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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?

329 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In her fridge and cupboard, she keeps lots of out of date, expired food.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:
SnappyQuoter · 19/05/2026 17:17

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:10

Apologies, what I meant was that there are objective reasons that I say - as a fact - that that her relationship with food/weight is unhealthy. Not just my opinion.

But given the response to this thread and the situation I described after adding in that disclaimer, it seems most people agree that even without these undisclosed reasons it's clear her relationship with these things is unhealthy...

Am quite stressed about the prospect of having kids and having to leave them with their grandparents given these and other issues around food. And I know it will be expected of me that I will agree to do that so that we can go out to dinner/holiday and so on. Not sure how to navigate that at all

Sorry but I’m really not understanding here. Can you not talk to your husband? In any healthy marriage, you would say “hey, this is batshit - your mother feeds you and refuses to feed me, she won’t let me order proper food and then eats off my plate while you get what you want and when she does offer food, it is mouldy. This is batshit. I need food. We are not visiting her again until you sort this out. Our children won’t be staying with her at all, she isn’t healthy or safe.”

Talk to your useless husband fgs.

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:18

goody2shooz · 19/05/2026 17:08

@illtellyouwhat are you actually saying that your dh eats mouldy or out of date food because his mother gives it to him? He’s not able to say ‘no thanks’ or ‘it’s mouldy/out of date’? ?

Hmm... If you asked him he would probably say he avoids that food by trying to pick something else or not eat at all, otherwise cut off or remove the mouldy bit and eats the rest. Depends on what it is

OP posts:
HazelMember · 19/05/2026 17:19

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 16:26

@DuckbilledSplatterPuff
"Your DH is really relieved that he's escaping the full force of this behaviour and he's keeping his head down so that he doesn't attract any more flak."

I think this sums it up fairly well. And is essentially how their whole family operates.

Edited

But your focus is virtually all on MIL.

What kind of man lets his wife be on the receiving end of such horrible behaviour? Think about this before you have children.

BuckChuckets · 19/05/2026 17:21

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…

Why are you both being so ridiculous? You can't complain if neither you nor her son are doing anything about it.

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:22

FancyBiscuitsLevel · 19/05/2026 17:12

@illtellyouwhat- she has an eating disorder.

You can’t change that, but you can change the way you respond. Firstly, forewarn your DH, you’ve had enough. If you go out for a meal, you two pay and you will order exactly the same as dh regardless of if you want it or not. Say you are going to tell the waiter “oh just still deciding let them order first” and then say “I’m going to have the same as him, the xxxx”. So not order anything different.

If you are at her house and he is offered a meal and he can see you haven’t been, he’s to ask if there’s anything for you too. If MIL says no or that you don’t need anything, he’s to say you’ll both leave and go get some lunch, this isn’t something you are prepared to accept him not backing you on.

Also next time she says she has an amazing diet plan, you need to speak up “actually MIL are you ok because that sounds like an eating disorder. You’re having nowhere near the nutrients and calories your body needs on that diet.” Do not say it sounds good, say it sounds unhealthy, disordered, the diet of someone mentally unwell. You do her no favours by pretending.

@FancyBiscuitsLevel

I'll try that for restaurants. But, and I'm really not trying to be difficult - I promise - if I do this they will just change their order. There's an established rule about not ordering the same food.......

Also next time she says she has an amazing diet plan, you need to speak up “actually MIL are you ok because that sounds like an eating disorder.

This is a serious subject but the idea of doing this really made me crease up

OP posts:
illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:25

BuckChuckets · 19/05/2026 17:21

Why are you both being so ridiculous? You can't complain if neither you nor her son are doing anything about it.

Well in some way I am complaining, you are right, but mostly I am trying to understand whether this is a common thing (it seems like the answer is NO) and also whether I am being unreasonable to, for example, expecting to be given actual food at her house and/or if it's rude to nip out to get something for myself when I'm there and all the rest of it.

