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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

My sister moved house without telling us

417 replies

OliveIsMad · 21/07/2025 20:55

I got a text from my sister today to say that she’s moved house and here’s her new address. Hadn’t told any of us that she was moving house or even that she was thinking about it.

She does this all the time. She didn’t tell any of us that she was pregnant until she was about six months along — she just turned up one day with a bump and was like, Oh yeah, we’re having a baby lol. And when she had the baby, she didn’t tell us until the next day when she got home from the hospital. None of us even knew that she was in labour. She literally had a whole baby and then told us that she had given birth THE NEXT DAY once she was home. And we barely see the child (now 2) and my own mother has only held her granddaughter a handful of times. Bear in mind that my sister lives about ten minutes away. (The new house is also ten minutes away but in the opposite direction. I only know this because I had to Google the address.)

You know how I found out that she ran the London Marathon? I found her participation medal in her car. Turns out, she’d trained to run a 5k, then trained to run a 10k, then a half marathon, then a marathon. Took her two years. None of us even knew that she could run. Hadn’t thought to mention it.

She gets promoted or changes jobs, buys a new car, goes on holiday and we only hear about it weeks, months or even years later. She mentioned in passing once that she’d been to Australia. It was YEARS ago. She went to fucking Australia for like two weeks and literally none of us knew.

I tell my parents everything. We’re extremely close. We’re doing up our kitchen at the moment and I’ve run every single decision by my mum, she’s seen every paint sample, every fabric. I told her that I was pregnant the day that I found out. My other sister is also like this, although she still lives at home so partly it’s because of proximity. But my big sister acts as if she doesn’t give a toss about any of us.

I’m so sick of her gatekeeping absolutely everything in her life and not including any of us. I get that she’s big on independence, but there’s being independent and then there’s just being a bitch. If she thinks of us at all, it’s as an after thought.

Gah. Rant over.

OP posts:
usernamealreadytaken · 22/07/2025 22:49

You sound entirely reasonable, and very brave to come and post so openly @YouPutMyRealNameInYourUsername. I don’t think your sister will be back, she has not come out of this thread well. I hope you continue to have a happy, balanced life and enjoy your family x

Sakura7 · 22/07/2025 22:57

Good on you @YouPutMyRealNameInYourUsername for having healthy boundaries and creating a lovely life for yourself. Everything you say is totally reasonable and I'm glad you've seen that almost everyone on the thread could smell a rat in your sister's story.

Absolutely batshit that she sent you the few comments that were sympathetic to her and didn't twig that you'd be able to come on here and read the whole thread. 😂

By the way, your husband is right in what he said about your mother. You don't have to put up with this treatment or pretend everything was fine when it really wasn't.

Wish you lots of health and happiness in your future!

Sakura7 · 22/07/2025 23:00

And also the username is just too much 😂

You're definitely not the mad one here, but I think you know that already!

SpinachSpinachMoreSpinach · 22/07/2025 23:29

You seem very level headed, @YouPutMyRealNameInYourUsername, with healthy boundaries. Your Sis on the other hand… 🙀

PithyTaupeWriter · 23/07/2025 00:03

@YouPutMyRealNameInYourUsername thank you for this update! I hope this thread has given you some validation that you are not the mad one (although it sounds like you’ve well and truly got your life together and probably don’t need or want any external validation). Your experience is more common than many people think, as exemplified by this thread. So much of it spoke to me for sure.
I wish you all the best and hope you continue to have a great life, and your daughter is very lucky to have you

SmurfnoffIce · 23/07/2025 00:09

YouPutMyRealNameInYourUsername · 22/07/2025 22:14

Ok, hi everyone, it’s me, I’m the sister. My sister wrote this post and then sent me some screenshots of people agreeing with her to prove her point, but obviously I found the whole forum and have laughed and laughed at all the messages she didn’t show me.

I asked her if I could create an account and add my own comment and she said that she was going to delete the whole post anyway… which wasn’t exactly a no, so here I am. New to Mumsnet, more of a Redditor myself, hope it’s less political here.

