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Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Meeting BF's parents first time but BF is nervous wreck

168 replies

ameliepoulet · 23/02/2016 16:13

Sorry this is long. My bf wants me to make a 'good' impression on his parents. I am 25 and he is 24. I have met his parents once briefly at church and they were charming and lovely and bf talks about how great they are. They are very close. We are going to his parent's home this weekend for lunch and at first I thought it would be nice to spend time together and get to know his parents better. We have been together 8 months. He has already met my family and my family say he is great.

Bf has turned into a nervous wreck as he has already 'dumped' four girlfriends after their first time at his home because they 'failed to make a good impression'. He says he loves me and that he is nervous because he really wants me to do everything perfectly so that his parents will 'love me' as much as he does.

He has also given me a list of do's and don'ts because he knows what will 'work' on his parents. Some of these borderline on the ridiculous and some completely patronising (i.e., I do know where to put a napkin) Here they are from his email:

offer to remove shoes when you arrive
remove your shoes even if they insist it is 'up to you'
no swear words - ever, even if we get married and we've been married for 40 years - no swearing in front of them.
never ever put a glass down on the table without a coaster - it is a cardinal sin
never take any alcohol, even if offered and waved in front of you insistently - IT IS A TEST - dad doesn't even know how to use a corkscrew - they don't drink.
make sure you eat everything on your plate
make sure you eat dessert however full you are
put the napkin on your lap
it is a round table - the bread plate is to your left.
They will watch how you eat like a hawk - pray there is no soup or spaghetti
when you are done eating leave your cutlery at 5'o clock position - dad is very particular about that
help clear the table even if told not to and do it as soon as my mum stands up
insist on washing up and do it very well - mum will check everything
wear the gloves for washing up or mum will say you don't take care of your hands and give you a long lecture about the importance of ladies keeping hands smooth
do not show me any affection and don't expect me to show you any
Don't talk about the environment - dad hates the environment
Make sure you emphatically tell them you don't have a tattoo and never will - I swore an oath to them I would never marry a girl with one.
My mother is practically psychic and can detect a lie or falseness a mile away so just be your lovely self, and just forgive my silly list.

I told him he is being ridiculous and controlling and how can I be myself with so many ridiculous 'pieces of advice' or even relax. I even threatened to get a tattoo. He is already a nervous wreck and he says that he is nervous because of his last 4 girlfriends though he says he didn't love them. I wasn't nervous before. I am sure his parents are lovely but now I don't even want to go. Its like I have to pass this 'test'. What do I do? I mean, I do eventually have to meet them.

OP posts:
Yokohamajojo · 25/02/2016 10:05

No wonder he is suffering from anxiety! I think you should go just to see what they are like, perhaps they are a bit uptight but perhaps your BF is just blowing things out of proportion.

If you do go, just seriously be yourself and polite! As you would anyway when meeting new people.

Atenco · 25/02/2016 12:53

"If I was expected to wash up as a guest on my first visit, it's be my last. How spectacularly rude"

I agree. I am over 60 and all the women going off to the kitchen to do the washing up was the stuff of my mother's generation and the younger generation too, going by mumsnet. My generation wouldn't have wanted anything to do with a man who expected to sit on the couch while I went to do the washing up in his parents' house.

AndTheBandPlayedOn · 29/02/2016 00:11

Hi Amelie,
Did you go to the lunch? How did it turn out?

WhatALoadOfOldBollocks · 29/02/2016 08:58

"Within 30 minutes of me sending him the link, he was round this morning with flowers and an apology."

Ah yes, because flowers and "sorry" make everything OK don't they Hmm

How was lunch Amelie? Were his parents oddballs? Did you BF implode?Wink

NameChange30 · 29/02/2016 09:06

This guy has more red flags than a communist rally.

He might "just" be a perfectionist with massive anxiety issues (mmm, attractive Hmm) or he might also become controlling and abusive. Why take the risk?

Why do you want to be with him, OP? Do you think you can't find someone more normal emotionally secure?

springydaffs · 29/02/2016 13:52

As a pp said, some people have severe anxiety. Which is a MH problem. Yes, he needs to get it checked out but it doesn't mean he is an abuser.

He needs to get it checked out, get on it and stay on it for the rest of his life. So yes, he needs to take responsibility for it wholesale. Perhaps this thread will be a wake -up call.

I think you've your work cut out for you if you marry him but I don't think he sounds like an abuser. Though he may well be in future if he doesn't take responsibility for this NOW and get on it.

As for people telling him to grow up: he's 24 and has significant anxiety. Shaming him isn't going to help, MNers eg calling someone with mh problems a freak, weird etc.

ThatsNotMyRabbit · 29/02/2016 14:27

Update?

MeMySonAndl · 29/02/2016 14:40

Good grief, great to hear that you got a well deserved apology, but I would suggest you to stillm run away while you can because:

  • Highly strung perfectionist individuals become highly controlling people when they relax. If you are not as precise as he is, you will find him VERY asphyxiating and controlling.
  • Adults that need their parents' approval so much, are more than likely to let their parent rule the rooster in your marriage especially when it comes to your children (they won't be Paulet's children but their grandparents' and would make their best to override your wishes with the support of your BF).

Run woman, you have been given a golden opportunity to have a better life. Don't waste it.

TealLove · 29/02/2016 14:46

He doesn't like the environment Grin
What on earth?!.....

NameChange30 · 29/02/2016 16:32

I disagree with springydaffs, I think his behaviour already indicates controlling behaviour and not just anxiety. And if he doesn't address his mental health, it will cause a world of heartache for the OP. I say that as someone who's had MH issues myself. I have always taken responsibility for my own issues and never imposed on a partner the way he is ALREADY trying to do after just 8 months.

AmserGwin · 01/03/2016 17:56

Update?

FeelingFine89 · 01/03/2016 22:05

Good God... Poor guy.
Having parents like that, he'll never find happiness with someone.

metoo72 · 02/03/2016 11:31

Did you endure the lunch? What happened?
The parents seem the height of rudeness to me...very 'keeping up appearances' they seem to be trying to portray themselves as very proper when actually, from the sounds of it, they are quite the reverse.

GoblinLittleOwl · 02/03/2016 12:04

What would bother me would be the fact that he dumped four girlfriends who didn't make a good impression. So he is as silly a snob as his parents?

A friend married a man whose mother had form for this; one previous girlfriend who failed to please was sent home in a taxi.

Unsurprisingly, the marriage didn't last.

goddessofsmallthings · 02/03/2016 12:15

I sent a link to this post to my bf this morning. I asked him if he thought I should follow the advice

WTAF??!!

And we are expected to believe that the power of Mumsnet caused him to rush round with a bouquet and an apology, together with an assurance that his parents aren't the overbearing fruitcakes he made them out to be. Hmm

I may post on Sunday evening after the lunch to tell you how it went!

How jolly decent of you, OP, but pray do tell, why the delay? Are you still engaged in doing the washing up to perfection, or are you frantically french polishing the table due to having neglected to use a coaster before you put your glass of water on it?

It seems to me a Biscuit is an essential addition to this thread.

shoeaddict83 · 10/03/2016 15:56

so no update? Was this post not true then do we think?! Hmm

Duckdeamon · 10/03/2016 16:20

True or not we want to hear about the lunch Grin

Ava7Susan · 14/08/2017 01:20

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