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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU with my Mum and my garden situation?

103 replies

Hornswaddler · 21/05/2026 22:14

For context I am closer to my Mother than I am anyone else. We get on very well, we go on minibreaks together a lot (we share interests that her and my Dad do not share so I am her 'trip' buddy go-to)and go out for lunch/dinner etc, we talk a lot, we're close. We don't have a bad relationship generally.

A few months ago I moved into a house near her.

Unfortunately, at the time of moving, I was also quite overwhelmed with work. I work part-time for a company but also have freelance work and two projects had come through at the same time as moving. I couldn't have predicted this really, nature of it but I had enough time, I just had to work very, very hard. The move had some complications and it was bad timing. I paid for help with moving when I wasn't available, also had some friends come over to help shift things etc, it went smoothly and all was fine but it was a very stressful period for me and I was very stressed and tired.

I also spent a lot of money in the move, I had some left over, but I did not want to spend it all at once, I wanted to be careful with it. I am single and live alone and I have to be a bit careful with money.

My biggest bugbear with the house was the garden. Previous occupants had flagged it all and I am a nature lover, I wanted grass, shrubs, greenery.

From day one my Mum has pressured me like anything into paying to get the garden landscaped, plants planted, everything taken away and done. She knew a fella who'd be great at it and it'd be done within a week or so. She nagged me a lot about this when all I could concentrate on was deadlines with work and doing essential things. She pressured me with some other move-related decisions which annoyed me but I gave in to those. This pressure made me so much more stressed at an already difficult time, I wasn't sleeping properly and felt myself becoming quite ill with it all.

But I did say, no, not what I want, I want to have a proper think about what I want the garden to be like, and I am too busy and distracted with work to do that currently. I also don't want someone I don't know coming in and doing it, it will stress me out. I'll think about how I want the garden, and then either do it myself or maybe get him to do it, but not yet. Really, I wanted (and still want!) to do it myself. Yes it will take a bit longer but I want to do it my way. I didn't see the urgency. Yes, the garden wasn't how I wanted it but I had too many other more pressing matters to concentrate on.

Mum put SO much pressure on me. When I said I had to be a bit careful with money as I had spent a lot on the house already, she offered to pay and was most annoyed when I didn't accept (parents are wealthy but although they paid for a lot of education for me, as a fully fledged adult I have not taken a penny from them)!

But once I had refused this, I thought that was the end of it.

One night after I had first moved in and my internet was not yet on, I was at her house doing my freelance work, and didn't finish until almost midnight. I had already worked my other job that day, it had been busy, so I was utterly shattered and gave up.

Went to say goodbye to her and she laid into me about the garden again. It may sound extreme but I was just so tired, I had switched my brain off and just wanted to go home and go to bed and I almost didn't even know what she was talking about. I said 'Mum, this has been put to bed, I am doing it myself', she wouldn't accept it and I admit that I snapped at her a little, not badly just 'Look I've worked an 18 hour shift, I cannot have this conversation now, thank you for letting me use your internet, I am going to bed'.

I felt guilty when I got home and sent her a message explaining that I have too much to do, I cannot put thoughts about the garden to the forefront of my mind when other things have urgency and that does not, and apologsised.

Again, I thought that was that.

That was about 2 months ago and she's just got back from being on holiday and came round a few days ago and started again about the garden. I have now taken a lot of the concrete up, done some planting and started to dig out bits where I want a lawn. I have done quite a lot as things have calmed at work. I got a lot of 'told you sos' (not exactly but, 'If you'd have just done what I said you'd have this all sorted by now!') and 'You wouldn't have it looking a mess had you done what I said' and again I explained that I wanted to do it myself, I am happy doing it myself, I did not and still do not want to pay a random bloke to do it, I am quite capable and I have already got a lot done.

Tonight, she rang me and the conversation again turned to my garden, only about the other part of it now which already has a lawn. I have not cut it. I like the concept of 'no mow May' and love sitting and watching pollinators and in the greenery, I know it is not everybody's 'thing' but it is mine. She said she was coming over this weekend with her strimmer'. I told her she was not! If I want it strimming I am quite capable of doing it, but I don't! I got told that the only reason I haven't done it is because I wouldn't have noticed it. I have! I just like it the way it is? It's not her garden, surely it doesn't affect her even if I don't cut the grass for years.

