One bag of chips which she clipped back up, put in another bag, and told us was being saved for tomorrow. |
| I don't really get the complaints about inlaws not "serving" you lunch. Cant you just open the frog and get something out? I wouldn't expect to be served multiple meals at someones house. |
I don’t think you understand the dynamic with these older people. You can’t just open the fridge without horribly offending them and causing a family row. Nor can you bring the food. Which is why that one poster has to fake that she won the Harry and David gift basket. |
I don't get this. Yes you can. Your spouse was their child. They grew up in that house opening the refrigerator and making themselves food when hungry when parents weren't cooking. But now as an adult they are too afraid to open the frig? Grow a backbone. This is insane. |
My MIL talks like this and my children and I are all on the low end of the healthy BMI and have low body fat. They also eat what is a healthy amount given their high activity level. Their aunt on my side of the family is a dietician who works with professional athletes. |
I usually give my kids only 1/2 of a big banana because otherwise it constipates them. Found this out through much trial and error. If it's a small banana they can have the whole thing without a problem. |
Yeah I usually split a giant one between my two toddlers for this reason. |
This is not relevant. The grandmother is a rude POS |
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Yeah, for some reason, many women as they grow older and eat less, whether due to decreased appetite or dieting for weight or health, forget that other people, especially younger adults and teens eat a lot more. And due to their own food anxieties, whether it is cost, time invested in shopping, prepping, cooking or just weight/health concerns, they find that people who eat differently than them are making bad choices or condemning them for their diet.
The best thread on this feeding anxiety, was not about in-laws per se, but a mother who said she was having trouble keeping her family (two adults, two teen boy athletes, an 8 year old and a 3 year old) fed. She was surprised that one package of 10 drumsticks or one rack of ribs wasn't enough to feed her family. https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/15/465595.page#6825369 And one respondent hit it on the head with one of my favorite DCUM quotes:
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First, there may not be anything to eat in that fridge Second, there are MILs who make a point of declaring that the kitchen is closed. So yes, you can go in there and help yourself, but there will be an argument as a result. I'm willing to deal with the argument, but it sucks |
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My dad had gotten weird about food as he’s gotten older. Last time we visited, we all went to a late afternoon cocktail party (people in my parents’ town loooove to throw cocktail parties), and my dad decided that the appetizers we’d had there were a sufficient stand-in for dinner.
Or he’ll decide that he isn’t very hungry for lunch and will just have a little fruit and cheese, and therefore the rest of us should as well. Or, someone will have a small snack in the afternoon, so he’ll decide that dinner now must get pushed back by a few hours. Happily, my mother is still normal about food and just overrules him. |
There probably just isn’t a ton of food in the fridge honestly. My IL’s go out for a lot of meals and mostly have condiments and their own leftovers in the fridge. We bring a lot of our own food when we visit. Learned that one the hard way a few years ago. |
LOL. I was never allowed to make food or gets snacks in my house growing up. Ever. |
Same. My in laws never keep much in the fridge or cabinets and are weird about the kitchen so I just keep a lot of snacks for the kids and their water bottles in my bag/the car. |
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My elderly, widowed, skinny mom doesn’t understand the need to have a fully stocked refrigerator: not in her house and certainly not in my house with a family of 5. She was a SAHM of 4.
We are doing a modest renovation in our small kitchen and will finally add some much-needed pantry and storage space. My mom is obsessed with and fixated upon what exactly we will store in this new space - she has a lovely walk in pantry that is carefully arranged with just a few food items on each shelf. She truly can’t understand how much (and how well) we eat. |