Anonymous wrote:Reasonable because she is not a mind-reader. If you want her to not bring food for the other Indians, tell her BEFORE she cooks. She may not be used to restaurant Indian and need to bring food for herself to avoid IBS. Now, had you privately and kindly explained it ahead of time like the wrestling mom whose MIL had a ego thing of not listening, then it would have ill-intent. Your MIL just sounds naive about what it rude in this country. Instead of calling her nuts, try using your words.Anonymous wrote:I am white, raised in the US. DH was born here, but ILs were born in India. When MIL comes to visit from out of state, she always brings food. Usually this is not a big deal. We eat it, or we don’t.
This time, the visit was around a big family event. We hosted a meal at our house for a mix of Indian and non-Indian friends and family members. (Everyone lives in the US and the Indian side of the family regularly eats a mix of Indian and Western food.) We had the meal catered and had tons of food, all of it vegetarian and meeting any stated dietary restrictions. In the middle of the meal, MIL starts pulling out her homemade food and pushing it on people.
It felt rude to me. It’s not her house, she’s not the host, we had plenty of food. DH thinks his mom is nuts in general, but does this seem reasonable to other people?
Reasonable because she is not a mind-reader. If you want her to not bring food for the other Indians, tell her BEFORE she cooks. She may not be used to restaurant Indian and need to bring food for herself to avoid IBS. Now, had you privately and kindly explained it ahead of time like the wrestling mom whose MIL had a ego thing of not listening, then it would have ill-intent. Your MIL just sounds naive about what it rude in this country. Instead of calling her nuts, try using your words.Anonymous wrote:I am white, raised in the US. DH was born here, but ILs were born in India. When MIL comes to visit from out of state, she always brings food. Usually this is not a big deal. We eat it, or we don’t.
This time, the visit was around a big family event. We hosted a meal at our house for a mix of Indian and non-Indian friends and family members. (Everyone lives in the US and the Indian side of the family regularly eats a mix of Indian and Western food.) We had the meal catered and had tons of food, all of it vegetarian and meeting any stated dietary restrictions. In the middle of the meal, MIL starts pulling out her homemade food and pushing it on people.
It felt rude to me. It’s not her house, she’s not the host, we had plenty of food. DH thinks his mom is nuts in general, but does this seem reasonable to other people?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am white, raised in the US. DH was born here, but ILs were born in India. When MIL comes to visit from out of state, she always brings food. Usually this is not a big deal. We eat it, or we don’t.
This time, the visit was around a big family event. We hosted a meal at our house for a mix of Indian and non-Indian friends and family members. (Everyone lives in the US and the Indian side of the family regularly eats a mix of Indian and Western food.) We had the meal catered and had tons of food, all of it vegetarian and meeting any stated dietary restrictions. In the middle of the meal, MIL starts pulling out her homemade food and pushing it on people.
It felt rude to me. It’s not her house, she’s not the host, we had plenty of food. DH thinks his mom is nuts in general, but does this seem reasonable to other people?
It’s cultural but like 50 years ago. My mom is 80 and wouldn’t even think of doing such thing. I actually can’t even imagine my late grandma doing it without discussing with the hostess, even if it’s her daughter or DIL.
Anonymous wrote:Cultural difference.
It would be rude of her to show up without bringing a dish. Indian moms feed people. It’s definitely a love language.
For the entire event not to have any food from the elder woman in the family would be weird and relegates her to the level of all the non family guests that just show up and eat.
Anonymous wrote:I am white, raised in the US. DH was born here, but ILs were born in India. When MIL comes to visit from out of state, she always brings food. Usually this is not a big deal. We eat it, or we don’t.
This time, the visit was around a big family event. We hosted a meal at our house for a mix of Indian and non-Indian friends and family members. (Everyone lives in the US and the Indian side of the family regularly eats a mix of Indian and Western food.) We had the meal catered and had tons of food, all of it vegetarian and meeting any stated dietary restrictions. In the middle of the meal, MIL starts pulling out her homemade food and pushing it on people.
It felt rude to me. It’s not her house, she’s not the host, we had plenty of food. DH thinks his mom is nuts in general, but does this seem reasonable to other people?