Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

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

335 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In her fridge and cupboard, she keeps lots of out of date, expired food.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:
godmum56 · 19/05/2026 17:48

alexdgr8 · 19/05/2026 13:28

Just be more straightforward.
Don't shilly shally around as if you are in the wrong.
You don't have to make any comment about her or her habits.
Simply be yourself and state your needs.
So if out with her say
I need to eat now.
? Is this cafe OK for you or do you prefer the one across the road.
A bit like with toddlers dressing. ?green shirt or blue.

If going to her house bring food with you or order a takeaway to be delivered.
? Indian or Chinese mother ?
Any comments about your weight just say
I'm not trying to lose weight. ?how are the begonias.
All the best.

I would add another phrase to this "I am not discussing it. If you continue I will leave" or if at your house "if you continue you will leave"

PopcornKitten · 19/05/2026 17:48

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.

I think you’ve become conditioned not to rock the boat. You also don’t want the vitriol or push back that this may cause so you’ve allowed this to happen to you. They will always treat you like this if you allow it to happen.
id imagine they fall far short of the relationship you’d like to have with in laws. This will never change. They will never be that.
now you need to stand up for yourself and be strong for you- hopefully you can have a long chat with your DH and if he doesn’t get it i suggest that you take a step back from the relationship with her. And the rest if necessary.
I guarantee that although it will be hard it will be worth it.
Just think if you were on a double date with DH and another couple and you said about this how crazy they would think MIL was- pouring your drinks into someone else’s glass for example. Wouldn’t DH be embarrassed for people to know that?

Sunisgettinganewhaton · 19/05/2026 17:50

Same mil asked me when I was losing the pp baby weight.. Ds was 2 weeks old and I was back in size 8 jeans. Obviously boobs were bigger as bf. Another thing she ranted about.

SALaw · 19/05/2026 17:50

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:39

other family members in attendance

But do you care what Aunty Joan thinks?!

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:51

SnappyQuoter · 19/05/2026 17:27

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.

😂unfortunately this is 99% off the time but the origin of the rule is it's how he was brought up

OP posts:
Oldraver · 19/05/2026 17:53

Fucking hell would freeze over before I let someone like this take food off my plate or the other belittling behaviours

And my husband would be getting what for for sitting there scoffing food while you get the nearly portions. What is he thinking

NoGarlic · 19/05/2026 17:55

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.

No, it isn't. It's how some old ladies behave across the world!

I wouldn't be as distressed as you by this weirdness, neither would I be as compliant. I'm loving many of the replies here. If it's okay, I'll add my "What I Would Do" - and, yes, I have extensive experience of batshit MILs and other relatives 😂

  1. Take food to her house. Nice food, that you want to eat, and which packs tidily in a handbag. Just for you, not H - unless he starts asking you to pack for him, too.
  2. Fetch it out at the appropriate moment, with an airy "Oh, you never feed me so I took precautions! Haha! How's your soup?"
  3. "I'm not eating that, it's out of date. DH, do you want some of this eight-year-old soup?"
  4. Order her not to keep asking about your weight. Yes, order her. Tell her you're happy with your size and it's rude to pass remarks. Repeat. And repeat!
  5. Order what you actually want to eat in the restaurant. Fuck their unspoken rules. Push her hand away from your plate and suggest she orders something else if she's still hungry.
  6. When you're hungry, say so FGS! Keep a pack of cereal bars or something with you whenever she's around, and just bloody eat one or two.
You can do all this in a fairly light-hearted, family joke sort of way. This is even better when other family are around: everyone loves a running joke as long as it's good-humoured. MIL won't love it but her options are to make a spectacle of herself or pretend she finds it amusing as well.
godmum56 · 19/05/2026 17:57

@illtellyouwhat there is a thread on here about valuable advice so here is some for you.
"If you always do what you always did, you will always get what you've always got"
You can't change yyour partner or his mother but you can change YOU and how you react to the crazy shit. I advise you to do so stat.

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:58

SALaw · 19/05/2026 17:50

But do you care what Aunty Joan thinks?!

Yes and no. Yes because I have to see Aunty Joan sometime in the future and I'm unable to say "well MIL didn't really let me have any lunch so I was absolutely starving" (although maybe next time I will) because it's a numbers game, one person vs a family and I don't want to make it awkward. I mean really the more I write about this the more I'm getting pissed off with myself for being this stupid and playing this game with them.

