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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?

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In her fridge and cupboard, she keeps lots of out of date, expired food.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:
AliCatWalk · 19/05/2026 18:31

Also bonus points if your UN is a King of the Hill reference 😸i am definitely reading it in Hank Hill's voice

butterpuffed · 19/05/2026 18:32

This a very strange thread .

Not only does the MIL appear to have an aversion/ obsession with food but OP is intent on talking about/analysing every single thing connected to her behaviour. about it . Worrying .

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 18:39

butterpuffed · 19/05/2026 18:32

This a very strange thread .

Not only does the MIL appear to have an aversion/ obsession with food but OP is intent on talking about/analysing every single thing connected to her behaviour. about it . Worrying .

Edited

You'd be even more worried if I told you about all the other stuff, but I have spared you. Although I think "intent" is an odd choice of words here, seeing as its a single thread about her behaviour, did you want the thread to end efter 2 posts? Also, it's nice to be able to speak to people who aren't related to her about this for once, is that illegal??? 😂

OP posts:
illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 18:42

FancyBiscuitsLevel · 19/05/2026 18:20

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.

@FancyBiscuitsLevel

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.

I like this idea. I might try it without telling him, although that might come across as antagonistic. Will have to think about it but will for sure do try some version of this - thank you!

OP posts:
AnnaMagnani · 19/05/2026 18:42

With more detail about the wine incident, and that she always gives more things to her children in front of you, she's basically marking her territory.

I don't think you would accept it if she came to your house and cocked her leg in each corner of the lounge, but she is effectively doing this.

You and your DP are going to have to find your backbones.

pizzaHeart · 19/05/2026 18:44

No it’s not normal. Absolutely abnormal and rude.
You need to challenge that but in a subtle way - I mean that your DH should challenge that. You should agree what to do but he should open his mouth and produce the relevant response.
I would do all what @FancyBiscuitsLevel suggested ( I think I got the right poster) i would start from ordering the same as he with his agreement and he shouldn’t change his order, if he changed - you change too.
I wouldn’t tolerate this psychotic nonsense and I wouldn’t have children until it’s tackled ( if you planned to have them) .
No conversations about your weight or similar, if she comments just say her politely that : it’s rude and inappropriate to comment on someone’s weight (and it’s true in UK).
And guard your glass/ plate etc as a hawk. Make sure that you always watch her, if she wants to take something cover it quickly, push away her hand and shout: What are you doing MIL? And remember it’s a rhetorical question- you don’t want to know her reasons you are making a point that she shouldn’t do it.
Start planning your point making during short visits and then move to longer. Don’t give up. It’s indeed like trading a toddler. And it’s a successful strategy. The key is to stay consistent, polite, calm and don’t go into explanations - do short sentences.

FancyBiscuitsLevel · 19/05/2026 18:50

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 18:42

@FancyBiscuitsLevel

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.

I like this idea. I might try it without telling him, although that might come across as antagonistic. Will have to think about it but will for sure do try some version of this - thank you!

Important point- why are you nervous to talk to your dh about this ? Have the chat. Make a plan together. If he’s not got your back, he’s not worth hanging on to anyway.

Danascully2 · 19/05/2026 18:57

That all sounds completely mad and like she has major control issues which are linked to food. There are various versions of 'we can't do x or there will be friction/unpleasantness' or 'i can't talk to DH without causing friction'. This may well be true - there is no magic solution that will keep everyone happy. But I think it's really important that you set your own boundaries. Work out what you are not willing to accept (being hungry because you haven't had any food, eating mouldy food) and what is annoying but doesn't actually impact you (MIL telling you what she's eaten). Then make a plan in advance with your husband to eg make sure you eat enough. And grey rock everything else (that's nice MIL, did you see Strictly last night?).
I have an older relative with lifelong food/weight issues. In her case a related element is definitely feeding other people but in her case the food is very nice, not mouldy!... She talks a lot about food eg 'I ate so much at lunch I just had a packet of crisps for dinner'. I ignore that sort of thing. She is really lovely otherwise though and we get on well in general.
Is there any way of seeing your MIL in a different setting that doesn't involve food eg go to the theatre/cinema?

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 19:01

FancyBiscuitsLevel · 19/05/2026 18:50

Important point- why are you nervous to talk to your dh about this ? Have the chat. Make a plan together. If he’s not got your back, he’s not worth hanging on to anyway.

