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DIL problems that I don't get

(181 Posts)
grannygranby Mon 21-Nov-16 11:14:25

I have a DIL who showed antipathy from the moment we met. In fact was rude! And offhand. I have tried and tried over the years. Now They have my only grandchildren, two little girls 4 and 2 and still the weird hostility. It is not explicit. It is very contained and we all seem to be living in denial. They live about 60 miles the other side of the Pennines on m62 I hate the drive, I am A widower, live alone. The last time I made the journey they were out, after me having spent three days arranging it - it seems my son didn't tell her? Or she was just being awful.
And now Christmas is coming and though she will visit my daughters fine house (not mine she refuses except for very rapid visits on my birthday when they will take me to a restaurant) My daughter is now fed up with hosting them as dil wont tolerate our dogs being in the house. My daughter does not have children but a very beloved dog. I have an older dog and a puppy for company and I love them.
So I am torn. As a compromise with my daughter I sent a message to son and dil that at xmas it would be so nice if (as they are locked in the garden for the visit) we could at least all go for a walk in the beautiful park and woods with the dogs. We know it will have to be approached slowly and bit by bit.
There has been no reply at all. I am very sad. I think the girls would love to meet the dogs but it is forbidden I was even told off by my son for pointing out the dogs in the garden to the four year old. He thinks I am doing it to annoy dil. She is not phobic she has gradually brought in the no dog rules as she became pregnant babies etc etc as reasons to exclude.
I am so sad about this. We come from a very tolerant family, unfortunately my mum is dead she'd have been a great support as would my late husband but I'm afraid, except for my dogs, I am alone. I meet my daughter every day in the week for dog walk and chat she is great but she is standing firm on this one - or making me do so.
DIL certainly knows the power she has over me for access to my granddaughters but I can't understand why. It seems the more I give the more she takes and my son who is very successful at work and at home and us a devoted father does not want to stand up for me. I suppose that is what really hurts. So any support at this difficult time really welcome.

Jayanna9040 Mon 21-Nov-16 11:27:27

Sorry, I wouldn't take my children to a house where dogs are. I know everyone thinks their own dogs are lovely and wouldn't hurt anyone. It only takes one snap for a child to be scarred for life or worse. My son was bittenin the face by a family dog who was only protecting its own territory.

Ana Mon 21-Nov-16 11:28:51

I'm not quite clear what it is your daughter's standing firm on, grannygranby. You say she's fed up with hosting your son and his family because your dogs and hers aren't allowed in the house but you are thinking that a walk in the park with the dogs might help in some way...

Even if your DIL agreed to that, they'd still have to be kept out of the house. What is your daughter hoping is going to happen?

gillybob Mon 21-Nov-16 11:36:23

I think you all need to reach some kind of compromise grannygranby and from your point of view it may include leaving the dogs at home or having the looked after fro the duration of a visit. My sister has a (tiny) little dog. I visit her at her home and I walk the dog on the beach quite a bit but my DH is terribly allergic so I cannot allow it (small as she is) in my house.

glammanana Mon 21-Nov-16 12:05:51

Whilst it is very sad the relationship you have with your DIL in the end the choice is hers and your sons with regard to the dogs,have you ever asked if this lady has had an averse encounter with dogs or is she just generally frightened of them ? I never had my DGCs around the family pet as they can be very territorial and could just snap for no apparent reason.(the dog not the children)

elena Mon 21-Nov-16 12:26:23

After all this time, would it not help to have a real, serious chat about this, the whole family....listen to each other, tell your son and DIL how much you want to have a nice, easy relationship with them all, and what can you do to facilitate it (including the dog thing).

The 'living in denial' phrase you use is significant, I think. It feels more comfortable, and safer, not to be open and to make your feelings known, as if you are scared that if you do, bridges will be irrevocably burnt.

But maybe now is the time to be open, and genuinely loving and non-critical.

Christinefrance Mon 21-Nov-16 12:38:22

We have three much loved dogs but never take them with us when we visit other people. Not everyone is a dog lover and certainly I can understand the concern around small children. I think maybe you need to ease off on introducing the dogs to the children as it is clearly a bone of contention ( no pun intended )
Talk to your son and daughter in law and agree way forward which does not include the dogs at least for the time being.