I love her to bits but this has become a real thorn in my side. I don't understand why it bothers her so much? She doesn't have to deal with it. As it is I am quite happy with the progress I have made so far and I don't see the massive rush.

Upon moving I was already pressured into some other decisions I am not happy with but I am putting my foot down on this one.

OP posts:
Vroomfondleswaistcoat · 22/05/2026 17:43

As a mum, I absolutely don't mind my kids telling me to shut up. I have ADHD and can get fixated on a subject and damn well need to be told that I have gone on a bit too much. I don't take offence because I know what I am like.

And I thought No Mow May was less about wildlife and more about allowing wildflowers to come to seed before mowing so that they can spread in your lawn more easily. Usually they are mown to destruction and never get the chance to set seed. Leaving them to mature is good for the wildlife that eats them though, specific caterpillars etc.

Sharptonguedwoman · 22/05/2026 17:54

BigFrau · 22/05/2026 00:08

Don't do no mow May, it's bad for wildlife

Is it!!? Why is that, please?

Monty36 · 22/05/2026 18:14

At one point I wondered if she had promised the someone she knew that they would be doing your garden.
Maybe she did and feels embarrassed that she had to say it wasn’t happening, or it became awkward when he kept asking ?
Either way just no. She overstepped the mark. It is your house. Not hers. And not an extension of her house either.

Yetone · 22/05/2026 18:30

You are far too tolerant with her. You just need to tell her that you are having YOUR garden how you want it and you don’t want to discuss it any more with her.
Your life is far too enmeshed with her. Try a bit of space.

ComfyKnickers · 22/05/2026 18:33

I would be reducing contact and being careful about what information I share with her.

Middleagedspreadisreal · 22/05/2026 18:59

You're very patient, my DD has cut herself off from me for less x

Overworkedandknackered · 22/05/2026 19:22

FIL is like this, he gets fixated on something, at one point it was turning our front garden into a driveway, we weren’t bothered because there was plenty of on-street parking and we needed to spend our money other more important things like a working kitchen and curtains. Eventually he offers to pay so we said ok, you sort it and pay if you want to. He got half a job done, it was clearly more expensive than he’d been anticipating so he sat DH down and said ‘how will you be paying for it then’ and to DHs credit he just shrugged his shoulders and said I’m not paying, haven’t got any money for that.

suburburban · 22/05/2026 19:37

My dm would never keep on at me like this nor would I do it to my own daughters, they’d soon tell where to go and rightly so

rude, controlling behaviour

bakingsodar · 22/05/2026 19:46

parakeet · 21/05/2026 22:20

Why in the name of god do you keep entertaining this shite?

Just say "I dsagree, can we drop it please?"

Then "Mum shut up!"

Three strikes with me and someone is out: Shut the fuck up
I really do love the form of writing on MN

bakingsodar · 22/05/2026 19:48

Let's make it a classic ....I love this....next will be mum coming with few plants in pots and planting them overnight and having sex in the shed with good old dad

Hornswaddler · 22/05/2026 20:11

Oh so many responses, thank you all! I'm just reading through now, sorry, had an early night last night and today has been a bit shambolic at work.

OP posts:
Hornswaddler · 22/05/2026 20:23

SarahAndQuack · 21/05/2026 23:28

My mother is like this (without, unfortunately, what sound like your mum's nice qualities).

One time she got a bee in her bonnet about a low wall in my garden that had once been a plinth for an old oil tank. We were quite clear we didn't want to get rid of it (we were deciding what to do, possibly making it into an outdoor table, but we wanted to do it carefully). My then-partner and I were chatting and realised there had been a banging noise going on for a while.

We went out and found she had brought a sledgehammer with her and was methodically smashing the wall down.

She still believes she 'helped,' although unsurprisingly (she's into her 70s) she only succeeded in making a huge mess and couldn't finish the job. She will also insist on 'weeding' my garden and deciding what she thinks belongs where.

I would say - do not 'give her a job' to keep her busy. I made that mistake. I work as a gardener but once tried letting her talk me through pruning roses as I wrongly thought it might calm her down if she felt she was being useful. All it achieved was to make her think I didn't know my stuff.

