Anonymous wrote:My MIL does this. It annoys me too sometimes. I've started just agreeing with her in a super over the top way. I'll chime in "oh yes, I know Larla LOVES her daddy so much! It's adorable!" or "I know, he's such a good dad! She's really lucky to have him" and on and on and on.
Anonymous wrote:Meh. It's not a big deal.
I would encourage MIL/FIL to think of DS as "daddy's son". Then I would suggest that they fund their grandchild's college fund very generously - because he is "daddy's son".
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Anonymous wrote:Nope - not going to flame. These people are asses and your husband is TOTALLY wrong for not standing up for you. It's amazing how stupid stereotypes get imbedded really early. Epic in-law fail. Epic DH fail.
For the record, I was always the 'cheerful stupid' child in the opinion of my grandparents on my dad's side. I knew this by age three (it didn't help that I was left handed like my mom- just to give you a further indication of what these people were like).
I won't bang on about the fact that it now appears I am not as dim-witted as they thought (I am still mostly cheerful FYI) but no one close to me will ever put my kids in a box and try and keep them there. And if my husband bought into that kind of "me against/more preferred than you" toxic muck I would visit upon him something dire. You cannot change your in-laws but I hope to hell you can impress on your husband how wrong his buying into this is for your family dynamic.
Sorry if I sound strident (maybe that's the intellectually inadequate bit coming out) but you do need to deal with this. It's not just a phrase or a moniker, it's a power issue that needs to be addressed. Strong respected women grow strong respectable boys. Disrespected women have far greater challenges. Put your foot down OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is a one-year-old. My inlaws enjoy referring to him as Daddy's boy, saying Daddy is his favorite person etc etc etc, even recently telling me that if I wanted to have better luck capturing video of him walking I should film him while standing next to his father so he had motivation to walk towards me.
I find this incredibly hurtful --- as if to inspire competition or drive a wedge between DH and myself. My family doesn't do this --- I've asked my husband to say something to his parents, and he hasn't. In fact he seems to enjoy perpetuating this image.
I'm trying not to be petty so if that's how this comes across, please flame away --- maybe I need the reality check. Recently returned to work FT so maybe that's why this stings. Not sure how to nip this in the bud.
If it bothers you, have you thought about saying something to them? I understand having each spouse handle their parents, but I think if you are in the room and they are repeatedly saying stuff that hurts you, it makes sense to speak up. Maybe you are being overly sensitive, but why not let them know that? Unless they are in general hurtful people who don't like you and have made it known in the past, perhaps you should assume that they really don't know that this is bothering you. If I was saying something that was hurting someone I cared about, I would want them to tell me so I could stop.
NO! It is stupid to even give this thought, and stupid to even be hurt by it. I hate to type that because feelings are valid, but OMG. You will probably laugh that you even felt this way 2-3 years from now. Just let.it.go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is a one-year-old. My inlaws enjoy referring to him as Daddy's boy, saying Daddy is his favorite person etc etc etc, even recently telling me that if I wanted to have better luck capturing video of him walking I should film him while standing next to his father so he had motivation to walk towards me.
I find this incredibly hurtful --- as if to inspire competition or drive a wedge between DH and myself. My family doesn't do this --- I've asked my husband to say something to his parents, and he hasn't. In fact he seems to enjoy perpetuating this image.
I'm trying not to be petty so if that's how this comes across, please flame away --- maybe I need the reality check. Recently returned to work FT so maybe that's why this stings. Not sure how to nip this in the bud.
If it bothers you, have you thought about saying something to them? I understand having each spouse handle their parents, but I think if you are in the room and they are repeatedly saying stuff that hurts you, it makes sense to speak up. Maybe you are being overly sensitive, but why not let them know that? Unless they are in general hurtful people who don't like you and have made it known in the past, perhaps you should assume that they really don't know that this is bothering you. If I was saying something that was hurting someone I cared about, I would want them to tell me so I could stop.
Anonymous wrote:DS is a one-year-old. My inlaws enjoy referring to him as Daddy's boy, saying Daddy is his favorite person etc etc etc, even recently telling me that if I wanted to have better luck capturing video of him walking I should film him while standing next to his father so he had motivation to walk towards me.
I find this incredibly hurtful --- as if to inspire competition or drive a wedge between DH and myself. My family doesn't do this --- I've asked my husband to say something to his parents, and he hasn't. In fact he seems to enjoy perpetuating this image.
I'm trying not to be petty so if that's how this comes across, please flame away --- maybe I need the reality check. Recently returned to work FT so maybe that's why this stings. Not sure how to nip this in the bud.