First of all, they absolutely knew that we were thinking of moving house, we’d mentioned it a few times. Maybe she just forgot. But it definitely didn’t come completely out of the blue. I didn’t say anything specific about us viewing houses because I didn’t want anyone’s input. Our mother is a big one for offering unsolicited advice, which is fine, but if you don’t take the advice that you never asked for, she gets offended. If she’d known that we were serious about moving and had started viewing houses, she would’ve sent me links to houses she thought were best and would’ve wanted to know when I was seeing them, what I thought, whether we were going to buy them etc., and if we didn’t like them, she’d have been offended.

I find this sort of behaviour over-involved and controlling; my mum and Middle Sister would say it’s done out of kindness because our mum wants to help and to be a bigger part of my life. I understand their point of view but don’t agree. They just straight up don’t understand my point of view.

I didn’t tell anyone that we were moving until we had the keys in our hands and had actually moved in, which only happened yesterday, because up until that point anything could happen and then I’d have go around explaining what went wrong to people, when it doesn’t matter, doesn’t impact their lives, and is irrelevant. As far as I’m concerned, they found out as soon as they needed to know.

Secondly, I didn’t tell anyone that I’d started running because a) who cares? And b) I thought they’d make fun of me. I was very unfit in the beginning and I knew that the mental image of me going for a jog would be so silly that they’d all laugh and tease me, especially my mother. I would’ve found that demoralising and embarrassing, so I never mentioned it, and it got to the point where now running is just an everyday part of my life that I don’t think of as being anything interesting or worth talking about. I didn’t tell them that I was training for the marathon because I knew that if I couldn’t finish, I’d never hear the end of it. “Remember that time that Olive ran the London Marathon? Oh wait, she didn’t! Ha ha!” And if I didn’t find this funny, I’d be accused of being too sensitive or not having a sense of humour. Then when I ran it, and I did finish, I couldn’t tell them that I’d done it because I knew they’d kick off about me being a secret runner and say that I was being deceitful to be mean or that I was weird to not have told them.

Third, not that it really matters, but I was five months pregnant when I told them, not six, and we waited until then because we wanted to have the anatomy scan and get our Downs/Edwards/Patau’s screening results back before we told anyone, so that we would know, as far as we could, that the baby was likely going to be ok. Partly this was because my daughter was the first grandchild and I knew that everyone would be very excited about her, and I didn’t want to get them excited and then have to deal with the grief and upset if something went wrong or we had to make a difficult decision. But also, if something did go wrong, I would never tell my mum or sisters because they have no discretion and my grief would become gossip. I know most people are comfortable sharing at 12 weeks but I’ve also known people share much later and even had friends who had entirely secret babies during lockdown, so I don’t think 22 weeks is too absurdly late.

I didn’t tell anyone when I went into labour because it wasn’t anyone’s business but mine and my husband’s. It’s not a spectator sport. Also, I was a bit busy giving birth and didn’t really have my parents or sisters at the forefront of my mind, to be honest.

Australia was literally ten years ago. I didn’t say anything at the time because I was only 19 and I went on my own and it was kind of crazy, and I knew that if they knew what I was doing, our mum would have a meltdown and I’d get constant messages and phone calls every day, checking that I hadn’t been bitten by a spider or swallowed by a snake, and it would ruin the trip. I’d already moved out and we could go weeks without speaking, so no one noticed that I’d gone, and it didn’t come up in conversation until years later. I didn’t say anything, nothing bad happened, nobody got hurt, and I had a great Big Girl adventure all on my own. But they still managed to be pissed about it.

I have never said that I had a traumatic childhood or that I am a survivor of child abuse. This sort of inflammatory language is exclusively used by Middle Sister to undermine what I’ve actually said, which is that some of the choices our mother made affected me deeply at the time, were not reconciled or dealt with, and still affect me to this day. The eating disorder is an example of this, as it came in large part due to our mother’s constant monitoring of and commenting on my body, which included regular forced weighing, and the way that she controlled what and how much I ate (wasn’t like that for either sister), and has remained something that I have to deal with to this day. When she found out that I was hiding food and skipping meals as a teenager, she punished me for it. Didn’t just not get me help — actually punished me.

