Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pitch a fit that we wanted a small wedding and therefore she couldn’t invite every person she ever knew. Pitched an absolute fit and threatened not to pay for the wine, which we totally could have covered ourselves, but she had insisted on providing for us. Don’t be that MIL. Realize that your son and DIL are a new family unit and respect that.
Ha ha! We will pay for our kids weddings so they know that they have no say for the venue and our guest list.
Maybe, if you were getting married and paying for the wedding then each set of parents would get 20 guests on top of inviting relatives. I think that is very generous. Or, maybe you can price out how much it costs per person and allowed parents and siblings to invite who they want as long as they are paying for them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My MIL gifted me a Van Cleef bracelet right before the wedding.
You mean she GAVE you a bracelet. Stop with the “gifted” crap. We already have a word: give.
It was a gift, so she 'gifted'. You seem very triggered. No one cares for you?
Did she carefully curate the bracelet before she "gifted" it.
It's just so pretentious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My MIL gifted me a Van Cleef bracelet right before the wedding.
You mean she GAVE you a bracelet. Stop with the “gifted” crap. We already have a word: give.
It was a gift, so she 'gifted'. You seem very triggered. No one cares for you?
Anonymous wrote:Immediately after the ceremony, she hugged me and said "Welcome to the family!" And she clearly meant it.
Back story: I'm gay, and DW's family is Catholic. When we announced we were going to have a ceremony in four months (this was long before it was legal), future-MIL said "I don't think I can come that day." And she left the room.
So she evolved pretty far pretty fast. It meant a lot. I loved her like a mother.
Anonymous wrote:Aw, some of these responses are such nice ideas! Filing away for when my sons hopefully get married one day.
My MIL did nothing which is fine... but she's always just been so, so stingy that it's basically a character trait and a part of almost every interaction. That feels unwelcoming.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After the wedding, my MIL paid off my college student loan, 50K, and bought me a brand new Toyota RAV4. She treats me like I am her own daughter. I go out to lunch every Saturday afternoon with my MIL and SIL and we call ourselves the triplets.
I would be so uncomfortable with this so early in the marriage. Good for you that you're into it, but I'd feel awkward and indebted... like how do you decline a social invitation or favor from someone after that?
Anonymous wrote:All I ever wanted from my MIL was for her to consistently kind. I didn't need any gifts or celebrations. Just kindness. Didn't get it. I took the high road, but eventually we did need to distance ourselves because it was constant drama. She was that way with everyone though-very tormented soul.
It is a two way street. I am sure you contributed to the drama.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My MIL gifted me a Van Cleef bracelet right before the wedding.
You mean she GAVE you a bracelet. Stop with the “gifted” crap. We already have a word: give.
Anonymous wrote:Pitch a fit that we wanted a small wedding and therefore she couldn’t invite every person she ever knew. Pitched an absolute fit and threatened not to pay for the wine, which we totally could have covered ourselves, but she had insisted on providing for us. Don’t be that MIL. Realize that your son and DIL are a new family unit and respect that.
Anonymous wrote:My MIL gifted me a Van Cleef bracelet right before the wedding.