OP posts:
BuckChuckets · 19/05/2026 17:25

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 16:02

That is in the pipeline. She took us out for a meal some time ago to tell us to make some!

I'd suggest you put a pause on plans to have kids with this wet wipe until he's practiced standing up for his loved ones. You can't bring children into this weird situation.

SnappyQuoter · 19/05/2026 17:25

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:18

Hmm... If you asked him he would probably say he avoids that food by trying to pick something else or not eat at all, otherwise cut off or remove the mouldy bit and eats the rest. Depends on what it is

Do you actually understand that this is insane behaviour from both of you… putting up with this is insane. Your husband sitting there eating mouldy food whilst you’re not allowed to eat is insane. Going out to a restaurant and you’re not allowed to order what you want, and then she eats your food off your plate whilst he can order what he wants? It’s insane.

You are a grown up, yes? So start acting like it.

No more visits that involve food unless everyone sits down to a proper meal. No more trips to restaurants unless everyone can order what they want and eat it themselves without her picking at it. You need to sit down and tell her this. Visits will be strictly a chat and cup of tea for an hour, then you go home unless she abides by these rules. She will never be alone with any future children because she cannot be trusted to feed them properly; god forbid one is a boy and one is a girl and she starves the girl. She won’t be invited to family meals unless she keeps her mouth shut about food and her hands away from other people’s places.

You need to do this. You have a voice so use it.

SnappyQuoter · 19/05/2026 17:27

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:22

@FancyBiscuitsLevel

I'll try that for restaurants. But, and I'm really not trying to be difficult - I promise - if I do this they will just change their order. There's an established rule about not ordering the same food.......

Also next time she says she has an amazing diet plan, you need to speak up “actually MIL are you ok because that sounds like an eating disorder.

This is a serious subject but the idea of doing this really made me crease up

Your husband will change his order if you order the same thing… is that all the time, or just in front of his mother? You realise that’s also insane. These people are nut jobs. Why have you married into this?

Do not have kids if this is the man you stay with. Just don’t have kids.

BuckChuckets · 19/05/2026 17:27

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:25

Well in some way I am complaining, you are right, but mostly I am trying to understand whether this is a common thing (it seems like the answer is NO) and also whether I am being unreasonable to, for example, expecting to be given actual food at her house and/or if it's rude to nip out to get something for myself when I'm there and all the rest of it.

Edited

Is this your first relationship? Didn't you have friends and family growing up? You can't seriously think this might be normal?

fetchacloth · 19/05/2026 17:29

YANBU your MIL has a big obsession around food to the point that she has to inflict that obsession on everyone around her.
I would politely ignore the barbed comments and change the subject. Frankly I wouldn't accept her behaviour in my house.

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:30

SnappyQuoter · 19/05/2026 17:25

Do you actually understand that this is insane behaviour from both of you… putting up with this is insane. Your husband sitting there eating mouldy food whilst you’re not allowed to eat is insane. Going out to a restaurant and you’re not allowed to order what you want, and then she eats your food off your plate whilst he can order what he wants? It’s insane.

You are a grown up, yes? So start acting like it.

No more visits that involve food unless everyone sits down to a proper meal. No more trips to restaurants unless everyone can order what they want and eat it themselves without her picking at it. You need to sit down and tell her this. Visits will be strictly a chat and cup of tea for an hour, then you go home unless she abides by these rules. She will never be alone with any future children because she cannot be trusted to feed them properly; god forbid one is a boy and one is a girl and she starves the girl. She won’t be invited to family meals unless she keeps her mouth shut about food and her hands away from other people’s places.

You need to do this. You have a voice so use it.

and then she eats your food off your plate whilst he can order what he wants? It’s insane.

Have I told you about the time she poured some of my drink into her daughters glass, because she (her daughter) "had had less" (real reason: I had poured the last bit of the more expensive drink into my glass before her daughter arrived and she wanted her to have it, said I could drink refill with the other bottle (cheaper stuff) 🙂

OP posts:
Lottapianos · 19/05/2026 17:31

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:22

@FancyBiscuitsLevel

I'll try that for restaurants. But, and I'm really not trying to be difficult - I promise - if I do this they will just change their order. There's an established rule about not ordering the same food.......

