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She will never change.
She will never do what you envision. She likely cannot. Keeping planning how to get her to change...stop. Plan how to bound your family's exposure and reactions. |
Exactly. I feel it's only one or two posters who post continually about sucking it up - maybe they don't even read the OP. I would never do that in this scenario. You are entirely correct that parents accept behavior from a small child that they should not accept from anyone else. I would put my foot down here and teach MIL consequences. Either she learns it, or she doesn't, but at least she's not in my house. |
| Just tell your DH to tell her she can come but everyone expects best behavior. |
NP but if she did that I’d probably ignore her. Like id keep cooking Christmas Eve dinner and I’d keep helping the kids with a holiday craft. I’d occasionally say something like “we are decorating cookies in the dining room , MIL, if you want to join us!” and then ignore whatever it is she mumbles and keep decorating cookies. “We are heading out to walk the dog, just me and older DS, if you want to join us!” and then start putting coats and shoes on and go, with or without her. Like basically just pretend she is a goldfish that you tell what it is you’re about to do. If she tries to huff at the end of the day and say she feels unwelcome you can say “I invited you to decorate cookies, and to take a walk, and to help with lunch prep, and to come watch Elf in the family room with us, and you chose not to. Sorry you feel unwelcome though. See you tomorrow.” I think it’s important to continue to invite/ offer while she is there, for your kids to see that, and also as a buffer for if the kids overhear her saying everyone ignores her and doesn’t like her or whatever. Because you can give objective examples that you’ve tried to include her. This will help your kids not feel bad when she says that and wonder if maybe they aren’t doing enough to make her feel welcome. And if your kids start to express that they feel bad or guilty then stop inviting her, put your foot down. Their mental health is more important |
THIS! There was recently a post around Thanksgiving about, I think, a MIL complaining that she didn’t feel welcome or hosted properly and someone compared it to their child complaining to them that dinner didn’t taste good, as if it’s normal for adults to complain that the meal wasn’t good when being hosted in another’s home. That’s behavior we expect from children, not someone old enough to be a grandparent. |
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"Sorry MIL, we are incredibly busy this year. Let's catch up in January when things calm down."
She can lie in her bed. |
My mother used to not get along with my dad’s family and would do this when I was a kid. She’d take my younger sibling and announce she was “going for a walk”. It was honestly so strange. Everyone knew why, and it felt so rude to me, even as a child. I don’t think this is the way to handle things, honestly. My mother should have just sent us with our dad. OP should just send her husband and no longer host. |
NP- oh, nooo no no. I think your main problem is the feeling like you need to sit in the living room with her while she pouts. No wonder you are miserable when she comes over for the holiday. You greet her, hang up her coat, ask if she’d like a drink or a snack, sit with her for 5 min, then get up and go about your day. Same for the whole family. I would make sure each kid sat with her for at least 5 min to chat, to be polite, but then they’d know they were free to move along and keep playing or reading or whatever. I’d invite her to join you with stuff- like decorating cookies in the kitchen or whatever- but I would never feel obligated to “sit and visit” silently and awkwardly for more than 5 minutes. |
And if someone returns to say "oh but she has a mental illness", no, that's not an excuse either. There are plenty of mental health disorders that do not express themselves with hostility, lies and gaslighting. Mentally ill people who are pleasant do not have the same social outcomes as mentally ill people who are unpleasant, that's obvious. The family should not make themselves miserable just because their relative is "ill" and somehow that gives them a pass to act in hateful ways. I make a distinction between quirky "weird" behavior that doesn't hurt anyone, and personal attacks that are intentional and willfully nasty. |
What? I’m talking about OP continuing to live her life while MIL is there. If OP and her son are going to walk the dog, then they walk the dog and invite MIL along for the walk. It’s not weird or strange. Are you saying in this circumstance the dog should poop on the floor in the house and OP should not walk it? Because it would be rude? |
You're blaming your mother for going along and not making waves? Wow, you're sick. She was living at a time when rejecting one's parents and in-laws was even more shocking than today. Perhaps there would have been dire consequences if your mother had rebelled like this. Maybe give your mother a little grace. |
| Haven't read all the responses. if he wants to see her without kids, by all means let him! If he insists on dragging the kids into this and isn't open to negotiation, then I would get marital counseling. He is an adult, but children must be protected. |
I've stopped reading after this post, OP, because I can't believe all the stupid, non-supportive replies you are getting. There are a lot of socially inept people out there. I agree with the PPs advice. The first critical thing here is whether your husband wants to see his mom or not. What she is doing is EXTREMELY annoying, but potentially negotiable if you re-orient your thinking. If he didn't want to see her but has never had the ability to say that to her, you could cut her off, problem solved. But if he does, which it seems he does, you can only control your own reactions and try to insulate your kids from the nonsense. As PP says, when she has her grand gesture of departure, just shrug. And when she comes back, I would treat the drama with the same nonchalance. |
Pp here. DH is very understanding and sympathetic to my BIL. He knows my brother’s mood affects me greatly. If my brother is having an episode, I don’t bring my kids around him. My oldest is a teen and is a really mature and empathic kid. He actually tells ME to be more understanding of my brother and how he can’t help it when my brother upsets me. |
Meant sympathetic to my bipolar brother. I am much less tolerant of my MIL. Both BIL (DH’s brother) and I are bothered by MIL. She knows how to upset us! |