Anonymous wrote:Did you invite them to come to you for Christmas? I can see them being bummed about your having to stay home, but then they thought of a way to “salvage” Christmas, since they might be unlikely to invite themselves to your house.
As a rule, I try to not get upset about a request. People can ask anything, and I can always say no. I have to be okay with saying no, and not blame them for my no.
Anonymous wrote:Did you invite them to come to you for Christmas? I can see them being bummed about your having to stay home, but then they thought of a way to “salvage” Christmas, since they might be unlikely to invite themselves to your house.
As a rule, I try to not get upset about a request. People can ask anything, and I can always say no. I have to be okay with saying no, and not blame them for my no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did she suggest that your husband and child spend Christmas away from you? Or did she just suggest they still visit without out (but not necessarily for Christmas)?
If it's the former, I would be annoyed too. Maybe a compromise would be for your husband and child to visit another time over winter break without you, while still spending Christmas home with you.
Christmas. Other siblings are coming to them and she wants husband there at the same time. Which I get, and I also really wanted our kid to have time with all of her cousins, but then this happened.
I’m at risk of preterm labor so I don’t really want my husband out of town right now, but we did invite them to visit at some point in the near future and they haven’t gotten back to us on that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was a ridiculous, misguided, ill thought out request but you need to let it go. Unless she has a history of cutting you out of things, or started laying in pressure when your husband said no, there is nothing to be gained from holding a grudge for this moment of poor judgement.
This. OP is pregnant and stressed and scared, and therefore likely (like everyone) to displace all that onto something unrelated. That's normal but you can't let it ruin important relationships.
Try to frame it as a funny story about loving family being foolish.
Anonymous wrote:It was a ridiculous, misguided, ill thought out request but you need to let it go. Unless she has a history of cutting you out of things, or started laying in pressure when your husband said no, there is nothing to be gained from holding a grudge for this moment of poor judgement.
Anonymous wrote:This was crappy of her for sure. I recommend that you reframe it in your mind- it’s not a personal attack on you. It was her coping badly with her disappointment at the holiday plans changing. She made a bad decision and your husband handled it swiftly. Move on and take the high road.
Anonymous wrote:How far away is out of town? Like a plane ride away, he shouldn’t go at all.
A 3 hour car trip and he could go either before or after Christmas Day to see all the relatives.
You can have a break from parenting for a couple of days and relax and rest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow , yes, that was very selfish and not empathetic at all. I can’t imagine asking my son to leave his wife alone at Christmas ever, much less when she’s going through something like this! That being said, I think, never wanting to speak to her again, is a slight overreaction, although I wouldn’t be opposed to sending some poop in the mail to her.
you and OP sound like you are about 12 years old. No contact? Poop in the mail? GTFO. Grow up. Life does not revolve around either of you!!!
You step off. I'd be mad as holy heck too and it would permanently change the way I think about MIL. What kind of b suggests a husband leave his wife when she is having pregnancy complications and even worse during the holidays? She's a selfish b who made clear what she thinks of her dil. It sounds like she isn't even concerned about the issues op is dealing with.