Anonymous
Post 10/30/2025 19:51     Subject: MIL told DD “I love you more than I love your dad.” What now?

Anonymous wrote:Does anyone here watch what lies beneath? People like this are energy vampires or emotion vampires. They want you to be upset. Why reward that? It just makes them stronger.

The Michelle Pfiefer horror movie?
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2025 19:01     Subject: MIL told DD “I love you more than I love your dad.” What now?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Whew, thanks everyone. I was worried this was the beginning of the manipulation of DD. No one sees it as that? If not, I won’t needlessly upset DH. Thank you!


Oh no, it is definitely the beginning of manipulation. I can't believe other people can't see that!! I would mention it to your DH, but do not involve your DD in that conversation.


Absolutely this! And I agree that the MIL will feed off any drama it creates among the adults. She lit a little fuse by talking to the child and will only have achieved her goal if you let it blow up. Be as measured as possible with your daughter but do let her know that it is not the way parents typically talk about their children and that she can feel free to let grandma know that speaking badly about her father is upsetting to her. My MIL is always trying to snare me and the kids into complaining about other family members. I just starve it at the source and refuse to engage. It’s emotional immaturity plain and simple. Sorry OP!
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2025 16:57     Subject: MIL told DD “I love you more than I love your dad.” What now?

Anonymous wrote:What’s the problem with her loving her grandchild more than her son? You just like attention and want to make a big deal over nothing?


Again, read the OP. That's not the problem.
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2025 16:50     Subject: MIL told DD “I love you more than I love your dad.” What now?

I agree with the above poster. MIL should not be using a 9 year old as a sounding board for her complaints. Badmouthing the child's father to the child is also bad. I'd not lie to the girl. The grandma isn't "silly" or mean something else. DD is uncomfortable for a reason. Do not gaslight her out of trusting her own reactions. Let the 9 yo choose whether to go with MIL on future outings. MIL cannot undermine your three person family.
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2025 14:21     Subject: MIL told DD “I love you more than I love your dad.” What now?

Anonymous wrote:OP here. Whew, thanks everyone. I was worried this was the beginning of the manipulation of DD. No one sees it as that? If not, I won’t needlessly upset DH. Thank you!


Oh no, it is definitely the beginning of manipulation. I can't believe other people can't see that!! I would mention it to your DH, but do not involve your DD in that conversation.
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2025 13:48     Subject: MIL told DD “I love you more than I love your dad.” What now?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Here is what you say "Boomers are so crazy. What a weird thing to say." The sooner she realizes that this woman is going to say a lot of crazy shit and she should ignore it, the better.


It's not the generation--it's the person. "Grandma can be selfish and say mean things sometime when she's disappointed that people don't do what she wants. Just know that she loves you and Dad."


This pulls the kid right into the middle of the drama and is just as unfair to kid as what grandma did. Two wrongs don’t make a right here.
Keep kid out of drama. Do not feed the beast.


It's the truth.
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2025 13:40     Subject: MIL told DD “I love you more than I love your dad.” What now?

Does anyone here watch what lies beneath? People like this are energy vampires or emotion vampires. They want you to be upset. Why reward that? It just makes them stronger.
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2025 13:36     Subject: MIL told DD “I love you more than I love your dad.” What now?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Here is what you say "Boomers are so crazy. What a weird thing to say." The sooner she realizes that this woman is going to say a lot of crazy shit and she should ignore it, the better.


It's not the generation--it's the person. "Grandma can be selfish and say mean things sometime when she's disappointed that people don't do what she wants. Just know that she loves you and Dad."


This pulls the kid right into the middle of the drama and is just as unfair to kid as what grandma did. Two wrongs don’t make a right here.
Keep kid out of drama. Do not feed the beast.
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2025 13:28     Subject: MIL told DD “I love you more than I love your dad.” What now?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I get the idea that DH should handle his mother but this would be teaching MIL she can get his attention by saying things to DD. I'd just ignore.

Exactly. That’s exactly how triangulation works. She will then know she succeeded. I don’t know what I would do, to be honest. That’s a tough spot.


I just posted about my difficult mil and I really think that making a “thing” out of this just makes her successful. People llle that feed off drama, especially negative drama. Just starve it by refusing to see the drama behind the passive aggressive statements. Cheerful obliviousness is the most successful strategy, along with deciding where your limits are (for example we turned down trust funds for your kids because we didn’t want her to use that as a power play or to give her our kids social security numbers).


That is commendable. Many people allow an inheritance to be held over their heads.
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2025 13:26     Subject: MIL told DD “I love you more than I love your dad.” What now?

What’s the problem with her loving her grandchild more than her son? You just like attention and want to make a big deal over nothing?
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2025 13:26     Subject: MIL told DD “I love you more than I love your dad.” What now?

Anonymous wrote:Op tell us you don’t care for your MIL without telling us .


Sounds like she's justified.
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2025 13:26     Subject: MIL told DD “I love you more than I love your dad.” What now?

Just say grandma sometimes says crazy things just ignore her when she does
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2025 13:24     Subject: MIL told DD “I love you more than I love your dad.” What now?

Anonymous wrote:Here is what you say "Boomers are so crazy. What a weird thing to say." The sooner she realizes that this woman is going to say a lot of crazy shit and she should ignore it, the better.


It's not the generation--it's the person. "Grandma can be selfish and say mean things sometime when she's disappointed that people don't do what she wants. Just know that she loves you and Dad."
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2025 13:18     Subject: MIL told DD “I love you more than I love your dad.” What now?

Here is what you say "Boomers are so crazy. What a weird thing to say." The sooner she realizes that this woman is going to say a lot of crazy shit and she should ignore it, the better.
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2025 13:10     Subject: MIL told DD “I love you more than I love your dad.” What now?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I get the idea that DH should handle his mother but this would be teaching MIL she can get his attention by saying things to DD. I'd just ignore.

Exactly. That’s exactly how triangulation works. She will then know she succeeded. I don’t know what I would do, to be honest. That’s a tough spot.


I just posted about my difficult mil and I really think that making a “thing” out of this just makes her successful. People llle that feed off drama, especially negative drama. Just starve it by refusing to see the drama behind the passive aggressive statements. Cheerful obliviousness is the most successful strategy, along with deciding where your limits are (for example we turned down trust funds for your kids because we didn’t want her to use that as a power play or to give her our kids social security numbers).