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Someone tell me not to speak my mind..

(57 Posts)
Anya Sun 01-Mar-15 18:41:05

I've had it up to here with my DiL. She seems to feel that I 'do too much' for my DD and her family and always making snide remarks about them. My son earns a very good wage and DiL only works 3 mornings a week, whereas my DD is a full time secondary teacher, and her husband works shifts. So I often have to drop her boys at school and pick them up.

I'd like to think that perhaps she had my best interests at heart, but I'm feeling more and more that she is jealous of the amount of time I give to my daughters children. But I do drop her oldest at school, have them overnight if need be and childmind her youngest once a week. I'm even beginning to wonder if she is suffering from some mental health problem.

But what is really getting to me is the poison she is feeding my DS. He is now beginning to sound like her.

Yet every so often she'll text me and say 'love you xxx'. I'm totally comfused. But there has been an incident again this weekend and when my DS drops his daughter off for me to childmind tomorrow I'm on the verge of telling him exactly how I feel and to hell with the consequences.

Someone please tell me to calm down and keep schtum. .

annemac101 Sat 07-Mar-15 09:32:11

All good advice here. I have a friend who tells me to speak my mind to my DIL but I just think it would cause too much bad feeling and once it's been said you can't take it back. Mine tells me nothing about my two GDs I have to ask everything. Never says when first tooth came in,first steps taken,peanut allergy discovered. Her mum looks after the children while she works,I used to help out but I moved house and don't drive. Nothing would please me more than to help out although I have oldest for overnight stays. I'll never be close to her as it's been over ten years now. So it's put up and shut up for a quiet life.

kathryn489 Fri 06-Mar-15 19:18:15

Hello,

I am a granny to be, so I can't speak from granny experience but maybe from the DIL perspective... I have a MIL who helps us heaps and I wouldn't know what to do without her she is a lovely lady and I care about her very much - and that said if she was feeling upset about me and my approach I would hope she would tell me not bottle it up as these things never really go away, something like recently I have felt you are unhappy with me and I don't understand why I love having my grandchildren are you ok? A bit of an opener but it gives her the opportunity to say how she feels and I would say it with your son present too. If she doesn't say anything to you but raises it later with your son he is likely to say well mum did ask why didn't you say? Just a thought but I would approach them together in a caring way with a script in your head x

KatyK Wed 04-Mar-15 16:00:35

Yes it did Anya. Helped me to keep it zipped. Thank you and well done to you.

Anya Wed 04-Mar-15 14:31:49

Progress certainly KatyK I'm really pleased that the advice on here helped you too smile

KatyK Wed 04-Mar-15 10:08:19

Not stupid at all Anya, none of us are mind readers. I think if more people talked instead of texting and communicating via social media, things would be a lot easier. I had to come on here yesterday and re-read all the advice given in order to stop myself from ringing my DD and 'having a go' at her for once again putting us off from visiting. I was fuming but read the good advice on here and let it go. Then lo and behold last night she texted to apologise! Now I can count on one hand the number of times she has ever apologised to me or anyone else. Progress maybe? smile

loopylou Wed 04-Mar-15 06:51:22

Anya, you've got absolutely no reason to feel stupid I bet many GMs see more or do more for some GCs than others.
Certainly my parents saw more of their GCs who lived closer than mine, who saw more of their paternal GPs.
There wasn't and isn't any jealousy involved, that was just happistance.
It sounds as if you've cracked it!
Just as babies don't come with an instruction manual neither do we!
flowers x

janerowena Tue 03-Mar-15 23:30:57

Those lightbulb moments - you are right of course.

Ana Tue 03-Mar-15 23:15:17

sunshine

Anya Tue 03-Mar-15 22:57:46

Ever had an 'ah ha' moment and wondered why, when it was so obvious, you didn't see it before.

It hit my this afternoon. My DiL simply wants to know that I love and appreciate her girls as much as I love and appreciate my DDs boys. That's why she seems so bitter, she feels that because I do more for my GSs and see more of them, as a consequence I am closer to them.

It's true, I am much 'closed' to them, but I love my GDs just as much.

I feel so stupid not realising this earlier.

rosequartz Mon 02-Mar-15 18:02:17

Well done - crisis averted! flowers

Eloethan Mon 02-Mar-15 15:25:36

That's great Anya - well done to you.

janerowena Mon 02-Mar-15 15:25:17

It is, and it's very upsetting.

I am very proud of you, anya because I really do understand how tough it is. I too have become very adept at changing the subject and being perfectly lovely whilst hustling them out of the door.

I can't be too critical of DD's choice of partner, because I only have to look at Ex to see where she got her faulty male-choosing genes from!

Grannyknot Mon 02-Mar-15 14:39:11

[thumbs up] anya

janerowena very good post and reminds me too. I've got 5 SILs and there is never consensus ...and I've had to learn over the years that what I say to one is often used against A.N. Other depending on where the latest alliance is ... grin They continually are not speaking to each other and it's hard to keep up with the different factions.