To be honest, we've spoken about various things related to SIL and my wish for there to be more/better/ANY boundaries. Usually the outcome is he feels I'm attacking her or being negative about her and so on. And, like someone just said, he thinks I spend too much time thinking about/analysing her behaviour.

But as many people have said, lots of these behaviours are problematic, and there are many more behaviours like this, which all affect me, often negatively because they simply make me sad. So of course I think about it. And I often think, you know, instead of sitting here, I could (in theory) be with my family who - while they also have their issues - do shower me with love and care (I was spoiled for love as a child). Instead I sat am here and having to be polite to rudeness. I am not sure it is fully appreciated (by them) how much effort I put into trying to be involved in their family, despite the fact that I wish the involvement looked different.

OP posts:
goody2shooz · 19/05/2026 19:09

@illtellyouwhat I can’t get my head round the idea that TWO ADULTS can’t say ‘that’s mouldy - it’s not fit for consumption’ to another adult. And you’re considering having a child with this man? His dm takes food off your plate/drink out of your glass/doesn’t give you food and neither of you can speak up??
You really shouldn’t be considering bringing a baby into such a dysfunctional relationship if neither of you can stand up to this absolute nonsense and appalling bad manners - and you’re a pair of complete wet fish to sit there and let his dm treat you like that.

godmum56 · 19/05/2026 19:12

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 19:01

To be honest, we've spoken about various things related to SIL and my wish for there to be more/better/ANY boundaries. Usually the outcome is he feels I'm attacking her or being negative about her and so on. And, like someone just said, he thinks I spend too much time thinking about/analysing her behaviour.

But as many people have said, lots of these behaviours are problematic, and there are many more behaviours like this, which all affect me, often negatively because they simply make me sad. So of course I think about it. And I often think, you know, instead of sitting here, I could (in theory) be with my family who - while they also have their issues - do shower me with love and care (I was spoiled for love as a child). Instead I sat am here and having to be polite to rudeness. I am not sure it is fully appreciated (by them) how much effort I put into trying to be involved in their family, despite the fact that I wish the involvement looked different.

Op, why do you stay?

BuckChuckets · 19/05/2026 19:15

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 18:27

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

The solution would be to stop this behaviour immediately, and make sure your wet wipe husband is fully onside, but the more you post, the less it sounds like you're willing to do that. So I'll reiterate, please don't bring children into this horror show.

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 19:15

godmum56 · 19/05/2026 19:12

Op, why do you stay?

hard to convey in this thread without going off topic. but you could call it "the relationship pareto principle", where the 80% of successes make up for the 20% of challenges.

OP posts:
goody2shooz · 19/05/2026 19:15

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 19:01

To be honest, we've spoken about various things related to SIL and my wish for there to be more/better/ANY boundaries. Usually the outcome is he feels I'm attacking her or being negative about her and so on. And, like someone just said, he thinks I spend too much time thinking about/analysing her behaviour.

But as many people have said, lots of these behaviours are problematic, and there are many more behaviours like this, which all affect me, often negatively because they simply make me sad. So of course I think about it. And I often think, you know, instead of sitting here, I could (in theory) be with my family who - while they also have their issues - do shower me with love and care (I was spoiled for love as a child). Instead I sat am here and having to be polite to rudeness. I am not sure it is fully appreciated (by them) how much effort I put into trying to be involved in their family, despite the fact that I wish the involvement looked different.

@illtellyouwhat this relationship just gets worse and worse. He puts his family and their feelings before you and how you feel. Shuts you down for talking to him about it. Says you’re being negative. When you’re being treated like this? Frankly my dear, I’d leave. I certainly would never have a child with a husband who wouldn’t support me, or even look out for me. You’re not a team.

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 19:16

BuckChuckets · 19/05/2026 19:15

The solution would be to stop this behaviour immediately, and make sure your wet wipe husband is fully onside, but the more you post, the less it sounds like you're willing to do that. So I'll reiterate, please don't bring children into this horror show.

I'll try to find a way of doing some kind of planning session about life after kids, to weave these issues into that, thank you for the pushback

OP posts:
Tabarnak · 19/05/2026 19:18

OP, about your DH and boundaries.

OK, she has brought him up and subsequently browbeaten him to believe boundaries are non existent. So instead, maybe instead of coaxing him to build boundaries, tell him his job is to protect and look after you.

