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Parenting

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My mother keeps accusing me of child neglect

109 replies

Kanfuzed123 · 29/10/2021 14:03

So I need to know who is insane here. DH and I know for sure we do not neglect in any way shape or form our child. Dd is 2. I want to put that out there flat out so no confusion, yet my mother continues to imply and flat out accuse me of neglect.

For context she and I have a difficult relationship, she was abusive as a teen and a narcissist and I was the scapegoated child.

So I need a reality check.
Big trigger for my mum is my daughters size- she follows 9/25th centile for everything has done since birth. In regularly accused of starving her. She has 3 meals and 3 snacks a day, along with milk. We eat a wide array of food (no pork- Muslim). I don’t offer her sweets like candy lollipops, but we have treats like cake and chocolate here and there. No HCP has ever any issues but it constantly comes up and the lack of sweeties is neglect and abuse and ‘f’ing up her childhood’
She also accuses me of neglect over the type of food I feed her, as it’s not ‘British’ enough. She’s also triggered by the cuts of meat we use- I.e. slow cooked mutton for Jamaican curries, or chicken thighs. Apparently this is neglect.
Where we buy her clothes and the style of clothes- this is probably one of the biggest ones. Full disclaimer I don’t buy designer clothes for DD as it seems a waste. She goes to nursery and they said don’t send them in good clothes they’ll get ruined, so we tend to send her in multipacks from George asda as she dirties her clothes all the time. This is apparently disgraceful. We tend to buy a fair few multipacks in general for her home clothes from places like H&M and next, again because she dirties them. She’s mainly a leggings and tops kind of girl she doesn’t like dresses and tights (think it gets in the way of her playing). We mainly get her clothes from next, m&s, George, TU, H&M and maybe a few bits and bobs from tkmaxx. Some times I do sale shopping too for bits. It’s what we can afford- I see 0 issue with this. It’s normal right? I’ve had constant accusations of neglect and abuse and how mortified my mother is seeing her because she looks like an urchin. Her clothes are always clean and ones that do have food stains on that don’t budge we use as our outdoor exploring clothes or our arts and craft/ messy play clothes.
Toys- another big one- I won’t list all the toys and books dd has but you could honestly say it’s too many. But a huge blow out occurred when dd was 1 and she wanted her to have one of those amazing huge wooden climbing frames. They are lovely but we live in a new build house with an adequate yet smallish garden so we don’t have the room. The garden is also on a slope. Cut to her ordering a £1000 climbing frame the dimensions of which were larger than the garden (width wise). This was a huge deals and again accused of fucking up dds life and ruining her childhood.
She’s also insistent that DD is behind and this is a sign she’s neglected. Big one is she can’t read yet (she’s 24.5 months old) and can’t count (she knows numbers but can’t count per se). She’s sailed through all her HV checks and her nursery have no once highlighted a concern.

There’s so many more examples, she’s not spent a night away from home since she was 3 months - neglect. Not been on holiday- abuse. Doesn’t have a pretend makeup counter - miserly.

I could go on honestly. I know I’m not mum of the year, nor would I pretend to be, but are the things we’re doing bad? Those are acceptable places to buy kids clothes right? I feel like I’m in the twilight zone a bit.

OP posts:
EmeraldShamrock · 29/10/2021 14:33

Definitely a Mum problem.
She is a nightmare.

Hockeyboysmum · 29/10/2021 14:38

Ignore her. 90% of my boys clothes are hand-me-downs from various friends. As was his pram and car seat. Certainly does him no harm. What is new is generally asda/primark/h&m. He is about to get bought ridiculously expensive shoes though as they need to fit over his ankle/foot orthotic splint.

He is 19 months old and cant stand walk talk etc. Is he neglected? No hes disabled. Kids are all different. Your daughter is loved and sounds very well looked after. If your mother cant see that then id cut contact as much as possie.

paisley256 · 29/10/2021 14:38

Stop giving her any information about your life /your choices...

I second this. She'd also benefit from taking up a hobby, something to occupy her mind. You sound like a lovely mum.

dottiedodah · 29/10/2021 14:38

She seems to be the one with a problem here! The clothes for Nursery are absolutely fine ,I was a NS teacher and its what children wear ,Leggings are great for babies .LO. She sounds unhinged and somewhat jealous as well! I would just keep her low contact .If she starts off when you are OL .just say "oh got to go Baby needs me!)