Also next time she says she has an amazing diet plan, you need to speak up “actually MIL are you ok because that sounds like an eating disorder.

This is a serious subject but the idea of doing this really made me crease up

When in restaurants, order what you want to eat. If the others want to get involved in some mad ritual around changing orders, let them. Start tuning in to what you want, and act accordingly

There are all sorts of games and rituals and manipulations going on, and scripts being followed that are very unhealthy and disturbing. And you're aware of what's going on, which is healthy and helpful. You have to avoid joining in with the madness though

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:32

BuckChuckets · 19/05/2026 17:27

Is this your first relationship? Didn't you have friends and family growing up? You can't seriously think this might be normal?

Not my first relationship. Had friends and family growing up, none of which behaved oddly with food. To some degree this is why I don't know how to handle this!

OP posts:
ToSayYouHaveNoChoiceIsAFailureOfImagination · 19/05/2026 17:33

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:25

Well in some way I am complaining, you are right, but mostly I am trying to understand whether this is a common thing (it seems like the answer is NO) and also whether I am being unreasonable to, for example, expecting to be given actual food at her house and/or if it's rude to nip out to get something for myself when I'm there and all the rest of it.

Edited

OP the more you post the more crazy you're sounding! Of course this isn't common. You don't need to be told that. You were raised by parents who treat food appropriately. Presumably you've eaten at friends homes? Eaten out with friends? Watched people sharing meals on tv/film?

You sound so incredibly passive in this and are refusing to entertain any suggestions because they go against the "established rules". Frankly, fuck the established rules. They're batshit rules. What is it that's in you making you obey? What are you scared of? Why don't you think you matter?

SnappyQuoter · 19/05/2026 17:33

Are you taking anything on board that people are saying here @illtellyouwhat?

It’s almost like you’re an alien that was dropped onto earth as a fully formed adult woman, and you’ve ended up married into psychoville and you think it’s normal because you’ve never experienced anything else.

This is not normal. Firstly, your MiL is batshit insane. You need to lay down the law on food. Secondly, your husband is a shitty husband. When someone loves you as a partner, they wouldn’t let you be treated like this. What he is doing, and what he is allowing, is not love. You lay the law down for him too.

wordler · 19/05/2026 17:35

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:22

@FancyBiscuitsLevel

I'll try that for restaurants. But, and I'm really not trying to be difficult - I promise - if I do this they will just change their order. There's an established rule about not ordering the same food.......

Also next time she says she has an amazing diet plan, you need to speak up “actually MIL are you ok because that sounds like an eating disorder.

This is a serious subject but the idea of doing this really made me crease up

I think the answer is to opt out of all game playing and rules for yourself.

At restaurants - simply order what you feel like eating - if it’s the same as DH and it makes him change his order that’s on him - if it doesn’t meet MiL approval that’s on her.

Just calmly take yourself out of the game.

If this makes MIL escalate you may have to help DH be former with boundaries.

SALaw · 19/05/2026 17:36

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 15:21

The thing about bringing my/our own food is that it also is a problem because it means money was wasted on buying food when she has "perfectly good food" in her house.

One time my husband and I nipped out to eat our after a long day, and when we returned she made a point to announce to everybody else in the family that [our names] just went to [fast food chain] even though I have perfectly good [vaguely similar cupboard food] in my cupboard!!!

and then after telling everybody she went to retrieve this item out of the cupboard and waved it around for us to see. And yes, I say item because she had just one portion of this, so it would have been for us to share, or maybe for me to have a few forkfuls and leave the rest to my husband... 😂

Who is “everybody else” and why do you care what she says to them?!!

