Agree. .i don't believe the problem is MIL. |
+1 "firmly stated". Pretty sure that means yell or shriek |
Ops perpective is clearly tainted when you read all tyat she is doing to that poor dog to prolongue its misery. I would not be surprised if MILs "push" was not a push at all but rather a typical nudge one might give any animal that jumped up on furniture to "cuddle" with someone who did not want the thing crawling on them. |
So if I do it to a kid, that would be okay? I don't want that on me. Humans are animals, especially untrained children. |
| I do NOT think it's ok for her to shove your dog like that. But can't you see how nuts it is if you let the dog lick the baby yet you ask her to wash her hands?? |
And she's such a dumbo, she can't even spell "niece." |
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I don't understand why you're ganging up on OP. Her house, her rules. I'd never think of providing this level of care to a dog, but WTF. It's her dog, her money, her family.
OP, I'm with DH on this one. It will blow over, so just forget it. Maybe weasel out of the MIL visit next time. You two clearly have no lost love for each other. DH can see her by himself, if he wants to. |
I'm sure there are plenty of hotels in the area. Just sayin'. |
+1 I would be skeeved if someone's dog jumped up on the furniture I was on. I wouldn't "push" the dog but I'd definitely nudge it. I think someone who lets their dog on the couch stepped over the threshold of "I have a dog I love" to "my dog is my best friend and we have matching sweaters!". I LOVE my dog btw, but he knows the couch is off limits. |
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Hurting a pet is never okay. For PPs who are saying the guest's comfort comes first, that is true, but it does not justify putting an animal in pain. OP would've moved the dog if MIL had asked.
MIL is not invited back while the dog is there. Period. |
If MIL is abusive and crazy (and she is!), then it is an important relationship for the grandchildren to avoid. We don't spend much time with my abusive, mentally ill MIL for exactly that reason. She wrecked my DH's childhood and young adulthood. He has nothing good to say about her as a parent. Why on earth would we allow her to have a major role in our children's lives? |
OP said at that moment "Don't push the dog" and she did it anyway. She didn't forget. She decided that OP wasn't going to tell her what to do and pushed the dog. In order to prove a point to her DIL, she injured an animal. |
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I push dogs off of me all the time. I don't like them jumping on me or touching me or licking me (sick). It's why I don't own a dog. If your dog sat on the couch next to me, I might give it a push away, but not hard enough to hurt it. HOWEVER, if you made it clear I'd hurt the dog, I'd apologize because that was not my intention. And then I'd probably avoid your house since I have to treat your dog like a gentle ice crystal and I can't deal with that. I think it's respectful to keep animals away from visitors. I still think your MIL should have apologized for hurting the dog, because hurting an animal isn't ok, eve if it wasn't intentional.
If your dog is in such a delicate condition, I'd keep her away from visitors. If I knew your dog liked the couch, I'd avoid sitting on the couch and sit somewhere else. It sounds like there are deeper issues here, however. I'd definitely keep the dog away from your MIL in the future. |
All we know is she pushed a dog off the couch. If a dog can't take the two foot drop from the couch to the floor, the dog should not be on the couch. Forcefully pushing due to anger is wrong, and kind of violent, but a nudge is not and OP seems a little hysterical so I'm not sure which occurred. We do not know the MIL is crazy. I have a hunch that these two women always hated each other and this has nothing to do with the dog. |
MIL was told not to push the dog and she did it anyway, hurting the dog. MIL is crazy or evil. Take your pick. |