MadMadMadamMim · 29/10/2021 14:39

@Pinkbonbon But you're a parent now. If there was a monster trying to get into your home amd hide under your kids bed, would you leave the door open?

That's the best phrase I've ever seen.

Narcissists are the monster under the bed.

Kanfuzed123 · 29/10/2021 14:40

We’re a Muslim family too but my mother is not. As a result we don’t go all in on x mas. Tbh we don’t have a tree or decorations and used to visit her and my dad for x mas with gift and stuff (she lives about 3 hrs away). We do buy DD gifts here but it was just mainly for my parents rather than because we actively celebrate. The same goes for easter and whitsun (which id never even heard of until I got a bashing for not celebrating). We do birthdays though, but with no balloons as DD is afraid of them. We do eid too, so we still have lots of celebrations and fun family events. Obviously this is a huge saga as well.

To the PP who mentioned that if she’s telling DD these things she might start to think she’s being abused- I didn’t even think of this, silly I know but thanks for pointing that out thats potentially incredibly dangerous. Reading it back and all your comments it does sound like she’s using DD to get one over on me, maybe even turn her against me

OP posts:
Betty000 · 29/10/2021 14:42

She's continuing to abuse you. Cut her out completely and don't look back!

itsgettingwierd · 29/10/2021 14:43

A simple sentence sums this up.

YOU are are not the one with issues or being abusive.

Go no or low contact. I'm never really one to say this as I know family dynamics can be hard and overcome as mines quite tricky.

But your mum is bringing nothing to your life.

FictionalCharacter · 29/10/2021 14:44

@Pinkbonbon

She is setting your child up to be the next scapegoat who can't do anything right. In a few years time it'll be 'maybe mum was right not to buy you nice things because you can't keep them clean. And besides, ugly girls don't deserve nice things'. All it takes is two minutes unsupervised and your kids self esteem gets ruined. And believe me, they can do a world of damage even when they are being watched too.

Tell her to fuck off and never contact you again.
Yes it's a hard thing to do. But you're a parent now. If there was a monster trying to get into your home amd hide under your kids bed, would you leave the door open?

Absolutely this. You're a normal caring mum, you're daughter's a normal child, your mum is ridiculous and horrible. Cut her off before she starts to manipulate and upset your daughter.
LowlandLucky · 29/10/2021 14:45

You sound like a great Mum. You child is not neglected because her leggings are from Asda, as long as they are clean and fit thats all they need to be. Please don't give her a make up set and please tell your mil to keep her views to herself or stay off the phone. She obviously measures love i £s poor sad woman.

hellcatspangle · 29/10/2021 14:46

Your mother sounds deranged, and quite honestly I'd keep her very much at arms length, if not completely NC.

User527294627 · 29/10/2021 14:47

You sound like a lovely mum, your daughter sounds like she’s having a lovely childhood, your mother is unhinged. I would be cutting her out of your life if I were you Flowers

itsgettingwierd · 29/10/2021 14:49

@Hockeyboysmum

Ignore her. 90% of my boys clothes are hand-me-downs from various friends. As was his pram and car seat. Certainly does him no harm. What is new is generally asda/primark/h&m. He is about to get bought ridiculously expensive shoes though as they need to fit over his ankle/foot orthotic splint.

He is 19 months old and cant stand walk talk etc. Is he neglected? No hes disabled. Kids are all different. Your daughter is loved and sounds very well looked after. If your mother cant see that then id cut contact as much as possie.

Irrelevant to thread but I found these were great with ds orthotics. The laces are elastic and you could use the ankle strap to secure the boot.

www.sportsdirect.com/lonsdale-canons-childrens-hi-top-trainers-033442#colcode=03344202

I just use to need to size up 1 size to accommodate the size of the orthotic foot base.

PieMistee · 29/10/2021 14:52

You need to reduce contact to nothing. Get her out of your head. My children almost never wear anything that isn't secondhand let alone from John Lewis.

Your mother wants to put you down and as your DD gets older will try and turn her against you which is damaging for all of you.

