Be firm - it is completely unacceptable to take your food, or comment on your body. As for you having to order cheap dishes in a restaurant - do the opposite, and have something expensive that you'd really like.
Firm upn your resolution not to be treated like this.

Same. I also voted YABU because neither you or your husband has a) pointed out how incredibly rude she is being and had an actual conversation with her about it, or b) done anything to set any boundaries.
I realise this is an advice forum and the whole point of it is to ask for help, but did neither of the above options occur to either of you?
Your husband sounds like an absolute wet lettuce and you’re not far off to go along with it all.
I’d be asking her why she’s doing what she’s doing (using the trusty Mumsnet “did you mean to be so rude”) and if nothing changes I’d be setting firm boundaries (ie your husband can visit by himself).
Also - I simply can not believe you are both sitting there with mouldy/spoiled food and not pointing it out!
Why are you both so scared of her???!
It sounds like she has some serious mental health issues so I wouldn’t expect her to change at all, it will be up to you and your husband to change how you are reacting to this madness.

Dillydollydingdong · 19/05/2026 14:56

I'd take a pack of sandwiches withe when visiting her, and if you're eating out, just smack her hand when she tries to pinch your food (obviously smile, make a bit of a joke about it). Or tell your DH to take food off his plate and put it on yours if you've only been given a small portion

AnnaMagnani · 19/05/2026 15:00

For visiting MIL we have rules of:
Always eat out, never let her cater
Pick what you like and ignore her salads are for ladies vibes
It's OK for me to wander upstairs so they can have mum son time and I can eat food stashed in my handbag

HazelMember · 19/05/2026 15:00

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 14:53

@HazelMember
"What does your husband do when she tries to eat your food?"

I think @LetsMakeThisMomentLast covered this a bit:

"I can’t believe your husband just gets stuck to his food without wondering whether you are being fed! Then again, he grew up with this woman"

@Feis123
"The most shocking thing of it all is that 'since she's paid for the meal'. You and your dh allow your MIL pay for the meal? Seriously? Why can't YOU and your dh pay for the meal and then order all you want and some more?"

This gets a bit complicated and will quickly take us off topic, but in short, the reason for going out for the meal is so that she can buy us a meal. I think she sees this both as her way of being motherly to her son - taking him out for a meal - and also a way of spending time with us in an organised manner so that "that's done".

@titchy

Do you stay with her? Why did you go all day without food? If you know what she’s like surely you take your own food? And order what the hell you want from a menu. Obvs pay for it, don’t expect her to. She is welcome to her issues but you don’t have to go along with them, so why do you?

We sometimes stay, but very rarely now. More so in the past. Made the food stuff even more difficult to deal with and plan.

There's a tendency to change plans a lot, often at a whim, and also not be totally upfront with what the plan is. So we went there to do [something] and planning for that meant that after that was done there would be free time for me afterwards to get food. But as I mentioned in my original post, once that was done suddenly I got dragged to something else which put a spanner in my lunch plan. I also want to make it clear I don't expect her to pay but it's sort of the expectation/rule here. It is a transactional dance that we all do which is quite frustrating. I think it's important that my husband spends time with his mum, and to some degree that we have times where she gets to spend time with "her son and his wife" as a unit. The alternative here is I become someone who appears to be avoiding her and then it's easy to end up being scapegoated and I don't really fancy being the awful daughter in law who never attends events. She can also be quite amusing to be around so it's not all bad. And of course my husband loves his mum and I want to help make his relationship with her easier.

So it is quite complicated but theres an unwritten rule that she takes us out for a meal and we take that meal from her and then we express thankfulness. Sounds so odd as I type this out but it is what it is.

Edited

So because he grew up with this woman it means he will eat himself while his wife has nothing? You make excuses for him. Yes MIL is not great but clearly she has an eating disorder. Does your husband have a disorder where he just stuffs his face while you have nothing?

Wauwinet · 19/05/2026 15:04

You need to stop going. If your pathetic husband is going to sit there and, as another poster aptly put it, stuff his face without ever considering you, then remove yourself from the situation.

