Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Offer some other suggestions. Grammy, Gigi, grandma first name, Nonna... Tell her any recognizable grandma name, but nothing that includes "mom."
Does DH back you up? If so, he can tell her. "Mom, please, don't be ridiculous. Pick something that doesn't have 'mom' in it."
You realize how ridiculous your words are? Grandmother, grandmom, grandma, all have "mom" in them. Why? Because she's the mother's mother or the father's mother. She is a mother of this child one generation removed. "Mom" is the mother. "Mom mom" is the a generation removed. Why is this so hard to process? And why would you make this your hill to die on? If you really want to be that nit-picky and control-freaky, you will alienate your MIL. Pick the battles worth fighting. And people wonder why so many DILs and MILs don't get along? This is why? Typically because someone (in this case the DIL) is being unreasonable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She probably has a friend or two with grand kids who call them that and now she wants to be called that too. New grandmas can be like little girls, wanting what their friends have, buying what their friends but grandchildren, comparing who does what, etc.
This is so true - my MIL wants to be called "nana" which is not a family name and both I and DH think sounds really dumb -- because her two best friends are nanas. Of course my poor mom, who is not a native English speaker, keeps asking DD if she had a good time when her "nanny" visited!
Anonymous wrote:
Offer some other suggestions. Grammy, Gigi, grandma first name, Nonna... Tell her any recognizable grandma name, but nothing that includes "mom."
Does DH back you up? If so, he can tell her. "Mom, please, don't be ridiculous. Pick something that doesn't have 'mom' in it."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ladies, dial back the drama. Nobody is sad, there will be no years of hard feelings and I am not a control freak. No matter how much a few of you complete strangers insist.
My baby will not be calling my MIL Mom and she has her very own name that is different from my mom's name. Win-win.
When DCUM agrees, listen. You may have "won" this one, but you sound neurotic, insecure and a bit of a diva.
+1.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ladies, dial back the drama. Nobody is sad, there will be no years of hard feelings and I am not a control freak. No matter how much a few of you complete strangers insist.
My baby will not be calling my MIL Mom and she has her very own name that is different from my mom's name. Win-win.
When DCUM agrees, listen. You may have "won" this one, but you sound neurotic, insecure and a bit of a diva.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She probably has a friend or two with grand kids who call them that and now she wants to be called that too. New grandmas can be like little girls, wanting what their friends have, buying what their friends but grandchildren, comparing who does what, etc.
This is so true - my MIL wants to be called "nana" which is not a family name and both I and DH think sounds really dumb -- because her two best friends are nanas. Of course my poor mom, who is not a native English speaker, keeps asking DD if she had a good time when her "nanny" visited!
Haha. My MIL is called "Nana," and we felt the same way about it. Seems ridiculous and is not a family name. DS called her "Nanny" for a long time because he was used to saying "Mommy" and "Daddy" that ended in "-y." Oh well!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She probably has a friend or two with grand kids who call them that and now she wants to be called that too. New grandmas can be like little girls, wanting what their friends have, buying what their friends but grandchildren, comparing who does what, etc.
This is so true - my MIL wants to be called "nana" which is not a family name and both I and DH think sounds really dumb -- because her two best friends are nanas. Of course my poor mom, who is not a native English speaker, keeps asking DD if she had a good time when her "nanny" visited!
Anonymous wrote:She probably has a friend or two with grand kids who call them that and now she wants to be called that too. New grandmas can be like little girls, wanting what their friends have, buying what their friends but grandchildren, comparing who does what, etc.

Anonymous wrote:Ladies, dial back the drama. Nobody is sad, there will be no years of hard feelings and I am not a control freak. No matter how much a few of you complete strangers insist.
My baby will not be calling my MIL Mom and she has her very own name that is different from my mom's name. Win-win.
Anonymous wrote:Ladies, dial back the drama. Nobody is sad, there will be no years of hard feelings and I am not a control freak. No matter how much a few of you complete strangers insist.
My baby will not be calling my MIL Mom and she has her very own name that is different from my mom's name. Win-win.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know a family who used the name "mama" for their one grandmother's name. Grandma has 4 children, who all call her mama, and it just became easier for the grandkids to call her that too. They all call their mothers "mommy" or "mom", so zero issues. It works for them. In our family we have:
Memaw
Grammy
Grandma
Nunna
Nana
Just a choosing your child's name is a very personal decision, so is what the grandparents decide to be called. It's a tad selfish on your part to veto something your MIL has been wanting to be called by your children. Very sad.
+1000
Not selfish, some MIL can be obxnious
MIL wants to be called a certain name. We're not talking Auntie or something ridiculous. Seriously OP, there are a TON of battles ahead and this is without question one that's not worth fighting. Let your dang MIL pick the name SHE is called. You're definitely selfish.