| Great, I agree with the fact that DILs want to host on their own. I love hosting and making a nice big, holiday. But the issue is that DILs have posted about MIL making a fuss and not wanting to come to their holiday celebration. Surely you've seen those? Why not just leave it alone if it is not about taking over? So, MIL won't come, she wants to be home, why post about how she won't come to DIL's house and is making a stink, if it is not about taking over the baton. DIL is offended MIL won't come, why? |
You haven't met mine then. One year she literally asked my husband to leave me and our young kids (baby and toddler) at home for the holiday break and come celebrate alone with her. Her reasoning was that it would be nice for the two of them to celebrate "like in the old days", and it was fine to leave us because the kids "didn't understand Christmas yet anyway" and I'm of a different religion. She was devastated, didn't speak to her son for months (and blamed me) when he said no. He declined before he even told me about it, but I'm sure it makes her feel better to think I made him say no. We did celebrate at home, like we always do, and she was invited to come join us, but she refused. I am not from the US either, though husband and MIL are. It saddens me that my MIL views me and her grandkids as competition. I have friends with awesome MILs who provide love and support and eagerly help with the kids. Mine only thinks about herself and shows interest in the grandchildren when it suits her. I should've known though... when my husband first introduced us, she refused to even acknowledge me and pointedly told her son not to rush things as she was in no hurry/not ready to become a grandma. (We were in our 30s and she was pushing 60). |
If we're thinking of the same thread, MIL is not just refusing to attend because she wants to be home, she's insisting on still hosting the entire family plus her friends. She wants to have her own celebration and expects to have the rest of the family there. |
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OP here. Maybe my observations are different because I don't know that many US DILs and MILs in person, but draw my conclusions on posts here. Here is one of threads that has stuck in my mind, where I can see that DIL will pick any reason to twart her MIL while at the same time being upset that MIL won't come visit.
http://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/683596.page |
Were you? |
NP. I don’t mind when my MIL didn’t come to a holiday. But then she called the day of and whined how she had no family, just neighbors, not the same. Lady, your family is all a 20-minute drive a way. You chose neighbors and your china pattern over your grandkids. Live your choices. |
So you are neither a DIL nor a MIL, plus you don't know many of them in person? Take. A. Seat. |
You haven’t met my ILs. Their greatest wish (often expressed) would be for me to take the kids away when they visit so my H could spend every waking moment with them. They don’t seem to realize that he wants to be the one taking the kids where they need to go when they visit just so he can get a break from their suffocating attention seeking. They also wish I would send him to visit on his own, which I have highly encouraged over the years, but again, he has zero interest. Oh my, the pouting when they came when we had an infant and I was on maternity leave and desperately looked forward to any time my husband was home after work or on the weekends so I could get 5 minutes to myself or take a shower that lasted more than a few minutes....they were so angry he wouldn’t just leave me with the 3 week old and drive them around to tour DC. |
In this particular thread, there was never a plan for MIL to host. MIL instead said that if she can't prep a turkey on Thanksgiving, she would rather spend the holiday away from her son and grandchild. DIL didn't want to drive for 7 hours with a toddler, which was her main reasoning for hosting. It's hard for me to understand why MIL was so upset about a precooked vs a homemade turkey. |
No, they are not. |
I am assuming that when OP says s/he doesn't have a Mil, it means s/he isn't married, which is the least shocking revelation of the decade. |
You have too much time on your hands. |
+1 Can you imagine if the wife is completely opposite the mother? Don't think that goes unnoticed by the MIL - sh&t *really* hits the fan! |
+1 This is really quite common - and the wife always somehow gets the blame! |
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I’ll agree with the article about what MIL and DIL are likely fighting over, but blaming all DILs for starting the family battles is just wrong. It’s like answering ‘what came first, the chicken or the egg.’
A DIL’s presence may trigger the problems but it doesn’t mean DIL started it. Just because MILs are older, it doesn’t necessarily mean they are emotionally mature and have healthy relationship skills. MILs may have undiagnosed and untreated personality disorders, same as some DILs. |