We haven't crazy, I was posting about the relationship with my m.i.l.
Is Mumsnet down today (13th May)
By special request, let’s discuss our favourite Classic Music and why?
Sign up to Gransnet Daily
Our free daily newsletter full of hot threads, competitions and discounts
Subscribe
I’m the DIL and I’m looking for some perspective on what might possibly be going through my MIL’s head.
I’ve been with my husband for 15 years. Initially I got on well with his mum, but things began to sour around the time we got married and then with each subsequent big life event – buying a house, having our first baby (her first grandchild).
She is a difficult woman – my husband and FIL would both say this themselves. Her way of dealing with issues is passive aggression: sour faces, tension, and insisting that everything is “fine”, so I’m left guessing what the problem actually is.
Over the years I tried to brush it aside and keep things pleasant on a surface level. However, I reached my limit after the birth of my son, who is now one. Initially she was visiting once a week and announced that this was the frequency she wanted. Once my husband went back to work, I naturally wanted this to slow down as it was becoming too much for me. When we visited them, it could only be for a couple of hours due to travel time and needing to work around our son’s naps and feeds.
This then turned into more sour faces and obvious tension when we did see her, which in turn made us pull back even more.
My husband spoke to his dad, who admitted that MIL was jealous that my mum sees our son more. That is true – my mum lives closer and I’m naturally more comfortable with her. I also didn’t have a strong relationship with my MIL to begin with, so prioritising her visits wasnt a priority.
I tried to address the tension directly with my MIL and mentioned what my FIL had said about jealousy. This was met with “sorry you feel that way” and denial that there was any problem. We tried again with visits, but nothing changed.
I don’t cope well with passive conflict. I’m direct (not confrontational, but honest), so my husband and I decided to have a sit-down conversation with both MIL and FIL to clear the air once and for all. This backfired badly. I raised other instances over the years to highlight the pattern of behaviour, and I’ll admit it felt good to finally get it off my chest. This was met with denial and then both of them turning on me – including my FIL, which surprised me given what he’d previously said to my husband. I suppose he felt he had to back her. My husband stayed neutral, which I found frustrating, though he says he was trying to keep things calm.
This was around four months ago. I haven’t spoken to them since and they haven’t seen our son, husband has kept in contact. The situation was causing me so much stress and taking up far too much headspace during what should have been a happy time that I didn’t even want to hear about them.
My husband was expecting an apology, but none came. A few weeks ago I finally received a text along the lines of “hoping we can all move forward”, with no acknowledgement of what happened.
For me, the damage is done. I do feel for my husband and I will be supportive of him to take our son to see them, but it will be infrequent as we already have busy lives. I will not be present as i currently do not have any interest in building the relationship back up.
I just can’t wrap my head around why she behaved this way, or why she couldn’t see the damage she was causing. It feels like she went completely the wrong way about trying to get what she wanted.
We haven't crazy, I was posting about the relationship with my m.i.l.
Sorry that was a reply to Norah.
That isn’t insisting. Insisting is when you have the power to make it happen and you do make it happen. Against any protest.
That’s just saying what she wanted/expected.
That’s what the OP claims to value. Direct communication. The right to express your wants and opinions.
The OP has a right to say no to that request.
But praising herself for being “direct” in expressing her opinions and condemning her MiL for being direct in expressing hers is double standards in my book.
Smileless - I dip in and out of GN regularly, but I didn’t realise you had reconciled with your son. So pleased for you x
Thank you utterbliss. It was a shame that we lost those 7 years but it was the best solution at the time and we did end up with a lovely relationship in the end.
Querying someone's post isn't being passive aggressive BlessedArt and if you aren't interested in my posts there's no need for you to read them or reply is there.
What happened to kindness and tolerance to each other?
You are a relatively new Mum and yes I agree your MiL shouldn't be so obvious in her disapproval but to cut her off completely is very harsh especially when they have offered an olive branch.
In future don't see them regularly but occasionally go with you DH and DS arrange to meet them on neutral territory. in law relationships can be tricky but meeting in public makes people behave better usually.
Lathyrus3
I’m going to dispute “ mother in law insisted on weekly visits” Norah. The MiL couldn’t insist ie make it happen.