It is a really odd generational thing about lawns, and gardens in general, and if your mum is of the 'manicured lawn and landscaped space' mindset, you will never convince her you're right to want no-mow May and a lovely gentle process of putting your garden together yourself. I just keep saying bluntly 'mum, I know you don't agree with how I'm doing this but it really matters to me' until it sinks in.

Thank you for sharing that account of things. It reads as if she did believe she was being helpful? But ended up making a mess of things and clutching at your supposed incapabilities. Is it some sort of extension of 'empty nest' thinking patterns? And that would have upset me, a definite intrusion of boundaries.

My Mum indeed does have many lovely qualities. She really does. I felt quite guilty starting this thread for that reason. She's always been very supportive, very accommodating, very much put me first in all sorts of ways. She's very generous with her time as well as her money (although as I have said, I have never accepted any monetary gifts from her). I cannot fault her in many ways at all.
She is however, a shrewd businesswoman and I am very much not! I am quite emotional and I think a lot about things, she's more of a 'I want that let's get it' person. I am not saying she isn't caring because as above, she is.

Yes, that's true. (Hopefully usually at least) the younger generations are an evolved version but some older people just can't shift their mindset. I am sure 20-somethings think that about my generation too.

OP posts:
Turnitoffnonagain · 22/05/2026 20:34

I thought your post was going to end with "I just got home from work and she's had this gardener in doing xyz and ruined my planned garden"
I really couldn't take the amount of mithering she is giving you and would have lost my rag with her long ago. You are saintly to put up with it.😇

B0D · 22/05/2026 20:35

What I do in these type situations something like:
Q — do you love me?
answer - (usually) yes
Q - do you want me to be happy?
A - (hopefully) yes
Q - Do you think Im capable of knowing what will make me happy/ doing my own garden ?
etc. etc
Q - what will make me happy is that you never mention my garden again unless it is to compliment and admire my hard work and taste.

B0D · 22/05/2026 20:36

I also love “that’s your opinion mum “

Hornswaddler · 22/05/2026 21:30

She can in theory access my home/garden without me there but fortunately I do not think she ever would (unless it was simply to drop something off or whatever).I really do not think she'd go so far, thankfully.

The letter is a good idea @GrantMyWishes and if this continues, something I will consider. Letters being 'old fashioned' are not old fashioned to my parent's generation.

@Teapotparadise81 , oh that is sad. I really hope not and I am sorry you've gone through that.

There's no family history on either side, and of course an older person becoming a bit more 'ditzy' does not necessarily mean dementia is onsetting, but it is definitely something I will be mindful of.

If you saw my Mum, she's 81 but regularly mistaken for someone in their 60s. Slim, glamourous, fantastic skin, hair regularly done, good clothes, top of the range car (and is a great driver) etc etc. It makes it easier I suppose for me (us, as in the family) to not appreciate the age.

@Unabletosleep please do not undermine yourself, I haven't had children, also not dealt with a bereavement. And it sounds as if you've done a lot!

I did move closer partly because of my parents ageing. I wanted to make things easier for all of us. I WFH with my 'main' job and my freelance work usually can also be done from anywhere, and being close to family is mainly a good thing too.

@Twisterr , my Dad was and is a very angry man.I felt like I wasn't a 'real person' and my emotional needs were quite neglected, looking back. Luckily, I do have friends and hobbies, albeit not many friends around here yet but the ones I have are good. I am trying to build that up.

If she mentions it again I will indeed be saying something about boundaries.

Other things, she insisted on my replacing all of the doors in the house before I moved in. I understand the logic on this one, doors can be a messy job however I was not so bothered about replacing them. The ones in were a bit old fashioned, but fine, nothing wrong with them and I genuinely liked them! I had been nagged for weeks about getting new ones, and I was once extremely busy at work and she was asking me to hurry up and choose some new ones. I may or may not have used capitals in my response and also asked what on earth the urgency to get them replaced right now was. I had to let her choose them because I was just too busy to spend however long it would take to go through the selection process myself. I also used what I see as an absolutely ridiculous amount of money on them, given they weren't something I had even considered replacing. And if I am totally honest, I do not particularly like the new ones she chose either.Grin

@Error404FucksNotFound I have considered saying that, I almost did, about regretting moving here. I don't! But sometimes I the heat of the moment I feel like saying it!

@Bimblebombles she has a lot of hobbies, pastimes and good friends (and a husband) I don't think she is bored.