Agus Mon 02-Mar-15 14:18:26

Well done Anyaflowers......very proud emoticon!

Mishap Mon 02-Mar-15 14:13:40

Medal winging its way to you - we need a medal icon!

Ana Mon 02-Mar-15 13:54:49

Yes indeed! smile flowers

loopylou Mon 02-Mar-15 13:53:45

Well done Anya!
flowers x

Anya Mon 02-Mar-15 13:51:27

Well DiL has just left. You would all be proud of me. I greeted her at the door with a hug and told her she looked nice (she always does). I didn't give her a chance to 'get started' just launched into an account of what we did with GD2 this morning (visited a music shop so we could look at all the instruments and name them) and how good she had been, what she'd had for lunch (quail eggs) and how we might get some quails.

Poor woman couldn't get a word in edge ways. Just as they were leaving she started on her favourite subject (grrrrrr...) but I cut across her and drew her attention to the snowdrops in my garden and picked one for GD2 to take with her. All the time smiling brightly.

Fortuitously the phone started ringing inside, so I gave her another hug, said good bye and excused myself to answer it.

The incident which brought this to a head (which I haven't gone into details about but was something I had asked them to do for us) has been resolved with my DS. But it was festering all weekend aided and abetted by several texts between us. Being able to talk about it and sleeping on all the advice given has helped me so much.

So once more, thanks to you all xx

janerowena Mon 02-Mar-15 12:36:28

I learnt a very long time ago, smile and look as if you are listening and agreeing, then go your own way and say nothing. I never say anything to anyone in my family about another family member, because the rows I have witnessed have been over such simple things yet the repercussions have lasted for years. I have two sisters who haven't spoken to each other for years and one of them has only just started speaking to my mother again - and they can't even remember what the row was about, exactly! This has been very hard for me, because I am by nature very outspoken. However, I do have a brain... wink

Thank heavens for places like this. I can tell you lot that SiL is a lazy slob, shoves ketchup on everything, won't eat anything other than roast and roasted potatoes and chips and bread, the only veg being Heinz baked beans, still hasn't put up shelves from 4 years ago and will never have a better job than the one he has now. If I can endure him coming to stay with me for weeks at a time, with my big mouth, I have great hopes for you Anya!

littleflo Mon 02-Mar-15 12:06:59

I agree with all that is said. It is up to the older generation to act wise and stay silent. Intense jealousy usually comes from a deep sense of insecurity. Maybe she wishes you were her mum, and by bad mouthing your daughter, she might misguidedly think this will mean more love for her.

Hard as it seems, maybe you could kill her with kindness. As has already been said, telling her how much you value her comments and concerns may wrong foot her but also boost her self esteem.

If she does have problems, anything negative you say will blow out of all proportion.

Many years ago my MiL asked me whether she should say anything to her other DiL about her behaviour. I cautioned her not to, saying that if it came to a choice between his wife and mother, she would lose.

Sadly she said something to my brother in law and they never spoke again.

rosequartz Mon 02-Mar-15 10:26:07

Yes, be diplomatic. She could be jealous of the relationship you have with your DD if she does not have the same sort of relationship with her own mother.

If you feel very angry you could write it down (longhand not on the pc!) then shred or burn it - immediately!
It might get it out of your system.

Oh, just read Eloethan's post and she suggests writing it down too - but don't keep it!!

You sound as if you do a lot for all of them - try not to get too tired or stressed. You need some tlc too.

Mishap Mon 02-Mar-15 10:17:33

The important thing is STOP, THINK! - you really do not want to say anything you might later regret.

KatyK Mon 02-Mar-15 10:12:27

I bottled things up for years about the way our daughter treats us on occasions. I have smiled, taken it all and said nothing. The problem with that is that it built up inside and I eventually exploded (I am usually a mouse) and it all came out. She was shocked and upset. It was a mistake. Things have never been the same since. I know it's different with your DIL. Good luck.

Hunt Mon 02-Mar-15 09:57:52

There is often a moment in relationships when you reach a crossroad and one way spells disaster. Please listen to all the good advice above. How many people advised ''having it out''? Quite!

Grannyknot Mon 02-Mar-15 09:52:36

anya well done on round 1. I'd be inclined to listen quietly to what my DIL has to say (or pretend to anyway as you seem to know what she will be saying!) and then say something along the lines of "We've been over this before, and I've given thought to your opinion but of course XX (husband's name) and I also have a view and right now I think I am doing the right thing by helping out with all my grandchildren according to need". Perhaps if you bring in your husband she will back off. I'm trying to exactly remember the "assertiveness code" which doesn't allow the other person to manipulatea conversation (perhaps others will know more about it) but it works for me, I just remember DESC and keep it brief:

Describe the situation
Explain your view
Summarise what you've said
Conclude.

flowers