She expressed a desire, clearly and directly. Something the OP says she values in her own dealings with people.
I would have said no to that. Clearly and directly and negotiated, not stored it up resentfully to bring out as part of a destruction of character at some later date.
A characteristic that the OP complains in her MIL. That harbouring of dourness and tension.
And then there’s the contempt for a generation of acquiescent women who keep the peace, alongside the condemnation of her MiL for expressing her opinions.
Total double standards.
They really are a pair.
I read OP I reached my limit after the birth of my son, who is now one. Initially she was visiting once a week and announced that this was the frequency she wanted. Once my husband went back to work, I naturally wanted this to slow down as it was becoming too much for me. When we visited them, it could only be for a couple of hours due to travel time and needing to work around our son’s naps and feeds.
I disagree with you, nevermind.
I’m going to dispute “ mother in law insisted on weekly visits” Norah. The MiL couldn’t insist ie make it happen.
She expressed a desire, clearly and directly. Something the OP says she values in her own dealings with people.
I would have said no to that. Clearly and directly and negotiated, not stored it up resentfully to bring out as part of a destruction of character at some later date.
A characteristic that the OP complains in her MIL. That harbouring of dourness and tension.
And then there’s the contempt for a generation of acquiescent women who keep the peace, alongside the condemnation of her MiL for expressing her opinions.
Total double standards.
They really are a pair.
That was @ Smileless
Your reasoning for missing it is neither here nor there to me. It’s just best that before passive aggressively rebutting someone, you do your due diligence. The implication was obvious so “missing it” seems unlikely. As was “missing” Allsorts post stating “he will either go with you for a quiet life and cut his parents off…”
Please spare me the semantic-laden back and forth. We can genuinely discuss any topic, but I’m completely disinterested in your style of nitpicking and derailing. Let us speak plainly with honest intent about the OP, or we can choose not to all. Up to you.
Smileless, stick to your guns. Well done for not letting your mil bully you. What a terrible woman. Those who criticise you are feeling guilty about their own dreadful behaviour to their Dils, and it is making them uncomfortable.
Blue18
Allsorts
I have met a few dil just like you. You have got what you want, true your husband can visit his mother, thats nice of you, but
how do you think that makes him feel? Woukd you lije him to treAt your family the same? However thats not important is it? He will either go along with you for a quiet life, cut his parents off or decide this was not what marriage meant to him, not easy when there are children involved learning that's how you treat people. Thank goodness I have a lovely dil, don't see her as often as she does her own but that's perfectly natural. As for you saying she is passively aggressive, she cant win can she against your behaviour, what would you prefer, that she tells you just what she must think of you, that would be good for you as you could then accuse her of attacking you verbally.And how often does the husband take the children to visit the DIL's parents?
It seems they were visiting PIL every 2 months, prior to baby.
After baby MIL seems to have insisted on weekly visits, at theirs.
OP hasn't expressed a desire to insist her husband never visit, she seems to find it acceptable if he reverts to the old schedule.
I'm not sure what is the problem?
Whose said you're not allowed to comment BlessedArt? That's why I missed it then because it was implied rather than actually stated.
I agree Lathyrus that there's likely to be trouble when the OP and her m.i.l. meet which is why I think them not doing so, and the OP's husband maintaining his and his son's relationship with his parents although not ideal, is preferable.
Allsorts
I have met a few dil just like you. You have got what you want, true your husband can visit his mother, thats nice of you, but
how do you think that makes him feel? Woukd you lije him to treAt your family the same? However thats not important is it? He will either go along with you for a quiet life, cut his parents off or decide this was not what marriage meant to him, not easy when there are children involved learning that's how you treat people. Thank goodness I have a lovely dil, don't see her as often as she does her own but that's perfectly natural. As for you saying she is passively aggressive, she cant win can she against your behaviour, what would you prefer, that she tells you just what she must think of you, that would be good for you as you could then accuse her of attacking you verbally.
And how often does the husband take the children to visit the DIL's parents?
*isn’t present
Doodledog implied it and others quoted her post in agreement, so yes you did miss it.