@Imgoingtobefree I am going to have a look at that book right after reading these responses!
Bear in mind, when I was taking flags up I was ensuring I let any bugs run off and find shelter before I moved them mother earth
@665theneighborofthebeast I will be honest, I have never been able to articulate (even to myself) that mindset, but it absolutely is that. I want to do it myself. It isn't about the money. I have never done this sort of thing before but I am enjoying doing it and I know I will enjoy the end result. And a lot more, if I have been the one to complete its transformation. I don't want that taken away just by throwing money at it, that's not the point! Thank you.

Taken the point regarding 'no mow may' and I am quite willing to leave the lawn as it is indefinitely!

@RainyTuesdayBlues I love that! I am not sure I can actually say it, but I think I can! We're both quite facetious people, I think she'd appreciate it!

@TheNinkyNonkyIsATardis that's such a shame. I can get very emotional about plants. I am sorry that happened.

@Monty36 that's an interesting theory and definitely possible. I am going to ask her about that.

@Middleagedspreadisreal I am indeed a patient person with people. Not with anything else unfortunately!

Oh @Overworkedandknackered I love that so much! Definitely sounds like fixation your DH is brilliant. And that's how I feel, I CAN do the garden myself. But if money was put into it, I also have an unfinished spare room that needs plastering and a roof that likely needs attention too, and sorting that I can most definitely not! If I am going to spend money I want it put there, where it is needed.

@B0D That's a brilliant way to handle it.

Thank you so much all of you. Again, I felt quite harsh beginning this thread. My Mum is fabulous and my biggest cheerleader in so many ways. Just this particular thing was/is a bit much.

OP posts:
worriedmumofgirls · 22/05/2026 22:26

My mum used to be kind of similar, just nag nag nag about whatever she had a bee in her bonnet about.

In the end I just lost it, and didn’t speak to her for a while. If she starts up again on the phone, I hang up. If she starts while I my house, I take her home straight away. If she starts while I’m visiting, I grab my coat and leave.

You need to start doing the same. It’s rude what she is doing and it needs nipping in the bud.

WiddlinDiddlin · 22/05/2026 22:29

LiteraryBambi · 22/05/2026 08:23

Don't tell your mum to shut up. Who does that.

Someone who has a Mother that keeps dragging something up that they've been given an answer to and told to leave alone multiple times?

TeenLifeMum · 22/05/2026 22:37

My mum was bizarrely angry we bought an automatic car then calmed down after ranting to my brother who pointed out that he lives in Canada where 90% of cars are automatic and both of their cars are in face automatics. Golden boy can do no wrong. 2 years later… she buys an automatic. wtf - why was i so heavily criticised. She thought I’d get bored driving without gears to change 😳🤷🏻‍♀️

LiteraryBambi · 22/05/2026 22:41

TheNinkyNonkyIsATardis · 22/05/2026 16:54

In your culture, is it also normal for a parent to be so dogmatic and pushy about a grown child's private property?

Yes 😂

LiteraryBambi · 22/05/2026 22:42

WiddlinDiddlin · 22/05/2026 22:29

Someone who has a Mother that keeps dragging something up that they've been given an answer to and told to leave alone multiple times?

Can't imagine ever telling one of my parents to shut up. It's just not a thing we would do.

nomas · 22/05/2026 22:49

All this navel gazing from you and your mum over a non-issue.

All you need to say is 'I'm not discussing this anymore' and change the subject.

I think you both enjoy your pseudo-feuds.

Bufftailed · 22/05/2026 22:54

You need to set a boundary. I am not looking for feedback on this issue. Repeat. I do that and it works. It’s your garden

Yetone · Yesterday 08:44

LiteraryBambi · 22/05/2026 22:42

Can't imagine ever telling one of my parents to shut up. It's just not a thing we would do.

So in your culture you would never tell parents to shut up even if they were being offensive?

CrushingOnRubies · Yesterday 10:07

I can sympathise… my dm can be like this not quite to the same extent but i totally get it. We have an old kitchen we have turned into a utility rooms. No one really sees it just somewhere to store dps tools and the washing machine and dryer. Mum keeps asking when are we going to decorate it. We aren’t the old kitchen cabinets are still in and in ok condition and provide excellent storage. I’m not redecorating and sorting out an already sorted room just because my mum suggests it.