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Grandparenting

Help me to understand

(149 Posts)
satsum Thu 24-May-12 10:01:11

Good morning I am hoping for some insight to help me understand my MIL. I will try and be as conherent and concise as possible.
My MIL is fantastic. She gives us our space, she is always available to help, she never gives unsolicited advice and she always tells me what a fantastic job I am doing. We have a lot in common and I try and take my daughter around at least once a week and let her know how much I appreciate having her in my life.
Here is the tricky bit for me. My MIL will not give my daughter back when she is screaming for my husband or myself. This started when she was one week old and I was breastfeeding my daughter on demand. My MIL would run out of the room instead of giving her back to be fed. My daughter is eight months old now and it is still a huge issue. My MIL finds it very upsetting when my daughter cries for me and she refuses to let her come to me. I find this so upsetting to watch my daughter reaching out for me and crying however I also find it upsetting to watch how devestated my MIL looks after I have to take the baby away and comfort her. Can anyone offer me some insight into my MIL feelings so that I can understand and not feel so angry. I now feel anxious before every visit and I am finding it hard to sleep.

AlisonMA Sat 26-May-12 12:39:58

What a shame we can't here what the Grandma thinks about all this. 1

soop Sat 26-May-12 12:43:56

Alison...it would help, wouldn't it?

Happygran1964 Sat 26-May-12 12:48:02

Satsum can I ask if your MIL is still quite young?

The reason I ask is that I am still only 47 and no sign of menopause yet so could still possibly, maybe conceive another child of my own, and when I first picked up my lovely newborn grandson I felt exactly the same emotions as I did when my own babies were born, that sense of wanting to protect for ever and an almost spiritual love that is hard to explain unless you are a mum yourself, you will know what I mean lol.

I am just wondering if your mil is somehow feeling broody for a baby of her own to love and nurture and if her emotions are somehow taking her back to when her own children were babies, that she temporarily forgets that she is granny and not mummy.

Only a suggestion but I personally see how easy it could be to slip back into the mummy role.

I am, however, fully aware that my DIL is the most important person in the world to little Harry and I will never step on her toes consciously!!

Bags Sat 26-May-12 13:09:29

You seem to be thinking along the same lines as I am, happygran. All those emotions are perfectly understandable, arent they? But one does has to remember one is only the gran, not the mum, and to notice if the mum is a bit – how shall I say? – 'put out' and take a step back, so to speak. It's all about sensitivity in the end.

tongue in cheek apologies to whoever it was who didn't like the pronoun 'one' – how they do slip out!! Tut, tut! wink

jeni Sat 26-May-12 13:11:55

I use ONE!

Bags Sat 26-May-12 13:13:27

smile

Bags Sat 26-May-12 13:13:52

Ones are jolly useful things, one finds.

Jacey Sat 26-May-12 13:15:51

One does Bags!! grin

jeni Sat 26-May-12 13:16:41

Absolutely! One couldn't agree more!smile I think a smile goes better with one than a grin

Jacey Sat 26-May-12 13:18:27

Does one Jeni? grin

jeni Sat 26-May-12 13:18:59

One does!

Bags Sat 26-May-12 13:19:54

And if one may retrace one's steps a little way, in difficult situations where feelings were inclined to get the better of one, my mum used to say: You can't change your feelings, perhaps, but you can change your behaviour.

soop Sat 26-May-12 13:30:22

Bags...was that a case of oneupmanship ?

Annobel Sat 26-May-12 13:32:07

Alternatively: '^One can't change one's feelings, perhaps, but one can change one's behaviour^'.

Bags Sat 26-May-12 13:36:09

soop, nope, just a bit of harmless, jokey teasing smile

anno, smile

AlisonMA Sat 26-May-12 13:40:31

My DiL takes offence at the slightest thing said in jest e.g. 'I could run off with him' has beccome 'you wanted to take my son away from me at 3 months'. 'How are you going to deal with him not eating pork when he is old enough to go to parties on his own and they might have sausages?' has become 'you want to feed my son sausages even though you don't eat them yourself'. Actually I do but not when she is around obviously.

An insecure older mum who has issues with even her own family. I just say this to point out that there are 2 sides to everything and sometimes it is actually the DiL who is being unreasonable.

Bags Sat 26-May-12 13:42:42

So the mature and sensible gran takes that on board and deals with it, doesn't she? I expect most of us were a bit touchy at times in early motherhood.

soop Sat 26-May-12 13:57:44

As far as I can recall, no member of the family offered me [as a new mother] advice or a helping hand. Although I made mistakes, I still managed a pretty good job overall.

Annobel Sat 26-May-12 14:53:15

I suggest that unless/until the OP gets back to us, we now give this thread a rest! We have probably done it to death!

Anagram Sat 26-May-12 14:56:42

I agree, Annobel - I'm exhausted by the way the sympathy is swinging from DIL to MIL and back again....! grin

satsum Sat 26-May-12 21:30:15

Thought I should provide and ending to this story. After reading your posts again and again and again, I decided to be firm and confident and invite my MIL a round for a chat. Well, it turned out that when she arrived I was so confident and empowerd by your posts; I was able to take my daughter when she was crying and then give her back when she was settled. I did this and didn't take on her emotions and it made for a nicer visit. Was she upset? Yes she was but I am sure that with time she will learn the difference between being a mother and a grandmother. Thanks gransnetters x

Anagram Sat 26-May-12 21:34:36

I'm very glad it worked out well, satsum! As you've read, we all have strong opinions but it's your family and you have to work it out your way - well done! smile

Thanks for letting us know the outcome - much appreciated!

nanaej Sat 26-May-12 21:43:32

Glad it is working out so your little girl is happy. That is what was needed. Am sure MiL will appreciate it in the long run. well done!

satsum Sat 26-May-12 21:45:29

Yes, that's true Anagram. I thought about asking her why she did it. But then I thought what's the point. It might be something simple or it could be something deeper than that. Either way I just wanted it to stop.

glassortwo Sat 26-May-12 21:48:08

satsum well handled, it will improve smile