Your MIL is batshit but it is his responsibility to deal with her and mitigate her lunacy so that it doesn’t impact you. Stop seeing her until he steps up and does that. Right now he’s taking the piss by turning a blind eye to it all and not confronting his mother. That’s what’s easy and comfortable for him even though it’s difficult and uncomfortable for you. You’re going to have to give him a kick up the arse to get him to stop being so selfish.

coronafiona · 19/05/2026 15:05

“I thought I’d bring lunch for us all here today! You’re always so generous with paying.”
and proceed to unpack a buffet/ whatever, make yourself at home in her kitchen and tell her to sit down and tuck in.
you can take leftovers back with you or stack her fridge, chucking I it whatever’s has gone off I. The process.
I think that generation were brought up to be super frugal with food and money and it leaves some people weirdly obsessive and judgemental about others.

MajorProcrastination · 19/05/2026 15:06

There's obviously something bigger and deeper going on. I would be clear about saying (in a polite way) "please could I have some soup as well Sheila?" or take your own food with you when you visit "hi Sheila, they had an off on these pasties/I've got some leftovers we need to eat up so I've brought it over to warm up" or why don't you two pay for the food when you're out? "don't worry Sheila, our treat today. I'll have the whitebait to start and the mushroom risotto, what are you having?" All with a smile. "I don't want to talk about weightloss thanks Sheila" etc.

TorroFerney · 19/05/2026 15:06

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 14:34

@SnappyQuoter "The only reason this woman is in her life is because she married her husband"

I have to remind myself of this all the time. Amusingly, I think she has to do the same: remind herself why I am in her life. And who knows, maybe that is part of what drives some of these behaviours, maybe it is a coping mechanism for wishing her son had found someone better or more up to her standards, even though I do agree, the behaviours appear very ingrained.

@TheSandgroper
"Wonder about how she was brought up by her parents (who would have been Depression/war children). Generational trauma is a thing and can manifest itself in funny ways."

This is also something that I reflect on and which helps me be less judgemental. On the other hand, and this makes all this even more strange to me on a personal level, my parents are the opposite and will offer you more food than you could possibly want or need. Certainly would never dream of withholding food.

Whilst I get that’s it’s interesting or normal to wonder why and perhaps try and justify her behaviour it really doesn’t matter why all that matters is that you shouldn’t be putting up with it and neither should your husband. Now perhaps he’s been trained from an early age that women only exist to look nice for men and be thin but he needs to pick his side and, if he telling him unless he wants things to go downhill very rapidly then that side is you.

cupfinalchaos · 19/05/2026 15:06

When you say you feel she wants you to order the cheapest option on the menu, who is paying the bill? Just curious.

persisted · 19/05/2026 15:10

I couldn't be bothered with all this.
'Soup for lunch is it? lovely stuff, is there another can of that there, doesn't look like there's enough for all of us. Not to worry then lets make sandwiches as well. I bought this lovely fresh bread and stuff on the way for a treat. Don't be so silly, of course I'm having some'

I will not be shamed for eating, and it will be a relentless steam roller of positivity until I get what I need. I wouldn't be putting up with that crap from DH either, he certainly doesn't get any lunch if I don't. And frankly he knows better, he would not enjoy himself.

My own MIL is batshit in different ways but I just won't engage with it. I'm polite, clear, assertive, bit like at work really.

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 15:10

@DrinkFeckArseBrick

So what actually happens, when you go to hers and she makes him food and not you? I can't actually imagine this situation...does he just say thanks and eat his soup while you just sit there with nothing?

There is a lot of whizzing around that happens. On this particular occasion we had just got back in. My husband had to do a work call whereas I didn't. So upon entering the house, she whizzed around to the kitchen to magic up something to eat for him, then whizzed back to the front door where him and I were still standing, offered the tin, whizzed back to the kitchen to heat it up. By the time I had taken off my shoes and gone inside, he had gone to take his call and she told me "come on we're going to go on some errands". So I said "oh okay" 😂

@DrinkFeckArseBrick
The whole thing is a bit batshit. What do you actually want to happen? Her behaviour is unlikely to completely change (she will likely always be weird around food). Do you want to avoid eating around her? Do you want her to stop trying to eat your food when you're out? Absolutely no way would I be wanting to discuss my weight, or eat a tomato and crackers for lunch. I'd also not be wanting to accept her paying for a meal out if she thinks she has control over what I eat. But what boundaries do you want to put in place?