Whenever I’ve tried to explain how I feel about some of the things that happened when we were kids, or the ways in which these things still impact me, our mother says things like, “Sorry I was such an appalling parent and that you hate me and hate all of us”, tells me I’m rewriting history, tells me how all of her friends and her own parents were worse, makes herself the victim. I have an email that she sent me months ago where she says, “I think you read too many sad stories as a child and had to jazz up your own normal childhood to make it seem more exciting and give yourself an interesting backstory. I’m so hurt that you’ve done this and feel very hard done by.” My husband read that email and told me to it was the most narcissistic thing he’d ever read and that I should cut her off.

My mum and Middle Sister are thick as thieves. Our dad and Little Sister are much more neutral but get roped in by the other two, so while my relationships with them could’ve been different, there’s a real Olive vs. The Rest of the World thing going on, which is odd since I’ve only ever brought up issues with two people.

There has always been a lot of tension, even if my sisters weren’t aware of it, so I keep my distance. This has been the status quo for years but has only really become an issue since my daughter was born because my parents and sisters feel entitled to more contact with her than I think is reasonable. It’s been worse since Middle Sister had her daughter because now I get compared. Our mum helps out a lot with my niece and has been doing full days of childcare and sleepovers and stuff, basically co-parenting, since she was about four months old, whereas I’ve never left my daughter (now 2.5 years old) with them and honestly won’t be doing so. I don’t have any feelings at all about my sister’s parenting or childcare set-up — couldn’t care less, whatever works for her, lovely that they’re all happy with the arrangement — but I don’t feel the need to copy.

Mum and Middle Sister have both said that they think it’s weird that I won’t leave my daughter with them. I don’t leave her with anyone, my husband and I work shifts around each other so she always has a parent at home. I don’t think that’s weird but according to them, it’s unfair on my daughter, who is apparently missing out on special bonding time with her nanny (to whom she is entirely ambivalent). My mother says that I’m withholding my daughter from her as punishment for her not being a perfect parent. For reference, we take our daughter round to visit every couple of months or so, maybe every 6-8 weeks, usually when it’s someone’s birthday or a holiday. I think that’s fairly normal?

Her depiction of Little Sister as more like her than me isn’t really accurate, but I won’t drag her into it.

You know Netflix is like ten quid a month, right?

Linguist1979 · 23/07/2025 01:35

I’m the same as your sister and it isn’t to be secretive or mysterious. My mother has an opinion on everything and tells me what to do and so I just don’t tell her anything until it’s a done deal. Even down to the marathon - my mum doesn’t like me running and cycling as it’s unsafe so I don’t tell her. I told her after I’d done the London marathon and she made me promise I wouldn’t run another. Same when we went to the Caribbean - she said I must promise never to go again as her nerves couldn’t take it, so now I go and don’t tell her. My sister would run it past my mum then do as she was told and she basically does nothing because that’s what my mum tells her to do. They see me as some kind of rebel whereas I’m just an adult making my own choices and decisions. I find my sister’s relationship with my mum bizarre. They find me bizarre. I don’t care! Growing up my sister was golden child and I was scapegoat. I always used to wonder what i had done wrong as I child whereas now I realise I had done nothing wrong!

NameChangedOfc · 23/07/2025 06:52

YouPutMyRealNameInYourUsername · 22/07/2025 22:14

Ok, hi everyone, it’s me, I’m the sister. My sister wrote this post and then sent me some screenshots of people agreeing with her to prove her point, but obviously I found the whole forum and have laughed and laughed at all the messages she didn’t show me.

I asked her if I could create an account and add my own comment and she said that she was going to delete the whole post anyway… which wasn’t exactly a no, so here I am. New to Mumsnet, more of a Redditor myself, hope it’s less political here.

First of all, they absolutely knew that we were thinking of moving house, we’d mentioned it a few times. Maybe she just forgot. But it definitely didn’t come completely out of the blue. I didn’t say anything specific about us viewing houses because I didn’t want anyone’s input. Our mother is a big one for offering unsolicited advice, which is fine, but if you don’t take the advice that you never asked for, she gets offended. If she’d known that we were serious about moving and had started viewing houses, she would’ve sent me links to houses she thought were best and would’ve wanted to know when I was seeing them, what I thought, whether we were going to buy them etc., and if we didn’t like them, she’d have been offended.