Telling someone “one day you will be a mother in law and get sidelined by your son’s wife”, and agreeing with the sentiment is implying she’s responsible for her husband not seeing his parents and will one day experience the same.
That’s quite plain. Just because there are more rational voices that don’t agree with Doodledog’s sentiment doesn’t mean the attitude is present on the thread. I must have missed where I wasn’t allowed to comment on whatever I pleased.
Message deleted by Gransnet. Here's a link to our Talk guidelines.
Smileless2012
Has anyone said the OP is responsible for her husband's relationship with his parents BlessedArt? I must also have missed posts where the OP's been blamed for him not wanting to spend much time with his parents, if that is the case.
Agreed.
I don't believe others feel DIL is responsible for her H's relationships. If he wants to travel a distance to see his parents that's a choice he's made.
He will when he sees fit.
Has anyone said the OP is responsible for her husband's relationship with his parents BlessedArt? I must also have missed posts where the OP's been blamed for him not wanting to spend much time with his parents, if that is the case.
To add OP, I have two daughters and a son. Part of the reason I would never behave toward my DIL the way yours and some others have is because of my daughters. It would behoove some to think about how they’d feel if their own daughter was treated badly by a spouse’s parent. I suspect there are those who are threatened by a young woman standing up for herself. I’m not saying you shouldn’t have boundaries. I am not defending your MIL. I am merely speaking of accepting that her personality will not specifically yield the response you are expecting, so move forward understanding that.
I say again, the OP is not responsible for her husband’s relationship with his parents.
If he won’t go see his own parents without prompting from his wife, that issue predates the lad even meeting his wife. Whether it’s poor upbringing or his own aversion to their personalities, it’s not his wife’s fault he chooses not to spend so much time with his own parents. It’s misogynistic madness to blame the woman here, likely due to projection.
OP, expecting an apology is a lost cause. Even if you get it she won’t mean it. She won’t feel sorry and your goal shouldn’t be to make anyone feel what they don’t. The goal is to ensure she behaves respectfully toward you. That’s it. I think spending less time with your PIL is a good idea. I think your MIL has learned you will not be a doormat. The fact that she has reached out with her version of an olive branch solidifies this to me. This is the “win”. You have clearly stated your boundaries, which has likely altered the way she interacts with you going forward. That’s a good thing. Expecting more than that is making a rod for your own back.
I wouldn’t cut her off completely. Not unless she falls back into disrespectful treatment. For the sake of the entire family, it’s better to have respectful cordiality. I also would not allow anyone, grandparent or otherwise, to think that they can have a relationship with my child by circumventing a respectful relationship with me. All family members, young and older, must be respectful of each other if nothing else.
Yes there is Allira and yes it does.
Smileless2012
^So it's ok for the MIL to behave hurtfully and DIL should just accept it and not say anything?^ has anyone said she should Blue18?
Anyway she hasn't has she. She's told her m.i.l. what she thinks of how she's been treated and has decided she doesn't want to see her.
It's a two-way thing, Smileless.
There is always another side to the story.
And it does sound like a story!
So it's ok for the MIL to behave hurtfully and DIL should just accept it and not say anything? has anyone said she should Blue18?
Anyway she hasn't has she. She's told her m.i.l. what she thinks of how she's been treated and has decided she doesn't want to see her.
I have met a few dil just like you. You have got what you want, true your husband can visit his mother, thats nice of you, but
how do you think that makes him feel? Woukd you lije him to treAt your family the same? However thats not important is it? He will either go along with you for a quiet life, cut his parents off or decide this was not what marriage meant to him, not easy when there are children involved learning that's how you treat people. Thank goodness I have a lovely dil, don't see her as often as she does her own but that's perfectly natural. As for you saying she is passively aggressive, she cant win can she against your behaviour, what would you prefer, that she tells you just what she must think of you, that would be good for you as you could then accuse her of attacking you verbally.
Registering is free, easy, and means you can join the discussion, watch threads and lots more.
Register now »Already registered? Log in with:
Gransnet »Get our top conversations, latest advice, fantastic competitions, and more, straight to your inbox. Sign up to our daily newsletter here.