2389Champ · 29/10/2021 14:53

My MIL was similar - always telling me how others were bringing up their children - and had this fixation that because I wasn’t routinely giving sweet treats, my DCs were missing out. She used to justify sneaking them chocolate bars by maintaining that if I denied them sugary things as children, they would grow up into adults that craved them!
When they were very tiny, I only gave them water or milk in their bottles but MIL took it upon herself to dissolve sugar in their water as a ‘treat’ I had to be very firm and tell her if I was coping fine on my own, I wasn’t interested in how others were bringing up their children and if I wanted advice, I would ask for it.

hiredandsqueak · 29/10/2021 14:55

I'd cut down drastically on seeing your dm. I have a lovely relationship with both dgs's and their dm's (dd and ds's dp) reason being I offer nothing but praise for their roles in raising my dgs, I say yes if asked to help out and I'm not at all pushy. Your dm needs to learn to respect your boundaries so I'd be putting in place some really rigid ones limiting her access to your dd until she has learnt where the boundaries lie.

Wnikat · 29/10/2021 14:56

You're fine. She's batshit. Don't see her any more.

jezziej · 29/10/2021 14:57

You don't need to explain yourself, your mum is a nut. I dealt with this too, even down to her mistreating me as a child/teen, like your mum!

Just get rid of her, you'll be better off.

1forAll74 · 29/10/2021 14:57

Everything you are doing is fine,so try not to dwell on your Mothers ridiculous opinions. I would go low contact with her, but before this, I would have to have a bit of a showdown chat with her, and ask her why she is so critical and comes out with such nonsense, as she needs to know, that she is being unpleasant towards you, and she ruins any family harmony all round with her crazy attitudes. She is doing herself more harm than good, causing problems for others.

ShagMeRiggins · 29/10/2021 14:58

Your mother sounds like she cares very much what other people think. Certain clothes, certain developmental milestones, certain British traditions being observed...

It’s a small life to lead, very insular, and rarely brings joy of any kind. Does your mother seem to experience happiness, ever?

You sound fine, your marriage sounds fine, your child sounds fine. Keep doing what you’re doing and learn to ignore your mother. If you wish to maintain a relationship with her it has to be on mutual terms.

Ps—I don’t know anyone who observes whitsun. I’m sure some do, and I’m sure it matters to them, but not observing whitsun isn’t a sign of parental neglect.

cuttlefishgame · 29/10/2021 15:00

So I need to know who is insane here.

It's your mother. She is vile.

She is continuing to abuse you, and now she has found another stick to beat you with.

Pinkbonbon · 29/10/2021 15:00

They love to play people off against eachother.

My gran would spend the day being extra nice to me and I would think maybe she was not so bad afterall...and then the second my mum came back she would tell her that I had been a horrible naughty child and that I deserved to be punished.

And on the other days...she would tell me I ruined my mother's life and should neve have been born and that my mother didn't really love me.

They change tactics in order to keep you destabilised. And they try to turn you against people you love because they absolutely hate the idea that people could love anyone else except them. Because they feel they deserve all the attention. And because they themselves are not capable of love. They are jealous and spiteful and they will never stop.

Luckily for me, the old bat died when I was 12.
I don't think my mum ever really processed that her mother was abusive. But then, she was the golden child so probably didn't get it as bad as her sisters did... or me, in turn.

But more people are becoming aware of abuse now tf. And if you see it then please dont let your child grow up thinking that it is normal to keep these people around you. Do all you can to teach them that bullies are not meant to be understood and forgiven. That they are meant to be escaped.

TeeTotaller1 · 29/10/2021 15:08

This is abuse
Just be careful if you do stay in contact as the years go by (and she's alive and kicking) as she may hone in on your little one as a teen, it's a power thing and she's undermining you every step of the way
I'd give her an ultimatum, she either stops with the verbal crap and you carry on. One word out of line and you go NC. She can't come back at you then to say that you're out of order for doing so
Quite frankly she sounds a complete nightmare, and you sound as though you're doing a fantastic job
If I were your Mum I'd be incredibly proud of you to be honest, don't let her bully you, because that's exactly what she is. A bully

Muttly · 29/10/2021 15:13

Your mum is an abusive person. She is attacking you to build herself up. You can almost bet that her mother was exactly the same and she is just carrying on a pattern of behaviour from her own upbringing.

Having to constantly deal with her criticisms is likely to affect your parenting so don’t as much as you can. I don’t have advice because dealing with extremely dysfunctional family members is a personal thing and only you can decide what you should do. It is so tough though and you don’t deserve what she is doing to you.

MrsTerryPratchett · 29/10/2021 15:16

Reading it back and all your comments it does sound like she’s using DD to get one over on me, maybe even turn her against me

It may also be that her performative grandparenting is to 'prove' what a good mother she is or assuage some guilt.

Her motivation doesn't matter. The result is that you feel bad. Don't feel bad.