Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

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

Living with in laws and a baby

112 replies

Tokyo5 · 06/12/2025 17:20

I’m getting straight into it. Last year, I left my amazing job overseas to move here, get married — and then, a month later, I unexpectedly found out I was pregnant. The pregnancy itself was fairly easy, but the labour was awful, and the baby blues hit hard afterward. All of this happened while I was living with my in-laws, where I still am now, with a newborn and a 41-year-old husband whose mother still washes and folds his laundry for him.

My mother-in-law is extremely overbearing. The turning point for me was coming home to find she had washed my underwear and put it away in my room — the only space in that house that feels like mine. That’s when I realized just how involved she is in her son’s daily life, from doing his laundry to putting away his clothes. She’s even said, jokingly but not really joking, that her son will always be a “mummy’s boy.” After a few moments like that, I started distancing myself. I don’t even bother anymore with being formal when her family/guests come over and just do my own thing. Anyways, she’s just naturally anxious and overthinks everything, often trying to have long emotional heart-to-heart talks, which is just not my personality.

Then, when the baby arrived, she became even more involved. Near the end of my pregnancy she showed me a huge bag of clothes she had bought for the baby, saying things like “tell me if I’ve done too much.” She even bought things like baby wash and cotton pads, and then started doing his laundry and fussing about whether our (mine and my husbands) clothes should be washed separately. I can’t explain it — I just get an icky feeling around her, and I hate leaving my baby alone with her. So I end up doing everything myself throughout the day (exhausting) and keeping mine and baby’s bubble separate. I don’t even go out because I just don’t want to leave the baby with her. Some people would say that’s not very nice, but to me it’s just maintaining boundaries. She also use to say things like “my baby” when she greeted the baby , so now I always make a point to respond with “I’m mummy.” She’s not aggressive or confrontational, but she really doesn’t understand when she’s overstepping. She can feels I’ve become very cold (tbh she does also give the same energy back) but I’ve just stopped caring about formalities.

All of this has taken a toll on my marriage. I’m at home caring for the baby 24/7 and still feel watched or monitored by his parents, even though I keep my distance. I can’t relax, I can’t even dress how I want because they might walk through the house. I’ve emotionally and physically pulled away from my husband because everything has built up so much. I just feel this deep silent resentment towards him which is sad because just last year we were inseparable. I told him that next year we are moving out, no matter what — and he agreed.

…Long read lol! Any thoughts?

OP posts:
Treylime · 06/12/2025 23:29

Will your in-laws be paying for the 'maid'?
Just move out. Simple solution. I'd love to hear the MIL's@ side.

RosesAndHellebores · 06/12/2025 23:33

@Tokyo5 if there's a "maid" or what my mother and grandma called a "daily", why was your MIL putting your clean undies in the drawer for you?

Someone may need to hand round the smelling salts.

Tokyo5 · 06/12/2025 23:48

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

RosesAndHellebores · 06/12/2025 23:58

@Tokyo5 I do apologise I conflated the term maid, who cooks and cleans for you, with someone who comes more regularly than once a week. In my experience a daily (in the UK) may help with cooking. A weekly cleaner would not.

Tokyo5 · 07/12/2025 00:00

Ok?

OP posts:
Tokyo5 · 07/12/2025 00:08

Are you hiring anyone to come spruce up your house? Didn’t think so. So stop giving terminology advice to someone who already has a loyal professional working for them and actually appreciates being addressed formally and respectfully. Read that last part carefully—I’m far more qualified in these terms than you’ll ever be.

OP posts:
Tokyo5 · 07/12/2025 00:09

@RosesAndHellebores Are you hiring anyone to come spruce up your house? Didn’t think so. So stop giving terminology advice to someone who already has a loyal professional working for them and actually appreciates being addressed formally and respectfully. Read that last part carefully—I’m far more qualified in these terms than you’ll ever be.

OP posts:
OneGreySeal · 07/12/2025 00:19

It sounds like a clash of cultures. Are you perhaps western/white and married into a South East or East Asian culture ?

Your mother in law doesn’t sound bad per se, I think it’s just the way some women are when it comes to their sons in certain cultures. They like to be heavily involved and that’s why having your own place is key to avoid that.

I think the issue isn’t your mother in law. It’s the man you chose to marry and have a child with when he’s clearly a bit of a bum. You’re also living in this woman’s home and having all your needs met and looked after. Perhaps a bit of gratitude is in need? Or as others have said pack your bags and get your own place perhaps sans husband given he’s unlikely to ever leave.

HundredMilesAnHour · 07/12/2025 00:20

They handed him a career, and yet he still can’t provide a home for his own new family, even with all the support and foundation he’s had since he was young.

And yet knowing all this you still married him and had a child with him and are living off his parents and moaning about it. Entitled much? What’s your contribution to the household?

OneGreySeal · 07/12/2025 00:21

LifeSurvior · 06/12/2025 21:11

In the space of 12 months of knowing him, you married and had a baby with a 41 year old man who has never lived independently or has even left home!!
Dear God woman what do you expect?
Your problem isn't your poor MIL here.
The pair of you need to get off your lazy arses and make and provide a home for yourselves and your child.
I cannot believe your concerns are about your MIL and not your ridiculous Husband who between you both have been freeloading of your in laws!!. He's 41 for goodness sake🤯

It reminds me of those 90 day fiancé episodes.