I find this sort of behaviour over-involved and controlling; my mum and Middle Sister would say it’s done out of kindness because our mum wants to help and to be a bigger part of my life. I understand their point of view but don’t agree. They just straight up don’t understand my point of view.

I didn’t tell anyone that we were moving until we had the keys in our hands and had actually moved in, which only happened yesterday, because up until that point anything could happen and then I’d have go around explaining what went wrong to people, when it doesn’t matter, doesn’t impact their lives, and is irrelevant. As far as I’m concerned, they found out as soon as they needed to know.

Secondly, I didn’t tell anyone that I’d started running because a) who cares? And b) I thought they’d make fun of me. I was very unfit in the beginning and I knew that the mental image of me going for a jog would be so silly that they’d all laugh and tease me, especially my mother. I would’ve found that demoralising and embarrassing, so I never mentioned it, and it got to the point where now running is just an everyday part of my life that I don’t think of as being anything interesting or worth talking about. I didn’t tell them that I was training for the marathon because I knew that if I couldn’t finish, I’d never hear the end of it. “Remember that time that Olive ran the London Marathon? Oh wait, she didn’t! Ha ha!” And if I didn’t find this funny, I’d be accused of being too sensitive or not having a sense of humour. Then when I ran it, and I did finish, I couldn’t tell them that I’d done it because I knew they’d kick off about me being a secret runner and say that I was being deceitful to be mean or that I was weird to not have told them.

Third, not that it really matters, but I was five months pregnant when I told them, not six, and we waited until then because we wanted to have the anatomy scan and get our Downs/Edwards/Patau’s screening results back before we told anyone, so that we would know, as far as we could, that the baby was likely going to be ok. Partly this was because my daughter was the first grandchild and I knew that everyone would be very excited about her, and I didn’t want to get them excited and then have to deal with the grief and upset if something went wrong or we had to make a difficult decision. But also, if something did go wrong, I would never tell my mum or sisters because they have no discretion and my grief would become gossip. I know most people are comfortable sharing at 12 weeks but I’ve also known people share much later and even had friends who had entirely secret babies during lockdown, so I don’t think 22 weeks is too absurdly late.

I didn’t tell anyone when I went into labour because it wasn’t anyone’s business but mine and my husband’s. It’s not a spectator sport. Also, I was a bit busy giving birth and didn’t really have my parents or sisters at the forefront of my mind, to be honest.

Australia was literally ten years ago. I didn’t say anything at the time because I was only 19 and I went on my own and it was kind of crazy, and I knew that if they knew what I was doing, our mum would have a meltdown and I’d get constant messages and phone calls every day, checking that I hadn’t been bitten by a spider or swallowed by a snake, and it would ruin the trip. I’d already moved out and we could go weeks without speaking, so no one noticed that I’d gone, and it didn’t come up in conversation until years later. I didn’t say anything, nothing bad happened, nobody got hurt, and I had a great Big Girl adventure all on my own. But they still managed to be pissed about it.

I have never said that I had a traumatic childhood or that I am a survivor of child abuse. This sort of inflammatory language is exclusively used by Middle Sister to undermine what I’ve actually said, which is that some of the choices our mother made affected me deeply at the time, were not reconciled or dealt with, and still affect me to this day. The eating disorder is an example of this, as it came in large part due to our mother’s constant monitoring of and commenting on my body, which included regular forced weighing, and the way that she controlled what and how much I ate (wasn’t like that for either sister), and has remained something that I have to deal with to this day. When she found out that I was hiding food and skipping meals as a teenager, she punished me for it. Didn’t just not get me help — actually punished me.

Whenever I’ve tried to explain how I feel about some of the things that happened when we were kids, or the ways in which these things still impact me, our mother says things like, “Sorry I was such an appalling parent and that you hate me and hate all of us”, tells me I’m rewriting history, tells me how all of her friends and her own parents were worse, makes herself the victim. I have an email that she sent me months ago where she says, “I think you read too many sad stories as a child and had to jazz up your own normal childhood to make it seem more exciting and give yourself an interesting backstory. I’m so hurt that you’ve done this and feel very hard done by.” My husband read that email and told me to it was the most narcissistic thing he’d ever read and that I should cut her off.