Anyway, then it feels like they don't have the complete picture and I look unreasonable for going out to eat when MIL had food (or so she said).

No, because on some level I actually don't care but I care because it's my husbands family. Not sure if this makes sense but it's the best way I can explain it.

Like, would I eat meals with any one of them if it weren't for the fact we have this imposed relationship - probably not. A drink? Yes no problem 99% of the time.

OP posts:
ThatJadeLion · 19/05/2026 17:58

Ahhh I'm do glad I don't have people like this in my life. I'm sorry to say that as its not very helpful. I think she is rude and her behaviour is toxic. Probably very set in her ways, not excusing her but she'll probably never change. I would grey rock a little and go less.

bafta16 · 19/05/2026 17:58

How old is she?

Wauwinet · 19/05/2026 18:01

Well that explains some things. Are you American? Americans are absolutely lovely people but they are extremely polite (more so than we are in my experience), anxious to not offend anyone, and easily imposed upon.

@illtellyouwhat I know that you’re avoiding answering questions and engaging with anyone that mentions your husband but how old are the two of you and how old were you when you met?

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 18:02

Humblepieman · 19/05/2026 17:45

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

I wanted to pick up on this thing about the role. Do you mean that from a "disordered eating" perspective, people who suffer from certain types of disordered eating give other people around them roles as a way to like... make their own behaviour okay? Enablers to keep the disordered eating going for the day? Like a starving buddy? Or did misunderstand?

OP posts:
MadeofCheeese · 19/05/2026 18:05

My mum is a bit like this and so Ive spent the last two years retorting how much quicker she will end up in a home or hospital. Honestly dieting in your 70s seems to be madness to me. I don't have any hard evidence but surely you need protein, calcium and healthy fats if you don't want your bones to break and body to deteriorate. Luckily she's getting it. I would just start mentioning bone and muscle weakness facts whenever she mentions it. DH also sneaked food for me when we visit in laws who can be like this too.

NoGarlic · 19/05/2026 18:12

MadeofCheeese · 19/05/2026 18:05

My mum is a bit like this and so Ive spent the last two years retorting how much quicker she will end up in a home or hospital. Honestly dieting in your 70s seems to be madness to me. I don't have any hard evidence but surely you need protein, calcium and healthy fats if you don't want your bones to break and body to deteriorate. Luckily she's getting it. I would just start mentioning bone and muscle weakness facts whenever she mentions it. DH also sneaked food for me when we visit in laws who can be like this too.

Yes, women over 60 need as much protein as an active young man. It really gets my goat when people keep repeating that we need less food. Less volume, perhaps, and fewer calories if we're inactive. But we need that protein for all the reasons you mention.

https://sheffield.ac.uk/healthy-lifespan/news/more-half-older-people-dont-consume-enough-protein-stay-healthy and any other link you happen to look up - we need approx 1.2 grams of protein per kg of body weight.

Top view of a white table filled with a large group of different types of food like carbohydrates, protein and dietary fiber. Food included in the composition are dairy products, sausages, minced meat, poultry, fish, bread, pasta, rice, beans, nuts, ol...

More than half of older people don’t consume enough protein to stay healthy

New Sheffield study that assessed the diets of older adults in South Yorkshire found that more than half of older adults studied aren’t consuming enough protein to reach national recommendations.

https://sheffield.ac.uk/healthy-lifespan/news/more-half-older-people-dont-consume-enough-protein-stay-healthy

TreadSoftlyOnMyDreams · 19/05/2026 18:12

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)

Whose house was this in? She may have simply considered it entirely rude that you had helped yourself though most English people would have simply ensured that next time if they were saving a glass of something special for a family member that the bottle was put to one side while everyone moved onto something less £££. Actually pouring it back out of your glass is pretty odd behaviour and even weirder that your SIL presumably then drank it?

None of this is normal.

I would be unapologetic about ordering the same food - it's what you want to eat and laugh it off as they are welcome to the odd family challenge of covering the entire menu in one sitting just to tax the restaurant staff.

