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SIL the fridge monster.

(73 Posts)
glassortwo Sun 23-Feb-14 14:30:33

This is going to sound ridiculous. hmm

Can anyone shed any light on the strange activity going on in the fridge.
SIL has taken to moving items about whenever he goes in the fridge. He has nothing to do with the shopping, filling of the fridge, or cooking and the only time he uses the fridge is to get milk out for his coffee or his lager on an evening.

When the shopping comes I fill the fridge under the usual regime that you do cooked meats and raw on different shelves and like with like etc etc.

He has started to move things around and puts raw and cooked together and I buy flavoured milk for the DGC as the youngest wont drink milk but will suffer choc or strawberry and he keeps shuffling them around so the dates on the cartons are all mixed up, when I have mentioned this shuffling he says "because I can, its my fridge".

Now I feel like telling him he is more than welcome to take over the whole lot if that's what he wants, but I tend to think he is just looking for me to react, any ideas?

Marelli Sun 23-Feb-14 17:02:02

Also - your DD is breastfeeding, isn't she? Does he not realise that messing raw and cooked foods about could cause problems for her? hmm

Riverwalk Sun 23-Feb-14 17:05:37

glass as I understand things, you all live together rather than you are living with them .... in which case it's not 'his' fridge.

I agree that it sounds like some underlying resentment or unhappiness ... is he often rude?

kittylester Sun 23-Feb-14 17:55:33

Maybe the new baby is having a delayed impact glass?

granjura Sun 23-Feb-14 18:46:45

Territorial issue as many said. Now I just do not know how to say this- but I have never ever heard of sharing a house with a son or daughter with their OH and family to work out well. I've have many friends who have done that, sold both houses to be able to buy a much larger one- and it has always turned out to be a disaster int he long run. Sincerely hope it will all wrok out for you and you'll be the exception to that rule. Despite our house being very large, if one of our DDs decided to come and live here- we would vacate and take a smaller house or flat nearby- and never share for more than a few weeks.

rosequartz Sun 23-Feb-14 18:51:33

It sounds like a classic case of nose pushed out of joint for whatever the reason. And the reason is not the fridge.

glassortwo Sun 23-Feb-14 18:57:52

aka I have tried to involve DD, SIL and DH in meal choices and I just get shrugged shoulders and told they have no idea, so have to plan what I think they will like.

I think he may feel his position is threatened in the household and he see's me as the person who DD and the children turn to first and this probably jars with him.

I have tried to explain about the fridge and the reasons why some foods are in a certain position, but I think it fell on deaf ears.

There have been little comments from him grannya I think your right I should deal with them then and there but I try to keep the peace and that possibly isnt the way forward.

DH has offered to have a word with him marelli and he feels SIL is being very childish with the comments he has made lately, as SIL and DD are more than willing to let me get up with the children, see to house and the cooking for them all, that he cant now go down the road he appears to be taking.

Maybe it is the new baby and him feeling that it should just be the 5 of them together in these early days with an addition to the family, but as we all expect to move into the house together it doesn't bode well, does it!

river at the moment we are living in DD and SIL house until our house is complete, then we are all due to move in together, maybe that takes away some of his control as it will be our house he will be living in.

Well we are away from next Sunday until Wednesday so it will give them time together.

Thank you all, now I have to decide where to go from here. smile

rosequartz Sun 23-Feb-14 19:07:41

Good luck smile

Ana Sun 23-Feb-14 19:20:34

Hope the problem will quickly be resolved, glass smile

grannyactivist Sun 23-Feb-14 19:33:43

Granjura perhaps we are the exception to the rule, but I have, in the past, lived for a year with my parents in law and it was one of the best years of my life. I moved into their house with my husband, three children and our au pair and it was a real wrench to leave. We have talked about living together again, and although it isn't so practical now it's still something we're considering.

merlotgran Sun 23-Feb-14 19:45:49

I actually feel a bit sorry for glass's SIL. If moving things around in a fridge is such a big deal in his own house what are things going to be like for him when he's living in his in-law's house?

Can they not remain in their own home?

jinglbellsfrocks Sun 23-Feb-14 19:57:39

Oh! Bugger that. That would make me so cross. I would say something like, "well, if you want your children to get ill from cross contamination or old use by dates, you just keep it up". I would n't let him get away with saying stuff that. You do so much to help them glass! angry

jinglbellsfrocks Sun 23-Feb-14 20:03:48

I know you have to keep the peace though. It can't be easy.

merlotgran Sun 23-Feb-14 20:04:17

How on earth did people manage to live together before fridges, cross contamination and use by dates?

glassortwo Sun 23-Feb-14 20:10:44

They could merlot but I do all the childcare, and when DD goes back to work will be full time with the baby and not just having the other 2 children from 7am until school then collecting and seeing to them till bedtime as DD sometimes comes home after 8pm and they are in bed. She couldnt afford the childcare costs and I will be 40 mins drive away, and I have no intention of getting up at 5 in the morning to get down here for 7am and not getting home until after 9pm.
It was also their decision to have us all live together until the house was finished so its not something that has been forced on him.

merlotgran Sun 23-Feb-14 20:16:46

I'd ignore the fridge issues then, glass. They obviously depend on you a great deal which puts your SIL on the back foot. He's doing it to wind you up so let him get on with it because he'll soon lose interest if you take no notice.

