Anonymous wrote:Says things like "mommy needs to go away so I can be alone with my baby" or "your mommy is keeping me from my baby" or "grammy was a teacher so she knows best" to my child
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ My MIL also created a nursery in her house that was better outfitted Thant he baby's space at our home. Don't worry, in the end junk like this doesn't matter to the kids.
Thanks. I'm just mortified (as the mom) she had the gall to ask people for all this stuff. I'm sure some of the guests (yeah, she invited over 100 people) assume I was the greedy one, when I wasn't even invited and had zero say in it.
Anonymous wrote:She's only ever given my kids cheap clothes. Suddenly, her daughter is pregnant and she's trying to buy them everything form high end strollers to cribs, etc.
They don't need the money. We are doing okay too. I'm more annoyed because I feel like my kids are now tossed aside.
Anonymous wrote:MIL is over and decides she's thirsty. Pours a glass of water, takes two sips, leaves on the counter. Wants tea. Makes tea, takes two sips, leaves up cup on the counter. Decides she wants more water. Gets new glass, pours more water, takes a few sips, leaves in living room. Repeat over and over. Dirty glasses and cups everywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have 3 kids. MIL sends to each an outfit, a book, and a toy for each holiday for which Hallmark makes a card. This includes Thanksgiving, which apparently to her is the holiday where you are thankful not only for the things you have but also for the new things you get. MIL also brings an outfit, a book, and a toy for each child each time she visits. DS, 3, has started to greet her with "what present did you bring?" I can't be bothered to correct him.
This makes you sound a lot worse than your MIL.
Agree. She sounds lonely and like shopping for her grandkids gives her something to do.
Do the math on how much stuff that is. I feel for the PP here--in large part because the fact that she probably is lonely and needs something to do is at play here. Way better if MIL could find something more useful to do.
Useful according to who? Leave MIL alone. Shopping clearly keeps her happy. Sorry you don't deem that useful enough.
I'm the PP. I have read and occasionally contributed to the many, many threads pitting younger-generation DILs who don't particularly value the acquisition of stuff and whose kids have plenty already vs. the older-generation MILs who enjoy giving gifts and showing love by the bequeathing of stuff. It's intractable. I see both sides. But, this is a thread about slightly irritating things your ILs do and it is slightly (or perhaps VERY) irritating that she continues to inundate us with stuff that we don't want or need, after DH has asked her to tone it down, after I have asked her to tone it down, and after the older kids have very clearly showed that they are spoiled by her largesse. This is not a question of any of this being useful. It is not useful. I wind up rolling the less-recent gifts off to Goodwill (clothes), our elementary (books), and the trash (toys) after a couple weeks when they're not being used.
Anonymous wrote:My in-laws eat the same thing for breakfast and lunch at the same time every single day. When visiting for a week I get really tired of a turkey sandwich for lunch every. day. at noon. But I'm always hungry so I eat it since all I had for breakfast was an english muffin with jam.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have 3 kids. MIL sends to each an outfit, a book, and a toy for each holiday for which Hallmark makes a card. This includes Thanksgiving, which apparently to her is the holiday where you are thankful not only for the things you have but also for the new things you get. MIL also brings an outfit, a book, and a toy for each child each time she visits. DS, 3, has started to greet her with "what present did you bring?" I can't be bothered to correct him.
This makes you sound a lot worse than your MIL.