RedheadedMommy Mon 21-Nov-16 13:39:27

I also wouldn't take my children to a house with dogs. Its not uncommon.
My MIL had 2 dogs and didn't want to put them in a room when we was there. Her choice.
The children didn't go to her house because of it. Our choice.

I say 'our' because it was a joint decision. My DH knew i didn't trust dogs, we was told by Midwife and HV to be careful round them with children, i didn't want the DCs around them at a young age, neither did he and he backed me up. That is what your DS is doing.

Luckygirl Mon 21-Nov-16 13:45:49

I do understand how much the dogs mean to you and what excellent company they are for you, but you are dealing with a relationship with your DIL that is already a problem, and you must jettison your wishes about the dogs as this is just another bone grin of contention that is wholly unnecessary. You have enough troubles with her already without adding in something that really does not matter. Forget the dogs; leave them behind when you visit and do not mention them at all.

I am sorry to say that some people who love dogs do often have this idea that they are right to love them and others are wrong/odd/misguided; and that they can "cure" these strange non-dog-lovers by strategies such as taking them to the park etc. - nothing could be further form the truth, take it from me!

Forget the dogs and concentrate on forging good relationships with this woman your son has chosen as his wife.

Ana Mon 21-Nov-16 13:51:40

There's still the problem of where they're going to visit, though. If your daughter has made a stand (presumably about the dog issue?) and your DIL doesn't want to stay at yours, I don't see what can be done.

Couldn't you try to talk to your daughter and explain what people have said on here about dogs around children, even if you aren't convinced. It seems to be non-negotiable as far as your DIL and your son are concerned.

KatyK Mon 21-Nov-16 14:05:25

Well said Luckygirl I once told someone I wasn't keen on dogs and she said 'oh and here's me thinking you were a nice person' confused

Azie09 Mon 21-Nov-16 14:38:43

Gosh grannygrandby what a horrible story. Families are not easy is putting it mildly. It doesn't help that dogs and cyclists seem to bring out the worst kind of blind intolerance in the British, I don't understand it but I do think it's a vicious circle - dogs are banned so they see people less and are less socialised, people don't know how to behave around dogs and so dogs get banned and so on, ad infinitum.

Anyway, the 'unspoken' but known to everyone kind of hostility you've described is very hard to deal with and very hard to bring out into the open unless everyone is willing to participate. Without knowing your whole family situation, it's hard to know what to say beyond you must find a way of deciding what will be the best outcome for you personally and then stick to it.

Your DIL is not actually being very caring or thoughtful about your feelings (or those of your daughter) and the fact that your son supports her raises questions in the outsider about him (is he an appeaser) or do you have a problem with him of some sort, or is it possible she has some kind of mental health problem and he is silently defending her?

Your grand daughters are effectively being held as ransom! Could you tell yourself that there are many years yet where you will have a relationship with them and step back for the moment? The more you fret and try to sort things out, the more it puts you in the power of your DIL!

It's good that you have a warm relationship with your daughter and interesting that she is fed up with your DIL. I'd say side with her and stand up to your DIL without it becoming overtly hostile (i.e. keep some doors open) and see if that changes anything. Are you and your daughter able to make it clear that your dogs are important to you in a matter of fact way?

You must be so miserable about this whole situation which I imagine is not just about dogs but perhaps they are the symbol of it? I wonder if your DIL has a bad relationship with her own family? Or perhaps they are mistrustful of others and very inward looking. Maybe she has one of those modern conditions like narcissism or a personality disorder, think Rob in the Archers. Or is she a townie and thinks you are a country person or is she obsessed with cleanliness?

Who knows but I wish you all the best and I would say take a stand and do what makes you happy and see if you can find a way of hardening your heart a little.

Luckygirl Mon 21-Nov-16 15:21:17

Or your DIL may be a perfectly normal person who just happens not to agree with you - especially in the issue of dogs. I think it is very important that you and your DD (who shares your views) do not (even by implication) gang up on your DIL as this will be the worst way forward.

The partners that our children choose are mot always those whom we would have chosen to have a relationship with, but we have to find ways of getting on with them.

mumofmadboys Mon 21-Nov-16 15:27:08

If you live near your daughter could you possibly leave your two dogs and her dog at your house for a few hours on Christmas Day. Walk them first and then enjoy lunch etc just with family and no dogs. It would keep the peace and your DIL may behave differently as her children get older.