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:38

ToSayYouHaveNoChoiceIsAFailureOfImagination · 19/05/2026 17:33

OP the more you post the more crazy you're sounding! Of course this isn't common. You don't need to be told that. You were raised by parents who treat food appropriately. Presumably you've eaten at friends homes? Eaten out with friends? Watched people sharing meals on tv/film?

You sound so incredibly passive in this and are refusing to entertain any suggestions because they go against the "established rules". Frankly, fuck the established rules. They're batshit rules. What is it that's in you making you obey? What are you scared of? Why don't you think you matter?

Passive might be a good way of describing it, and probably really desensitised to it because I've had over a decade to get used to this... but also to some degree feel like they're doing me a favour by accepting me into their family. I don't know, I clearly have some issues myself if you go by that framing. And... maybe I am the crazy one, I don't know!

It just gets very unpleasant (in other contexts, about other things) when I put my foot down.

OP posts:
illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:39

SALaw · 19/05/2026 17:36

Who is “everybody else” and why do you care what she says to them?!!

other family members in attendance

OP posts:
Bringemout · 19/05/2026 17:39

It’s really odd, it almost seems like she thinks that unless you are very thin you are not worthy of her son. Also it is strange he hasn’t stood up for you, DH has definitely done this for me around a member of his family trying to fat shame me and if his mum tried to starve me I’m fairly sure he would put his foot down immediately. The simplest thing your DH could have done is just shared his food with you, it doesn’t involve direct conflict, just a gentle pushback because he must know that sometimes you’ll be really bloody starving while he’s eating,

I do think it’s a generational thing, I’m probably from a different culture (I’m assuming) but they like women very thin and fragile looking. No idea why tbh but definitely a preoccupation with thinness, I can’t helo but to think it’s because it makes women look vulnerable. My MIL is anti women having muscles, it’s ridiculous really.

HazelMember · 19/05/2026 17:40

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:38

Passive might be a good way of describing it, and probably really desensitised to it because I've had over a decade to get used to this... but also to some degree feel like they're doing me a favour by accepting me into their family. I don't know, I clearly have some issues myself if you go by that framing. And... maybe I am the crazy one, I don't know!

It just gets very unpleasant (in other contexts, about other things) when I put my foot down.

It sounds like you have very low self esteem.

Are you disappointed in DH? I would be.

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:41

SnappyQuoter · 19/05/2026 17:33

Are you taking anything on board that people are saying here @illtellyouwhat?

It’s almost like you’re an alien that was dropped onto earth as a fully formed adult woman, and you’ve ended up married into psychoville and you think it’s normal because you’ve never experienced anything else.

This is not normal. Firstly, your MiL is batshit insane. You need to lay down the law on food. Secondly, your husband is a shitty husband. When someone loves you as a partner, they wouldn’t let you be treated like this. What he is doing, and what he is allowing, is not love. You lay the law down for him too.

In some ways I am an alien, from across the pond! So I didn't grow up in the UK and don't know if this is just how old english ladies behave with their inlaws.

OP posts:
Humblepieman · 19/05/2026 17:45

Backedoffhackedoff · 19/05/2026 13:23

She’s got an eating disorder and it’s not uncommon at her age at all.

i wouldn’t do anything- ignore her quips, take your down snacks, tell her to leave your food alone. But all the while remember neither you nor your husband will solve this, and she can’t help it. Realistically she’s not to recover at her age

This, this, this and as another poster put it don’t fulfil the role she has given to you.

SnappyQuoter · 19/05/2026 17:45

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:41

In some ways I am an alien, from across the pond! So I didn't grow up in the UK and don't know if this is just how old english ladies behave with their inlaws.

It is not. You have permission from all the British people, young and old, on this thread to go and tell your husband that his mother’s behaviour is insane and you’re done with it so he needs to be on your side or visits are over. You need to be a united front, and all meals with her will be involve everyone being fed or no one being fed because you will immediately leave. No more restaurant nonsense, and he will make sure she feeds you from now on. Honestly, it should be divorce territory. He makes sure that she feeds you, lets you order what you want, and stops taking your food or you both leave.

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