I would go out to buy a sandwich / arrive with groceries or go out to get some if there is no suitable food. If she is batshit about food, you can equally be so on your insistence that you need some..... in date preferably.

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 18:12

Wauwinet · 19/05/2026 18:01

Well that explains some things. Are you American? Americans are absolutely lovely people but they are extremely polite (more so than we are in my experience), anxious to not offend anyone, and easily imposed upon.

@illtellyouwhat I know that you’re avoiding answering questions and engaging with anyone that mentions your husband but how old are the two of you and how old were you when you met?

Haha yes, well it's important to be polite, otherwise you might end up being rude!!

Not so much avoiding answering as I'm trying to read the different views and comments about his role in this, and reflect a bit so that I have something concrete to reply with. Obviously comments like just leave him or don't have kids with him aren't super helpful and not much to reply to that but I do appreciate people taking the time to say even that. It's a view, you know. All views welcome.

Your question is very easy to answer though. We're in our mid 30s and met in our early 20s

OP posts:
AliCatWalk · 19/05/2026 18:13

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 17:58

Yes and no. Yes because I have to see Aunty Joan sometime in the future and I'm unable to say "well MIL didn't really let me have any lunch so I was absolutely starving" (although maybe next time I will) because it's a numbers game, one person vs a family and I don't want to make it awkward. I mean really the more I write about this the more I'm getting pissed off with myself for being this stupid and playing this game with them.

Anyway, then it feels like they don't have the complete picture and I look unreasonable for going out to eat when MIL had food (or so she said).

No, because on some level I actually don't care but I care because it's my husbands family. Not sure if this makes sense but it's the best way I can explain it.

Like, would I eat meals with any one of them if it weren't for the fact we have this imposed relationship - probably not. A drink? Yes no problem 99% of the time.

@illtellyouwhat As a fellow passive person with my own mum having food issues, I can't imagine not at least "jokingly" protesting to most of these behaviors! Super rude of your MIL to commandeer your food & drink - in the examples you've provided, I don't think I would even be able to help myself from making a "umm wtf was that" face 😂& being like "what are you doing?!?" but laughing at the same time if that makes sense? I also wouldn't find it hard or unusual to [ask to] look at the expired food containers when she offers bad food and say, "oh wait, this is actually expired, do you have any that's in-date?" or something like that. It's not coming from a bad place, would even be arguably helpful for her, & it's a completely normal reaction, so you have nothing to feel shy or guilty about 🤷🏻‍♀️

As for any weight-related comments, I'd just give a non-committal "hmm" with a tone of annoyance/botheredness and then change the subject 😅 or just say "yeah, mmhmm, I actually don't really like talking about it" which would be a true statement & totally justified. Also would you ever be so bold as to intentionally order the same thing as someone else? Say, "I usually don't like to order the same thing, but that option looks so good, I think I'll get that too!"?

Again, I know this type of thing is all easier said than done, but I consider myself passive to a fault and am able to manage these types of phrases. They're true, coming from a rational & well-meaning place, & hopefully will get the message across enough to keep things moving along smoothly 😸good luck 💐

HazelMember · 19/05/2026 18:17

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 18:12

Haha yes, well it's important to be polite, otherwise you might end up being rude!!

Not so much avoiding answering as I'm trying to read the different views and comments about his role in this, and reflect a bit so that I have something concrete to reply with. Obviously comments like just leave him or don't have kids with him aren't super helpful and not much to reply to that but I do appreciate people taking the time to say even that. It's a view, you know. All views welcome.

Your question is very easy to answer though. We're in our mid 30s and met in our early 20s

Obviously comments like just leave him or don't have kids with him aren't super helpful

You and DH have been putting up this nonsense for years. It wouldn't be fair to inflict this on kids since neither of you are taking action.

AnnaMagnani · 19/05/2026 18:19

It sounds as if over the course of the thread you have reaslied it's a game she plays: partly to manage her own diet, partly to manage the diet of everyone around her and partly to show she is the dominant woman present.

The best way to approach this is not to join in the game.

You experience 'a vibe' that you shouldn't order a big or expensive meal in a restaurant - ignore it and order what you like
She offers you something mouldy - you point out it's mouldy and refuse to eat it
She doesn't offer you any food at all - you take out your own food or just leave and go home

She is being phenomenally rude. You don't want to upset her but she doesn't care at all about upsetting you.

