Anonymous wrote:Ok. Wow. First, yes, this stinks. But secondly, you're a little too wrapped up in the drama yourself.
Yes, your MIL is a bitch of the highest order, but like your husband (and likely because of your husband!), you're getting sucked into the "trying to please her" mode.
This should be a "can you believe the shit my MIL pulled this time" kind of reaction, not crying all morning reaction.
This is tough love: You need to grow a spine. As a PP said, take the invites, box them up, mail them to her.
And then disengage. Do not get sucked into the crazy. Your parents are actually a pretty good model for you. They think she is ridiculous, don't they? So work on strengthening your core values - your MIL is ridiculous. You put up with a certain level of that ridiculousness because she is your child's grandmother and husband's mother. But don't take it personally.
Feel sorry for her - how crazily insecure she must be. How horrifically embarrassed she must be by her husband's behavior, losing control of himself in your house. So she reacts by deflecting attention and making everyone else wrong. That is her coping mechanism.
Just rise above. Detach. Don't get sucked in emotionally. EVERYONE knows she is ridiculous. A ridiculous person has no power over you.
Now, as to your husband - sit back and watch this carefully. I agree, texting you these pictures is incredibly emotionally manipulative. But that's his coping mechanism with his crazy family. If he is unable to be a man of his own family (you, your child, and him), and separate himself from his family of origin, then yes, I would say your only hope is counseling.
My ex had similar issues with his crazy parents (one alcoholic and one enabler), and my MIL was seriously awful to me on several occasions, while ex was in the room. He did nothing. He was incapable of doing anything. He literally sat there while his mother ripped me a new one over nothing. And in front of our young DD. Get counseling, and hopefully he will dial in and realize that YOU and your children are his primary family now, not his parents. If he can't step up, then get ready for a rocky ride. My marriage could not survive, and ex never had the guts to do the hard emotional work it takes to heal from his childhood, or the strength to set boundaries with his parents. It was easier to bail out on his wife and kids. Good luck.