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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

I'm angry with my mother, I know it's probably unreasonable

59 replies

Mandragore · 22/03/2009 15:18

We see each other several times a week, and she helps look after my children if I have an appointment, plus we speak on the phone quite often. She is generally very supportive but I have had issues with her in the past, thinking she is controlling and quite toxic. We just keep a fairly harmonious relationship mainly as I need her help, honestly.

Anyway last week my children were quite ill. Both were being sick and I was up constantly all night for several nights, clearing up, in a sort of relay between them and the washing machine and bathroom, feeding the baby etc etc. I wasn't getting a break but was coping. I rang her and we had our usual brief chat, during which I asked if I might call her to come round if I became ill and couldn't manage with the children.

She sounded really dubious and grudging about it, and wouldn't give a definite answer just saying she was afraid of having to take time off work as work is importantto her and she wants to look committed (she is committed and they know she is, she already does an extra day a week at the moment). Of course I understand and I don't begrudge her wanting to keep her attendance at the top, but I have nobody else I can ask to help if I am ill.
I have a few friends but they are all married and frankly if I was ill I would not want to ask one of them to come and look after me, as I would be worried about passing something on to them and their children. Actually I have an agreement with my best friend that we don't meet if the children are ill. We're upfront about this.

I made it very clear I would only ask if things were desperate, and eventually she said Ok she would help if it was life or death but would prefer it if I had 'something else in place'. We have discussed this before, I have found out about homestart, but they don't provide emergency cover, just a once-a-week thing so it wouldn't help much if I was suddenly ill.

I accepted her feelings on it and we left it - but I asked her not to come round despite her offering to, on her days off, as I didn't want her to catch what the children had got. She was very blase about it, saying 'well I saw them last week, I'll be Ok' but I know if she got ill I'd feel terrible. So I insisted and managed alone. It was fine, I didn't get ill, and the other day when the children were much better, she came round and helped me with some cleaning, which again I felt worried about but she insisted.

This morning I had a phone call from my father saying mum was ill with a tummy bug. I'm not sure why he rang to tell me. He's like that. I said I was sorry and rang her just now to see how she was.
She told me how horrible it is and how awful she is feeling, and obviously thinks it is what my kids have had, despite the fact I kept her away during the worst of it, and I haven't had it myself.

She has done this once before - came to help when Iand ds had a bug, came down with it the next day and made me feel really really guilty. I am not saying she has got ill deliberately but the way she is about it feels as though she is saying 'see, it's your fault'

Why do I feel like this? I can't figure it out but it definitely feels like she is blaming me when she was keen to come round all the time, and I was so careful not to let her. I feel like I can't win.

Is it her or me?

OP posts:
Sparkletastic · 22/03/2009 17:01

YANBU about the ringing to tell you about illness thing - MIL does that on the rare occasion when she is in the country, has seen the DDs, and caught a cold off them ffs. Kids get ill, if family members want to see them there is a chance they might get ill once in a while too, it ain't usually life-threatening....

compo · 22/03/2009 17:07

god people, what on earth is wrong with asking yuor mum for help if you're ill! my mum would want to help if she was nearby, just as I would help my sister with her kids if she was ill and I could help
what's with all this 'I survive on my own so should you'.

BitOfFun · 22/03/2009 17:11

Yey! The tide is turning

You watch, all the softies will start to come out of the woodwork now that compo has stuck her neck out! Hehehe

Quattrocento · 22/03/2009 17:18

This narratorial role suits you BoF

violethill · 22/03/2009 17:19

She wasn't expecting a bit of help compo - she was expecting her mum to take a day off work to look after her and her kids!! That's bloody ridiculous!

salome64 · 22/03/2009 17:19

Its fine asking your mum for help, not fine to have a tantrum when she can't commit to it.

Its just illogical to say I told her not to come round when the kids are sick, and then say why wont she come round if I get sick?

We would all help people out if we can, just its a two way street when it comes to support. She said her dad called to say her mum was ill and wondered why on earth he would do that? IMO if they see each other that much it seems perfectly normal.

I don't think I was hard on her in my original post, but it is galling when you do struggle all by yourself to hear someone whinge about their mum not dropping everything then having the nerve to fall ill and feel a bit sorry for herself.

But the emotional issue is something completely different , and she signalled it with the words controlling and toxic. Just needs a better example if that is the problem.

troutpout · 22/03/2009 17:20

lol bof...yep it was just a matter of time

salome64 · 22/03/2009 17:21

I mean its hard to get to the emotional truth of any situation with limited knowledge. Maybe this seems minor to some, including me, but it could be the final straw, etc. Its just very hard to tell.

piscesmoon · 22/03/2009 17:22

I don't think her mother was making a drama of it! She wasn't the one to even mention it. Her father rang-probably a good idea if she was relying on further help. OP then rang her mother to ask how she was and her mother told her!

salome64 · 22/03/2009 17:22

so trout, what I have said is being all softie? or harridan? I don't see it as either.

piscesmoon · 22/03/2009 17:25

I think any mother would help if she could, but OP's mother was supposed to be at work!I don't think that her employer would be too happy if she was taking time off work to look after and adult child-or was she supposed to lie?

salome64 · 22/03/2009 17:28

To be fair, I think the OP meant look after the dcs if she fell ill. but agree otherwise pIsces.

piscesmoon · 22/03/2009 17:31

I still think it is difficult to take time off to look after grandchildren, unless it is really serious and you have compassionate leave.

salome64 · 22/03/2009 17:33

I agree. pisces.

violethill · 22/03/2009 17:38

Yeap. A tummy bug isn't life or death - it's just one of those things. I would never expected anyone, not even my DH to take a day off work in that situation. There are times when you just have to be a grown up.

GLaDOS · 22/03/2009 17:39

Sounds complicated. but bugs are going around. She will have picked them up elsewhere most likely.

Maybe you just need to have a think about if you actually want to be dependent on her at all? Maybe have a bot of counselling to try and work through the pros and cons.

If she is toxic, you need to think about your kids - and yourself - being in emotionally healthy environments.

But take it slow. It's hard.

salome64 · 22/03/2009 17:42

I'm beginning to think its been for me being by myself - never have any dh or mother issues....whats a little bit of d&v, eh?

salome64 · 22/03/2009 17:42

I meant to say its been easier for me...

Ivykaty44 · 22/03/2009 17:42

Is it her or me?
both of you, as in 6 of one and half a dozen of the other. You have it seems a straned relationship and probbly need to either get things out in the open or suck it and see

justaboutback · 22/03/2009 17:46

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn

salome64 · 22/03/2009 17:47

I think she left the building quite some time ago...

Quattrocento · 22/03/2009 17:48
Mintyy · 22/03/2009 17:55

I think your Mum probably did catch the bug from your kids (was it a whole clear two days between the last episode of d or v and her visit?) and if so she could expect a bit of sympathy from you, rather than you thinking she is toxic and controlling.

I think I remember your posts (under a different name?) from last week when you were in the thick of it?

Can the dcs father not look after them if you are ill?

I love my DS and DD to pieces but tbh I would not help them out with any future gc (please God) if they had tummy bugs because I am an emetophobe.

salome64 · 22/03/2009 17:57

I remember throwing up all over my grandmother after having got car sick when I was little. It was that leather smell they used to have. Bet she thought she'd left all that behind.

salome64 · 22/03/2009 17:59

We must be due some kind of narratorial interjection about now...

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