My mum and Middle Sister are thick as thieves. Our dad and Little Sister are much more neutral but get roped in by the other two, so while my relationships with them could’ve been different, there’s a real Olive vs. The Rest of the World thing going on, which is odd since I’ve only ever brought up issues with two people.

There has always been a lot of tension, even if my sisters weren’t aware of it, so I keep my distance. This has been the status quo for years but has only really become an issue since my daughter was born because my parents and sisters feel entitled to more contact with her than I think is reasonable. It’s been worse since Middle Sister had her daughter because now I get compared. Our mum helps out a lot with my niece and has been doing full days of childcare and sleepovers and stuff, basically co-parenting, since she was about four months old, whereas I’ve never left my daughter (now 2.5 years old) with them and honestly won’t be doing so. I don’t have any feelings at all about my sister’s parenting or childcare set-up — couldn’t care less, whatever works for her, lovely that they’re all happy with the arrangement — but I don’t feel the need to copy.

Mum and Middle Sister have both said that they think it’s weird that I won’t leave my daughter with them. I don’t leave her with anyone, my husband and I work shifts around each other so she always has a parent at home. I don’t think that’s weird but according to them, it’s unfair on my daughter, who is apparently missing out on special bonding time with her nanny (to whom she is entirely ambivalent). My mother says that I’m withholding my daughter from her as punishment for her not being a perfect parent. For reference, we take our daughter round to visit every couple of months or so, maybe every 6-8 weeks, usually when it’s someone’s birthday or a holiday. I think that’s fairly normal?

Her depiction of Little Sister as more like her than me isn’t really accurate, but I won’t drag her into it.

Oh, wow! I didn't see this coming!
As has been seen and commented extensively troughout this thread: you are the healthy one in this family system. Congratulations on having achieved the most important thing of all: a well-rounded, independent life, and a healthy family. You really broke the cycle, as they say 🙌

thepariscrimefiles · 23/07/2025 07:11

@YouPutMyRealNameInYourUsername Thank you for giving your side of the story, which helps justify my response to your sister about her version of events.

Your sister and your mum have a really unhealthy co-dependant relationship. God knows what your sister's husband thinks of his wife's need to run every single decision past her mum.

Her responses became more spiteful as posters read between the lines and came to the correct conclusion about your experience of your mum's parenting. Your information about your mum's behaviour around your eating disorder makes it clear that she was the cause/catalyst for your issues with food and weight, rather than a caring parents without the tools or knowledge to get you the right support and treatment.

Also, your sister's choice of Mumsnet user name indicates that she is as petty and lacking awareness as your mum. I'm glad that you have a supportive DH. I would reduce contact with your mum and your sister after this.

jpclarke · 23/07/2025 07:11

O my god, I actually stopped reading this thread as it was annoying me because the OP really didn’t want to hear anyone’s replies unless they were agreeing with her narrative. I can’t believe she used your real name either.
You definitely sound like you have very good reasons to keep your life to yourself, and how you choose to bring up your daughter is your business. Being a grandparent or an aunt for that matter is privilege not a right.

windyfarmers · 23/07/2025 07:28

@YouPutMyRealNameInYourUsername I recently cut off a sibling in similar circumstances. The final straw was them posting a photo of me and my baby on a public forum with a load of bile how awful it is of me to have a child at my age. They're now posting how I'm insane and I'm stalking them, all they did was make a few comments, they would NEVER use my real name... A photo, a fucking photo! Funny how that bit gets left out of the rants about what a crazy bitch I am to have cut them off.

It's ok to cut off family. Especially ones like this.

BrendaBleddynsBeachBall · 23/07/2025 08:19

@YouPutMyRealNameInYourUsername I’m so sorry you had to deal with this. You deserve a lovely, peaceful life and I think you’ll probably get it. Best of luck in the future, and congratulations on your new home!

SmurfnoffIce · 23/07/2025 08:48

Oh, wow! I didn't see this coming!

