Anonymous wrote:OMG, OP, are you sock puppeting here? There can't really be this many adults who think that their parents should be at their beck and call 24/7, can there? Are you all millennials?
OP and PPs, I'm the one who said I dealt with a serious neurological condition without demanding a relative move in and do everything I commanded. I don't think that makes me a martyr or even unusual - my neighbor managed 3 kids and a job while her husband was deployed to Afganistan. My other friend recovered from ACL surgery while working FT and raising kids (w/one overnight on the surgery day.) I have friends with cancer and Parkinsons; others who are caring for disabled kids and parents.
We all just get up and do what we have to do. Of course, family pitches in if they can - but that doesn't mean they move in for weeks and manage every single child/household related task exactly as we demand. Being responsible for yourself and your own family, even when you've got an injury or other issue, is not martyrdom; it's adulthood.
Anonymous wrote:OMG, OP, are you sock puppeting here? There can't really be this many adults who think that their parents should be at their beck and call 24/7, can there? Are you all millennials?
OP and PPs, I'm the one who said I dealt with a serious neurological condition without demanding a relative move in and do everything I commanded. I don't think that makes me a martyr or even unusual - my neighbor managed 3 kids and a job while her husband was deployed to Afganistan. My other friend recovered from ACL surgery while working FT and raising kids (w/one overnight on the surgery day.) I have friends with cancer and Parkinsons; others who are caring for disabled kids and parents.
We all just get up and do what we have to do. Of course, family pitches in if they can - but that doesn't mean they move in for weeks and manage every single child/household related task exactly as we demand. Being responsible for yourself and your own family, even when you've got an injury or other issue, is not martyrdom; it's adulthood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, you sound awful, OP. Your MIL is not your servant or slave! She's helping, presumably to the best of her ability, and you're furious that she hadn't taken out the trash before you returned home? And that she's not making freezer meals 24/7 or paying for your takeout? What planet do you live on where this is a requirement for family?
I say this as someone who had a serious neurological condition that prevented me from driving for 3 months and severely incapacitated me in most other respects. So I fully understand a medical emergency. But I somehow managed to work FT and care for 2 kids without ever expecting a relative to become my indentured servant.
Perhaps our conditions are different. I didn't ask for her to do an exceptional amount of work. Very discrete tasks.
You really are awful OP. Repeat after me: your MIL is helping you out, driving your kids, putting them to bed, helping get food on the table for everyone (yourself included.) The proper response to such help is gratitude.
If she's interfering with your ability to get work done (more, say, than wasting time on DCUM) then go into another room and close the door. Be an adult and tell her you need to focus. NBD.
But if you think your MIL is obligated to do everything you instruct her to do exactly as you see fit (and pay for your takeout too - what a cheapskate!) you've got a very transactional view of family. Unless you are suddenly paralyzed below the neck (which your DCUM posting rate suggests is not the case) you are still capable of managing basic tasks (even preparing for dinner believe it or not!)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, posters here are nuts. Your MIL sounds awful and I would absolutely INSIST that she leave now. Cut the visit short. She came UNDER THE PRETENSE of helping, and yet, she has done almost no helping. You have two small children, recent surgery and workin from home. She is a detriment not a help. I would tell DH that he tells his mother it's time to end the trip, or you are going to tell her yourself. You don't have to scream it in her face. I would just tell her that this situation isn't working out for you the way you had hoped, and due to that you are going to have to politely ask her to leave.
Then who is going to pick up the kids and entertain them while her DH isn't home?
Anonymous wrote:Op, posters here are nuts. Your MIL sounds awful and I would absolutely INSIST that she leave now. Cut the visit short. She came UNDER THE PRETENSE of helping, and yet, she has done almost no helping. You have two small children, recent surgery and workin from home. She is a detriment not a help. I would tell DH that he tells his mother it's time to end the trip, or you are going to tell her yourself. You don't have to scream it in her face. I would just tell her that this situation isn't working out for you the way you had hoped, and due to that you are going to have to politely ask her to leave.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Totally cool. I get that you don't have to agree with me. I have 12 pins and a screw bolting a bunch of iron rings to my leg. Completely and totally unsafe for a small wobbly child to be around and we told both moms (mine and MIL) I have strict doc's orders to not be alone with the kids. Perhaps I should have said that to start.
Is she leaving you alone with kids? Because it doesn't sound like it.
When she wants to prep up dinner after kids get home or run to get take out before DH is back, pretty much yeah.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, you sound awful, OP. Your MIL is not your servant or slave! She's helping, presumably to the best of her ability, and you're furious that she hadn't taken out the trash before you returned home? And that she's not making freezer meals 24/7 or paying for your takeout? What planet do you live on where this is a requirement for family?
I say this as someone who had a serious neurological condition that prevented me from driving for 3 months and severely incapacitated me in most other respects. So I fully understand a medical emergency. But I somehow managed to work FT and care for 2 kids without ever expecting a relative to become my indentured servant.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, you sound awful, OP. Your MIL is not your servant or slave! She's helping, presumably to the best of her ability, and you're furious that she hadn't taken out the trash before you returned home? And that she's not making freezer meals 24/7 or paying for your takeout? What planet do you live on where this is a requirement for family?
I say this as someone who had a serious neurological condition that prevented me from driving for 3 months and severely incapacitated me in most other respects. So I fully understand a medical emergency. But I somehow managed to work FT and care for 2 kids without ever expecting a relative to become my indentured servant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Totally cool. I get that you don't have to agree with me. I have 12 pins and a screw bolting a bunch of iron rings to my leg. Completely and totally unsafe for a small wobbly child to be around and we told both moms (mine and MIL) I have strict doc's orders to not be alone with the kids. Perhaps I should have said that to start.
Is she leaving you alone with kids? Because it doesn't sound like it.