Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd say something to her, but be nice and as nonconfrontational as possible - "Hey, MIL, what were you looking for in my purse yesterday? That was sort of an awkward situation. If you need something, tell me and I'll help you get it, ok?"
I like this. Say it or email it to her. And next time hide some anal beads in there with a note "To DH, here are the beads you asked for!"
This is probably the nicest thing you can say to MIL about the incident. But if you don't want to say it to her (honestly, I don't know if I would want to, I'm rather non-confrontational that way) I'd just try to forget about the incident. Let it go; family harmony is worth it.
Family harmony is worth it ONLY if you think this was a one-time, anomalous thing, OP. Do you? Has she snooped before? If this is a pattern, you need to confront her via e-mail as suggested previously (so there is a record, yes), and if your husband doesn't like it, you say:
"It was a violation of my personal property. So I am handling this personally. Frankly, I would have asked you to help me address this issue, but you have a pattern of not backing me up or believing me when it comes to your mother, so you have lost the privledge of me consulting you before standing up for myself."
Anonymous wrote:You and your husband have a major problem if he doesn't believe you when you are telling the truth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, first of all, tell your husband.
The answer is that there is no good reason. She's snooping. Be wary.
I know his response - he will tell me I'm being ridiculous, she would never do that and I misjudged what I was seeing. Been down this road with other situations in the past, he'll just defend her and try to make me think I'm nuts for thinking she would do such a thing.
This is a far worse problem than MIL snooping.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd say something to her, but be nice and as nonconfrontational as possible - "Hey, MIL, what were you looking for in my purse yesterday? That was sort of an awkward situation. If you need something, tell me and I'll help you get it, ok?"
I like this. Say it or email it to her. And next time hide some anal beads in there with a note "To DH, here are the beads you asked for!"
This is probably the nicest thing you can say to MIL about the incident. But if you don't want to say it to her (honestly, I don't know if I would want to, I'm rather non-confrontational that way) I'd just try to forget about the incident. Let it go; family harmony is worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd say something to her, but be nice and as nonconfrontational as possible - "Hey, MIL, what were you looking for in my purse yesterday? That was sort of an awkward situation. If you need something, tell me and I'll help you get it, ok?"
I like this. Say it or email it to her. And next time hide some anal beads in there with a note "To DH, here are the beads you asked for!"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You and your husband have a major problem if he doesn't believe you when you are telling the truth.
Yes, this is true. This is only the case when it comes to his parents though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, first of all, tell your husband.
The answer is that there is no good reason. She's snooping. Be wary.
I know his response - he will tell me I'm being ridiculous, she would never do that and I misjudged what I was seeing. Been down this road with other situations in the past, he'll just defend her and try to make me think I'm nuts for thinking she would do such a thing.
Anonymous wrote:I'd say something to her, but be nice and as nonconfrontational as possible - "Hey, MIL, what were you looking for in my purse yesterday? That was sort of an awkward situation. If you need something, tell me and I'll help you get it, ok?"
Anonymous wrote:You and your husband have a major problem if he doesn't believe you when you are telling the truth.