Indeed… it’s unbelievable really…

Daftypants · 23/07/2025 09:16

I am surprised she didn’t tell family about the pregnancy until 6 months along ?
I told family ( my parents first of all ) that I was expecting my first , but not till I was past 12 weeks .
With baby #2 and baby #3 because we were so far away we didn’t tell family until after 16 weeks because that’s when we were visiting them.
With a house move I think I might mention that after I’d actually sold my home but not before .
So I don’t think she’s completely odd your sister or doesn’t care , I think she just isn’t as enmeshed as you and your other sibling

DucklingSwimmingInstructress · 23/07/2025 09:37

Well, you've had your rant, you did imply that's what you wanted in your first post.

Things ate generally not black and white and from your posts it looks like (as so often) there are shades of grey here too, but what leaps out is your absolute inability to accept that anyone's view but your own is valid and anyone's way of life but your own is worthwhile.

Whatever the situation growing up between you all, when dealing with someone absolutely convinced of their own rightness and the utterly smothering lifestyle you live with your mother, I'd be backing away as far as I possibly could.

As an aside, I could imagine your mother sighing exasperated to herself "can't she make the smallest devision by herself?" (A bit unkind perhaps but the level of dependence you have is unhealthy).

What will you do when your mother dies? You're supposed to practice independence before that point! And for heavens sake, and your sister's, please develop some respect for her.

AttilaTheMeerkat · 23/07/2025 09:38

YouPutMyRealNameInYourUsername

Your H is right; you should cut them all out of your lives. They have done you great harm and I would also keep your child well away from your narcissistic family of origin. They make for being deplorably bad as parent figures let alone grandparent figures.

People from dysfunctional families like described end up playing roles. Your sister who started this thread is golden and her mother's caretaker (this has led to her becoming codependent), the other sister barely mentioned is the lost child who is overlooked in the family and you are the scapegoat. Those roles are interchangeable and they all do great harm.

I would not let your dad off the hook here either because he is her enabler and secondary abuser. He has abjectly failed you and your siblings also as a parent and has failed to protect you all from the excesses of his wife's behaviours.

The best thing to do with people like this is to live well and remain far away from their orbit. With you out of the frame they will then hopefully turn further against each other.

Sakura7 · 23/07/2025 09:38

I wouldn't be so sure @SmurfnoffIce as the writing styles are not similar at all, and it's a lot of effort to go to just wind people up on a forum. Unfortunately there really are people out there who behave like the OP.

@Daftypants I think you've missed a few updates along the way.

Dannydevitoiloveyourart · 23/07/2025 09:59

YouPutMyRealNameInYourUsername · 22/07/2025 22:14

Ok, hi everyone, it’s me, I’m the sister. My sister wrote this post and then sent me some screenshots of people agreeing with her to prove her point, but obviously I found the whole forum and have laughed and laughed at all the messages she didn’t show me.

I asked her if I could create an account and add my own comment and she said that she was going to delete the whole post anyway… which wasn’t exactly a no, so here I am. New to Mumsnet, more of a Redditor myself, hope it’s less political here.

First of all, they absolutely knew that we were thinking of moving house, we’d mentioned it a few times. Maybe she just forgot. But it definitely didn’t come completely out of the blue. I didn’t say anything specific about us viewing houses because I didn’t want anyone’s input. Our mother is a big one for offering unsolicited advice, which is fine, but if you don’t take the advice that you never asked for, she gets offended. If she’d known that we were serious about moving and had started viewing houses, she would’ve sent me links to houses she thought were best and would’ve wanted to know when I was seeing them, what I thought, whether we were going to buy them etc., and if we didn’t like them, she’d have been offended.

I find this sort of behaviour over-involved and controlling; my mum and Middle Sister would say it’s done out of kindness because our mum wants to help and to be a bigger part of my life. I understand their point of view but don’t agree. They just straight up don’t understand my point of view.

I didn’t tell anyone that we were moving until we had the keys in our hands and had actually moved in, which only happened yesterday, because up until that point anything could happen and then I’d have go around explaining what went wrong to people, when it doesn’t matter, doesn’t impact their lives, and is irrelevant. As far as I’m concerned, they found out as soon as they needed to know.