It is the fact that her behaviour is unlikely to change that is the challenge. I think mostly I wanted to know what other people's reaction to this was, just to get some reassurance maybe. If I speak to my parents too much about her behaviours, who are not like this at all, there is a risk that I create issues between them which I don't think would be helpful to anybody. There are obvious problems talking to my husband about this because he has never known anything different and she is his mother so I don't want to be upsetting him too much, even though we obviously have had our fair share of arguments about things like this and lots, lots of other issues related to his mother.

I'm just trying to find a balance really.

Worth mentioning that I don't really allow anyone else to push me around like this, and I think she knows that.

OP posts:
illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 15:13

coronafiona · 19/05/2026 15:05

“I thought I’d bring lunch for us all here today! You’re always so generous with paying.”
and proceed to unpack a buffet/ whatever, make yourself at home in her kitchen and tell her to sit down and tuck in.
you can take leftovers back with you or stack her fridge, chucking I it whatever’s has gone off I. The process.
I think that generation were brought up to be super frugal with food and money and it leaves some people weirdly obsessive and judgemental about others.

Funny you mention this - once, while I was cooking quite a large a meal, I offered her some, and she seemed very annoyed and just said they are all independent individuals in their family and will eat what and when they want to 😂

OP posts:
Lottapianos · 19/05/2026 15:17

OP, I have read your updates about the rules and the script that you all follow and the unspoken expectations and I absolutely get it. People will say 'why don't you just...' but it's not that simple. I understand, I really do

That said, please rest assured that your MIL's behaviour around food is highly disordered and it's important that you don't just go along with it. I have some sympathy for your husband because he has grown up in a very messed up and rigid environment and what is objectively batshit may well seem 'normal' to him. HOWEVER, you both need to start asserting yourselves and challenging 'the rules' and the extreme level of control your MIL has been enforcing. And never, ever go hungry just to keep the peace. Believe me when I say that this will be really corrosive to you over time, emotionally as well as physically

DuckbilledSplatterPuff · 19/05/2026 15:17

I hear you OP. Our relative was obsessed with people's weight and wealth and had a fridge full of expired food. In the days when they used to cook it was all Marguerite Pattern style performative display food and they would do things like put out and offer three different puddings with pouring cream.
I think they actually had a love/hate relationship with food.
Once our baby was on solids.. they proudly showed us into a room which had been covered in a large area of protective sheeting (a la Dexter) with a lonely ancient wooden high chair in the middle... about 2 metres from the rest of the family at the table. At first glance I thought they were about to paint the room, but I suppose they thought tiny DC would generate a large splatter area. I was indicated to stand (forgoing any lunch myself now I was a mother) in the centre of the sheeting feeding DC at a "safe" distance from the rest of them.Anything to avoid triggering the horror of "mess".
DH never wanted puddings at home so he would have "A bit of everything" there's was never any comment about that.. but if I or the DC took even one pudding that was being pressed on us.. we got comments like "Are/nt you on a diet?" or "Are you sure you ought to be eating that?" as the pouring cream was poured on regardless despite requests not to.
Anything we cooked was evaluated in the manner of their favourite TV Chef.. eg they'd pick up quiche and examine it to see if it could be classed as having a soggy bottom. (ARGGGHHH!)
It was Food Issue Central. Happy Days

wordler · 19/05/2026 15:19

@illtellyouwhat Just stop playing along.

Order whatever you want when out - don’t let her take your food. At her first attempt offer to call the waiter back to get her, her own portion.

Or agree beforehand that DH will police this behaviour and dump some of his food on her plate instead.

Always pack a lunchbox of food when going to her house.

Tell DH to refuse mouldy and old food.

Tell her that you’re not ima diet and she is to stop talking about weight to you.