Jayanna9040 Mon 21-Nov-16 15:33:23

Maybe I read Azies post wrong, but DIL has a mental health problem because she doesn't want to put her children at risk with dogs that they don't know and that don't know them????
I still think she's just being sensible. Watching your child's face being sown back together is not fun. And it was a perfectly nice dog 99.9% of the time.

BlueBelle Mon 21-Nov-16 15:54:01

Oh my word ...mental health problem because someone doesn't take to dogs what a load of tosh, it sounds like there is stubborness going on here

I cannot inderstand why believing that the dogs 'maybe' I would imagine definitely are causing the rift you then write a letter suggesting you all take them for a walk in the park and wonder why you didn't get an answer

I think this is very simple daughter in law for whatever reason isn't a dog lover and doesn't want her children around dogs and your son is obviously happy with that You and your other daughter adore your dogs and want your family to enjoy them as much as you do..... Grannygranby it's not going to happen You are in a stand off I would suggest you write a lovely invitation perhaps to a meal on neutral ground and tell them the dogs will be left at home and the dogs and son's family do not need to meet

Well for a few hours, a day, a weekend, whatever put the family first and the dogs second if they are going to stay at daughters house have the dogs at yours or vice versa

Ana Mon 21-Nov-16 15:57:45

Hear, hear BlueBelle. It does seem to be the only way.

yggdrasil Mon 21-Nov-16 16:17:35

seconded

Granarchist Mon 21-Nov-16 16:19:47

Probably too late now but all our dogs have been trained from puppyhood to be happy in a cage. They travel in dog cages and if we go away to stay with people the cage comes too. They regard them as their safe place. When toddlers, or children who are not old enough to be trusted with dogs, come to our house the dogs are happy to go into their cages in the utility room where they are happy and so are nervous parents or children, (I would point out that our late lab and current JR are brilliant with children but I would NEVER trust any dog alone with a child - not fair on the dog). I am very very doggy but I was bitten fairly recently and I will not go near that dog if I can possibly help it. Safe places are the answer and nothing is safer than a cage!

Luckygirl Mon 21-Nov-16 18:03:42

Just enjoy your dogs and allow those who do not like them to enjoy not being around them.

"We know it will have to be approached slowly and bit by bit." What you are saying here is that it will take time to get your DIL and her family to accept dogs. I find this attitude pretty arrogant to be quite honest with you. There is no reason at all why they should accept dogs if they do not want to. And you have no right to try and get them to do this.

Priorities! - if you want to get on with DIL and see loads of your DGDs then please stop assuming they are wrong and that it is your job to get them to change their minds. They sound to me as if they are trying to do right by you in spite of your intransigence - a trip to a restaurant on your birthday is dismissed as "rapid"!!

Cut the dogs out of the equation and start mending some fences with them. You have everything to gain and nothing to lose.

Just say: "I understand that you do not like dogs and that mine are a problem for you, so I will of course do everything I can to make sure that you and the children do not have to have contact with them. I so enjoy being with you and the children and am looking forward to seeing you soon."

Jalima Mon 21-Nov-16 19:49:47

It doesn't help that dogs and cyclists seem to bring out the worst kind of blind intolerance in the British,
I like some dogs and have owned dogs, but the DGC were out for a walk with their other granny recently and a huge dog leapt at her - yes, in a friendly fashion thank goodness, it was tall enough to put its paws on her shoulders and the owner seemed incapable of doing anything.
DGD1 was frightened when she was a toddler by a similar thing with a bit smaller dog which knocked her over. Thank goodness it was the little DGD he leapt at.

Perhaps it's irresponsible dog owners who are intolerant of people just going out for a walk and their understandable nervousness around strange dogs.

Jalima Mon 21-Nov-16 19:50:47

Thank goodness it was NOT the little DGD he leapt at!

Why can't we edit (at least give us 10 minutes?)

Jalima Mon 21-Nov-16 19:55:14

my son who is very successful at work and at home and us a devoted father does not want to stand up for me
He is married now and a father and is not going to stick up for his father against his wife.

Ana Mon 21-Nov-16 20:08:28

Or indeed his mother!

Jalima Mon 21-Nov-16 20:09:35

Oh! The OP said he/she was a widower
confused