Secondly, I didn’t tell anyone that I’d started running because a) who cares? And b) I thought they’d make fun of me. I was very unfit in the beginning and I knew that the mental image of me going for a jog would be so silly that they’d all laugh and tease me, especially my mother. I would’ve found that demoralising and embarrassing, so I never mentioned it, and it got to the point where now running is just an everyday part of my life that I don’t think of as being anything interesting or worth talking about. I didn’t tell them that I was training for the marathon because I knew that if I couldn’t finish, I’d never hear the end of it. “Remember that time that Olive ran the London Marathon? Oh wait, she didn’t! Ha ha!” And if I didn’t find this funny, I’d be accused of being too sensitive or not having a sense of humour. Then when I ran it, and I did finish, I couldn’t tell them that I’d done it because I knew they’d kick off about me being a secret runner and say that I was being deceitful to be mean or that I was weird to not have told them.

Third, not that it really matters, but I was five months pregnant when I told them, not six, and we waited until then because we wanted to have the anatomy scan and get our Downs/Edwards/Patau’s screening results back before we told anyone, so that we would know, as far as we could, that the baby was likely going to be ok. Partly this was because my daughter was the first grandchild and I knew that everyone would be very excited about her, and I didn’t want to get them excited and then have to deal with the grief and upset if something went wrong or we had to make a difficult decision. But also, if something did go wrong, I would never tell my mum or sisters because they have no discretion and my grief would become gossip. I know most people are comfortable sharing at 12 weeks but I’ve also known people share much later and even had friends who had entirely secret babies during lockdown, so I don’t think 22 weeks is too absurdly late.

I didn’t tell anyone when I went into labour because it wasn’t anyone’s business but mine and my husband’s. It’s not a spectator sport. Also, I was a bit busy giving birth and didn’t really have my parents or sisters at the forefront of my mind, to be honest.

Australia was literally ten years ago. I didn’t say anything at the time because I was only 19 and I went on my own and it was kind of crazy, and I knew that if they knew what I was doing, our mum would have a meltdown and I’d get constant messages and phone calls every day, checking that I hadn’t been bitten by a spider or swallowed by a snake, and it would ruin the trip. I’d already moved out and we could go weeks without speaking, so no one noticed that I’d gone, and it didn’t come up in conversation until years later. I didn’t say anything, nothing bad happened, nobody got hurt, and I had a great Big Girl adventure all on my own. But they still managed to be pissed about it.

I have never said that I had a traumatic childhood or that I am a survivor of child abuse. This sort of inflammatory language is exclusively used by Middle Sister to undermine what I’ve actually said, which is that some of the choices our mother made affected me deeply at the time, were not reconciled or dealt with, and still affect me to this day. The eating disorder is an example of this, as it came in large part due to our mother’s constant monitoring of and commenting on my body, which included regular forced weighing, and the way that she controlled what and how much I ate (wasn’t like that for either sister), and has remained something that I have to deal with to this day. When she found out that I was hiding food and skipping meals as a teenager, she punished me for it. Didn’t just not get me help — actually punished me.

Whenever I’ve tried to explain how I feel about some of the things that happened when we were kids, or the ways in which these things still impact me, our mother says things like, “Sorry I was such an appalling parent and that you hate me and hate all of us”, tells me I’m rewriting history, tells me how all of her friends and her own parents were worse, makes herself the victim. I have an email that she sent me months ago where she says, “I think you read too many sad stories as a child and had to jazz up your own normal childhood to make it seem more exciting and give yourself an interesting backstory. I’m so hurt that you’ve done this and feel very hard done by.” My husband read that email and told me to it was the most narcissistic thing he’d ever read and that I should cut her off.

My mum and Middle Sister are thick as thieves. Our dad and Little Sister are much more neutral but get roped in by the other two, so while my relationships with them could’ve been different, there’s a real Olive vs. The Rest of the World thing going on, which is odd since I’ve only ever brought up issues with two people.