Tell him it might help to be Wife Focussed rather than Mother Focussed. He must surely see it is rude and unacceptable for him to be fed and not you? Tell him to look out for you and look after you.

You don’t need to try and change her. You won’t and it’s not your job. But that doesn’t mean you have to be changed by her, even temporarily. You don’t have to put up with not eating properly, having your weight discussed or being bullied out of enjoying a restaurant meal.

When people give it out they are inviting a come back of similar energy.

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 19:18

goody2shooz · 19/05/2026 19:09

@illtellyouwhat I can’t get my head round the idea that TWO ADULTS can’t say ‘that’s mouldy - it’s not fit for consumption’ to another adult. And you’re considering having a child with this man? His dm takes food off your plate/drink out of your glass/doesn’t give you food and neither of you can speak up??
You really shouldn’t be considering bringing a baby into such a dysfunctional relationship if neither of you can stand up to this absolute nonsense and appalling bad manners - and you’re a pair of complete wet fish to sit there and let his dm treat you like that.

We can point it out but she will just say oh I'll just cut that off, or I'll just take that raspberry out of the punnet. She once chopped up a very, very out of date pineapple - thinking about this almost makes me gag - which had so many brown bits inside, green mould on the outside, it and she just kept cutting and cutting until she felt like she had got rid of the bad parts and then put that in the fruit salad or whatever it was we were having.

So it's not that we can't say anything it's that it doesn't make a difference. If you say it's not fit for consumption then it's like "I've eaten food like this all my life"

OP posts:
PussInBin20 · 19/05/2026 19:20

You all sound completely nuts! Why are you putting up with this??

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 19:22

PussInBin20 · 19/05/2026 19:20

You all sound completely nuts! Why are you putting up with this??

This made me lol. Maybe it's a match made in heaven (we're all crazy)!

OP posts:
goody2shooz · 19/05/2026 19:23

@illtellyouwhat so WHAT if she says that? She’s not the boss of you!! You just say, ‘well no, I’m not eating that thanks.’ And if your dh and/or his dm has an issue with that - then too bad. That’s THEIR ISSUE and appalling manners. As for the 80/20 bit well, how much shit in a sandwich do you want to eat?

HazelMember · 19/05/2026 19:26

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 19:15

hard to convey in this thread without going off topic. but you could call it "the relationship pareto principle", where the 80% of successes make up for the 20% of challenges.

So 80% of the time it is amazing while 20% of the time DH stuffs his face while you have nothing and he watches happy that he is not getting the flak?

tartyflette · 19/05/2026 19:27

It might be hard but I think that the next time she tries to take your food off your plate (I mean WTAF!! Gobsmacked.) you absolutely have to say,’Oi, Hetty please don’t nick my food — I’m hungry and I want it! ‘
I suppose you could try the tinkly laugh too but you don’t want to dilute your message.
I think that if you are anything other than firm and serious it will not have much impact, if any. She may take offence but that’s unfortunate - you have to address this before kids arrive.
And regarding your future children, I think this is where your DH really, really needs to step up and tell his mother that she could jeopardize her future relationship with grandchildren if things do not change.
Many grandparents have had to learn to button their lip from time to time when they don’t like aspects of how their DC bring up the grandkids. If they want to keep seeing them, that is.
Good luck.

godmum56 · 19/05/2026 19:30

illtellyouwhat · 19/05/2026 19:18

We can point it out but she will just say oh I'll just cut that off, or I'll just take that raspberry out of the punnet. She once chopped up a very, very out of date pineapple - thinking about this almost makes me gag - which had so many brown bits inside, green mould on the outside, it and she just kept cutting and cutting until she felt like she had got rid of the bad parts and then put that in the fruit salad or whatever it was we were having.

So it's not that we can't say anything it's that it doesn't make a difference. If you say it's not fit for consumption then it's like "I've eaten food like this all my life"

you say "I won't eat that" rinse and repeat

BrownBookshelf · 19/05/2026 19:30

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.

Hang on to that feeling of being pissed off with yourself for going along with all this OP. Hopefully you can build on it.

PopcornKitten · 19/05/2026 19:32

Going out and her paying for the meal is also part of the control. It’s her paying so she gets to call the shots.
rise up and channel that anger because of how small she has made you

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