Just imagine her nitpicking at you about when you will lose the baby weight, or going on about your baby girl getting fat. It has to stop now.

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 18:20

TreadSoftlyOnMyDreams · 19/05/2026 18:12

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)

Whose house was this in? She may have simply considered it entirely rude that you had helped yourself though most English people would have simply ensured that next time if they were saving a glass of something special for a family member that the bottle was put to one side while everyone moved onto something less £££. Actually pouring it back out of your glass is pretty odd behaviour and even weirder that your SIL presumably then drank it?

None of this is normal.

I would be unapologetic about ordering the same food - it's what you want to eat and laugh it off as they are welcome to the odd family challenge of covering the entire menu in one sitting just to tax the restaurant staff.

I would go out to buy a sandwich / arrive with groceries or go out to get some if there is no suitable food. If she is batshit about food, you can equally be so on your insistence that you need some..... in date preferably.

It was not in her house. The drink was poured to everyone present. Daughter was not present at the time. Daughter then arrives, at which point little is left of the nicer stuff so she poured that, and some of mine, into her daughters drink. I certainly was not helping myself to anything, if I put it that way. SIL didn't like it and preferred the cheaper stuff.

This is just part of a pattern of behaviour where she will sometimes take from me and give to her children. Even after she has offered me something like food or a drink. It's this "get your money's worth" and "hoarding" behaviour coupled with a bit of tribalism.

Could be food, could be dessert, could be a snack, could be TIME. Anything you could think of.

OP posts:
FancyBiscuitsLevel · 19/05/2026 18:20

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

This is why I said to forewarn your DH, he’s not allowed to change his order. He gets to pick what he wants to eat and you will order the same, if he changes his order you will keep changing yours to match his. Say it’s this or you refuse to go out for dinner again with MIL.

He has to be on board with you trying to change how you play MILs odd game, because (and be clear about this), you need to see if she can change or else she won’t be allowed to be in sole charge of any dcs. That if you have a daughter, you won’t allow MIL to force an eating disorder on her.

Keep calling it “your mums eating disorder”.

And yes, do the “are you ok because that sounds like an eating disorder” to MILs face. British politeness will rein in her reply but she’s unlikely to talk about her amazing diet again!

Be bold. Be brave. Do it for the dd who doesn’t exist yet.

fantam · 19/05/2026 18:24

Bring over a few brownies and one Space Cake. Make her eat the "edible" one and you eat the non cannabis version. She'll get the munchies after that and won't care what the heck you all eat.

Make it a habit every time you visit. You could have great fun with this. 😊

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 18:27

HazelMember · 19/05/2026 18:17

Obviously comments like just leave him or don't have kids with him aren't super helpful

You and DH have been putting up this nonsense for years. It wouldn't be fair to inflict this on kids since neither of you are taking action.

What I can agree with you on is that it is not fair to inflict this type of disordered behaviour on children. 100% but I disagree that the solution is to split up or never have kids

OP posts:
FancyBiscuitsLevel · 19/05/2026 18:27

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 18:20

It was not in her house. The drink was poured to everyone present. Daughter was not present at the time. Daughter then arrives, at which point little is left of the nicer stuff so she poured that, and some of mine, into her daughters drink. I certainly was not helping myself to anything, if I put it that way. SIL didn't like it and preferred the cheaper stuff.

This is just part of a pattern of behaviour where she will sometimes take from me and give to her children. Even after she has offered me something like food or a drink. It's this "get your money's worth" and "hoarding" behaviour coupled with a bit of tribalism.

Could be food, could be dessert, could be a snack, could be TIME. Anything you could think of.

OP in the nicest possible way, you need to find your backbone.

Her behaviour isn’t ok. Your dh probably thinks it’s not ok but has been conditioned to accept it. You haven’t, why are you accepting it?

you need to start making a fuss, it may involve publicly embarrassing her, it definitely will involve your dh being on side that he has to back you not her if he wants your marriage to be a happy one.

You simply can’t allow a child to see their mum being treated this badly, so MIL can’t be part of any future child’s life. It’s a kindness to teach her now that you have had enough and won’t tolerate this behaviour anymore.