No one will die if things in the fridge get moved around. Just keep an eye on raw chicken. wink

Riverwalk Sun 23-Feb-14 20:24:20

SiL should realise that if he has a MiL who does the shopping, cooking, and all the childcare then he can't suddenly start claiming territorial rights over the fridge.

I'm assuming a little chat with DH, SiL and DD is on the cards?

Out of interest glass I think you're renovating a farmhouse so presumably lots of space ..... will it be communal living?

Grannyknot Sun 23-Feb-14 20:40:14

glassortwo that is horrible! And the "it's my fridge" is a bit of a gauntlet thrown down, I think.

What about - the next time you "lock horns" so to speak, you there and then tell him how it makes you feel? "It makes me feel awful/in the way/unsure" sometimes completely defuses the situation and he can respond as a human being.

granjura Sun 23-Feb-14 20:52:28

Fabulous that it worked so well Grannyactivist, but it is unusual. Perhpas knowing it was for a limited period, even if a whole year- made it easier.

Just wondering about Glassortwo's situation- and how it was decided to all live together and renovate a farm to eventually share (Communal living- or you own flat each???)- looking back, did SIL need convincing, or was he totally for it from the start. In the case of one of my good friends- they fell in love with a house, and could only afford if mum sold and moved in with them- but it was not a happy choice as they overlooked issues as sil was 'blinded' with the prospect of the house.

Locking horns sounds easy- but it could be a disaster in the long run- but ignoring the issues will allow them to fester. So I truly feel for you, and sincerely hope you find a happy solution.

merlotgran Sun 23-Feb-14 21:14:01

I've always been laid back so maybe I'm out of step here but I cannot see how a few items in a fridge can be the cause of so much tension. How can ignoring it allow things to fester? If this is such a big deal then it's not a good idea to all move into a house where a shift in the balance of power is anticipated.

granjura Sun 23-Feb-14 22:11:00

Well yes, it does seem superficial- but it seems a symbol of a bit of power struggle, for whatever reason- so if it cause an issue, it needs to be dealt with, somehow, without locking horns either. And it can be the hardest thing to do if it is not to antagonise relationships for the future. It can be hugely difficult for DD to become 'pig in the middle' either.

Communal living sounds great- but is perhaps the most difficult thing to do, unless there is a clear hierarchy (for instance we had lodgers, but I was the boss.... ultimately).

newist Sun 23-Feb-14 22:12:25

Slight side track, I hope the baby is well and how is your knitting coming on?

janeainsworth Sun 23-Feb-14 22:53:11

Ooh Glass I feel for you. If you're doing all the cooking and shopping, he may technically own the fridge, but it's your kitchen!!

I would be inclined to ask him how he would like the things arranged in the fridge, but stipulate that the cooked and raw meat must be stored separately, and then stick slavishly to his arrangement, to the point where he sees how silly he is being.

I agree with others it could be a symptom of something going on, and you'll need to read carefully.

Having said that, it may be their house, but it's your home, and you shouldn't have to feel uncomfortable in it.
flowers

harrigran Sun 23-Feb-14 22:58:17

We were on the way to DS's house this afternoon and I heard this long drawn out scream and I said to DH " goodness what was that " ? Having just read your post glass I now know it was you venting your frustration grin
DH tells me I put the kitchen roll on the stand the wrong way hmm he turns it over, I go into the kitchen and turn it back and so it continues.

Polygran Mon 24-Feb-14 08:56:13

Simple rule in our fridge - raw meat (nothing else) on the bottom shelf only. Drinks in the door so one can see them! Condiments on shallow top shelf so one can find them. The rest is fairly chaotic. However, we have a separate beer, wine and mixers fridge in the utility room.
Sounds to me, that he needs his own personal drinks fridge if there is space.
DH takes everything out if he can't immediately see what he is looking for and the just puts them back randomly. It's not any form of statement, just the way he is. He woulnt bother looking in the bottom raw meat section though unless about to cook a meal.
They dont teach food safety at school these days! Maybe he needs teaching about salmonella risk etc.

rosequartz Mon 24-Feb-14 09:52:57

Polygran, I misread that first time and thought it said condiments on the top shelf where no one can find them. Ours are there but DH seems unable to see them.