MsGrumpytrousers · 07/12/2025 00:35

JockTamsonsBairns · 06/12/2025 23:11

I can't understand how this situation came about?
I wouldn't go for a coffee date with a 40yo man who still lived at home with his mum, let alone have a baby with him.

This. Also, how does anyone get pregnant unexpectedly, if you know how sex works?

RecordBreakers · 07/12/2025 00:46

I'm confused how your family have employed this 'maid' for 10 years, if they are cleaning your in-laws home which is in a different country from the one you were living in, until you moved to be with your dh?

99bottlesofkombucha · 07/12/2025 00:52

What are you doing about it op? It sounds like you’re waiting for him to come home one day and say I’ve lined up a couple of house inspections for us. This will never happen- arrange some inspections, tell him when they are, and take a house. You need daycare and a job, I don’t know why you’re confident this man will step up when you move it, he’s more likely to throw a baby tantrum over his laundry and storm out to take it all home to mummy who looks after him.

Tokyo5 · 07/12/2025 01:00

I could give you a whole list. My contribution has been giving him a child; a grandchild the family probably wouldn’t have had if I hadn’t come into the picture. On top of that, I sacrificed my body for nine months straight after marriage, my career, financial security, and social life. They’re fully aware of this and thankful, so it’s not just me who recognises the sacrifices I’ve made, each of which is a huge contribution to the home. And by the way, the household is in no way struggling for me to “contribute” in the way you’re implying.

Yes, I’m grateful for what exists, but if you actually read my post, this conversation wasn’t about contributions it was about personal boundaries. Since you want to go there, I’d love to know what contributions you’ve made to your little home. I’m guessing you working your little job in the biggest contribution - well maybe I can’t do that because I have a baby to care for? I had a child a few months ago - are we catching up now or you still need reminding about what I’ve been talking about this whole time on my thread?

also your other contribution I presume is you cleaning- I take care of all that, including after my husband as well as my in laws.

Living with the in-laws alone is the biggest emotional contribution—something you presumably don’t do.

So, very respectfully, I ask you: spare me the bullsh1t , set your alarm for your job tmr, stfu and go to sleep.

OP posts:
Tokyo5 · 07/12/2025 01:02

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

RecordBreakers · 07/12/2025 01:03

Why so rude ?

If you are anything like this in real life (as you have even implied yourself), I'm surprised your PiL haven't asked you to leave a long time ago.

OriginalUsername2 · 07/12/2025 01:05

Tokyo5 · 07/12/2025 01:00

I could give you a whole list. My contribution has been giving him a child; a grandchild the family probably wouldn’t have had if I hadn’t come into the picture. On top of that, I sacrificed my body for nine months straight after marriage, my career, financial security, and social life. They’re fully aware of this and thankful, so it’s not just me who recognises the sacrifices I’ve made, each of which is a huge contribution to the home. And by the way, the household is in no way struggling for me to “contribute” in the way you’re implying.

Yes, I’m grateful for what exists, but if you actually read my post, this conversation wasn’t about contributions it was about personal boundaries. Since you want to go there, I’d love to know what contributions you’ve made to your little home. I’m guessing you working your little job in the biggest contribution - well maybe I can’t do that because I have a baby to care for? I had a child a few months ago - are we catching up now or you still need reminding about what I’ve been talking about this whole time on my thread?

also your other contribution I presume is you cleaning- I take care of all that, including after my husband as well as my in laws.

Living with the in-laws alone is the biggest emotional contribution—something you presumably don’t do.

So, very respectfully, I ask you: spare me the bullsh1t , set your alarm for your job tmr, stfu and go to sleep.

Wow.. I’ve changed my mind, I hope your mil washes all your underwear forever and ever 😆

Tokyo5 · 07/12/2025 01:11

@OriginalUsername2 I hope yours stay dirty forever and ever hehehe 👹

OP posts:
Tokyo5 · 07/12/2025 01:13

@RecordBreakers yeah it doesn’t work like that record breaker …

OP posts:
Tokyo5 · 07/12/2025 01:30

@Treylime best solution is moving out , simple & square. Why would they be paying for it?

OP posts:
columnatedruinsdomino · 07/12/2025 01:33

Please tell your mil you’re hoping to move out. Give her something to look forward to.

selffellatingouroborosofhate · 07/12/2025 01:36

41-year-old husband whose mother still washes and folds his laundry for him

Has he ever lived on his own? Because that's a huge red flag for him not pulling his weight when you do get your own place.

Tokyo5 · 07/12/2025 01:38

@columnatedruinsdomino we’ll both celebrate for each other together ;)

OP posts:
Tokyo5 · 07/12/2025 01:40

@selffellatingouroborosofhate he has never lived on his own! I’m just hoping he pulls his weight when we do have our own place otherwise idk how this will resolve? Any advice?

OP posts:
selffellatingouroborosofhate · 07/12/2025 01:56

Tokyo5 · 07/12/2025 01:40

@selffellatingouroborosofhate he has never lived on his own! I’m just hoping he pulls his weight when we do have our own place otherwise idk how this will resolve? Any advice?

"Don't be surprised if you end up divorcing" is pretty much all I've got.

Swipe left for the next trending thread