There has always been a lot of tension, even if my sisters weren’t aware of it, so I keep my distance. This has been the status quo for years but has only really become an issue since my daughter was born because my parents and sisters feel entitled to more contact with her than I think is reasonable. It’s been worse since Middle Sister had her daughter because now I get compared. Our mum helps out a lot with my niece and has been doing full days of childcare and sleepovers and stuff, basically co-parenting, since she was about four months old, whereas I’ve never left my daughter (now 2.5 years old) with them and honestly won’t be doing so. I don’t have any feelings at all about my sister’s parenting or childcare set-up — couldn’t care less, whatever works for her, lovely that they’re all happy with the arrangement — but I don’t feel the need to copy.

Mum and Middle Sister have both said that they think it’s weird that I won’t leave my daughter with them. I don’t leave her with anyone, my husband and I work shifts around each other so she always has a parent at home. I don’t think that’s weird but according to them, it’s unfair on my daughter, who is apparently missing out on special bonding time with her nanny (to whom she is entirely ambivalent). My mother says that I’m withholding my daughter from her as punishment for her not being a perfect parent. For reference, we take our daughter round to visit every couple of months or so, maybe every 6-8 weeks, usually when it’s someone’s birthday or a holiday. I think that’s fairly normal?

Her depiction of Little Sister as more like her than me isn’t really accurate, but I won’t drag her into it.

really glad you’ve posted - rare you get both sides on Mumsnet - and the truth often lies somewhere in the middle

The state of your family relationships is sad but from what both you and your sister have said, it sounds like you’re doing the right thing as there is no way you can have a close relationship with middle sister until she becomes unmeshed from your mother. It seems to me that you are both a product of your mother’s manipulation and low key narcissism- but where you have chosen to step out from that control, your sister accepts the unhealthy relationships as normal.

I really hope there’s healing for your sister in future and healthier boundaries for you all in future. Wishing you all the best.

thepariscrimefiles · 23/07/2025 10:29

SmurfnoffIce · 23/07/2025 08:48

Oh, wow! I didn't see this coming!

Indeed… it’s unbelievable really…

Report it if you don't think that is genuine. Troll hunting isn't allowed on Mumsnet.

SmurfnoffIce · 23/07/2025 11:28

Yes Miss 🫡

Rallentanda · 23/07/2025 11:33

I worked out a while ago that my mother just wants to know this stuff so she can say she knows. Not because she wants to know me.

You know your sister: she's got a life that seems enjoyable and full, and it doesn't include her family. Maybe she was just fed up of having to vomit out facts to keep you all happy, instead of, you know, being cared about.

ETA: that'll teach me not to RTFT

averythinline · 23/07/2025 12:01

You seem to think your way of being enmeshed with your family is the only way......
It's not ..
And irrespective of what you think and feel anyway.. she is living her live in the way she wants ....and she is entitled to ... It's not to do with you..

Your fixed way of thinking that this is the only way of being is coming across more a reflection of your insecurities and mindset... And you sound really small minded..

Nothing that she's doing as described sounds unusual.. you on the other hand sound quite immature in your independence development...

Cavello · 23/07/2025 12:34

@YouPutMyRealNameInYourUsername
Welcome to Mumsnet. I think you're awesome and I have a very similar mother as you described.

You start to see the toxicity in your own family even more clearly once you have children of your own. Well done on keeping them at arm's length.

diddl · 23/07/2025 13:14

Assuming YouPutMyRealNameInYourUsername is who she says then I would say her account is pretty much what people were thinking anyway.

Itsseweasy · 23/07/2025 13:46

YouPutMyRealNameInYourUsername
You sound like a very strong, mature and emotionally intelligent person. In fact you sound the complete opposite of your awful sister, the OP.
I empathise deeply as I am in the exact same position with my siblings and mother.
They have no self awareness, are totally enmeshed and dependent on how they look and are thought about by other people, literally require constant validation to function, and are all narcissists. They don’t understand me or see that I have absolutely no desire to be like any of them.
I have boundaries of steel which they despise as they can’t get their narcissistic supply from me.
I just wanted you to know that many of us are like you and in the same position with our family of origin, and to validate your experience (not that you need it - unlike your sister 🙄😆)
The fact that your sister calls you a bitch for having boundaries (sorry, I mean for being secretive!) and thinks you don’t tell them anything to be mysterious (!!!) tells me everything I need to know about her level of emotional intelligence (lack of). What a sad way to live.
So glad you posted, you sound like a wonderful person 🩷