Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:you need to start putting sex toys in your closet and purse, things that will embarrass her and show her she has crossed the line and needs to leave you some privacy. Maybe hang a swing in the closet? whatever you can do to make her regret it
Thought of that! But we were at my BIL house and my nieces found a dancing pole in their bedroom. Of course they told this to my MIL. She called every single person and told that her DIL has it in her bedroom. So the toys in the closet not an option!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Close your bedroom door. My MIL would never go in my bedroom without permission or some real reason, like unpacking and putting a book on my bed for us, or to say hi to the dog.
God, if only this worked with my in-laws. If a door is closed, that's the first place they go.
Anonymous wrote:No not normal. She sounds like a mom to a mommas boy. Either jewish or italian.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No not normal. She sounds like a mom to a mommas boy. Either jewish or italian.
Stop with the bigoted stereotypes.
I'm Jewish and I thought I'd heard everything...is there a stereotype about Jewish women going through purses?
I think it has more to do with the one about being nosy. Don't be thick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No not normal. She sounds like a mom to a mommas boy. Either jewish or italian.
Stop with the bigoted stereotypes.
I'm Jewish and I thought I'd heard everything...is there a stereotype about Jewish women going through purses?
Anonymous wrote:Op here.
MIL worked before her retirement and was a breadwinner actually. However she never buys herself anything, another weird thing. She wears same stuff every single day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not super unusual, but completely inappropriate. MIL is probably of the generation where husband made all the money, it was his money, she got an allowance, and never got to get new clothes or accessories. Her big excitement came every other year when hubby got her a new coat for Christmas and it was supposed to move her to tears with gratitude. Set some boundaries, but pity her.
How old do you suppose the MIL is that she spent her adult years in the pre-womens'-lib era? Even if MIL is 90, it's still not normal to search someone's stuff and then cry when they ask you not to. It's mental illness/personality disorder, especially as OP says her MIL is not from one of the cultures where that kind of crazy, no-boundary behavior is often "acceptable."
If you can't be a grown-up and tell someone not to search you, and you quake at the thought of them gossiping about what they find, then you deserve the life you and your man-baby have together with his dysfunctional family.
I was born in 1981 and my own mother had this relationship with my father, as did the vast majority of my friends' mothers. Both my grandmothers (born in the 1930s) had the same. I know women now who live in similar roles.
I'm old enough to be your mom, so I lived it, and I didn't know anyone who received an allowance or had to get permission to buy clothes. This would have been considered an old-fashioned thing, even back then, to be controlled by one's husband if he were the main breadwinner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not super unusual, but completely inappropriate. MIL is probably of the generation where husband made all the money, it was his money, she got an allowance, and never got to get new clothes or accessories. Her big excitement came every other year when hubby got her a new coat for Christmas and it was supposed to move her to tears with gratitude. Set some boundaries, but pity her.
How old do you suppose the MIL is that she spent her adult years in the pre-womens'-lib era? Even if MIL is 90, it's still not normal to search someone's stuff and then cry when they ask you not to. It's mental illness/personality disorder, especially as OP says her MIL is not from one of the cultures where that kind of crazy, no-boundary behavior is often "acceptable."
If you can't be a grown-up and tell someone not to search you, and you quake at the thought of them gossiping about what they find, then you deserve the life you and your man-baby have together with his dysfunctional family.
I was born in 1981 and my own mother had this relationship with my father, as did the vast majority of my friends' mothers. Both my grandmothers (born in the 1930s) had the same. I know women now who live in similar roles.
Anonymous wrote:Op here.
MIL worked before her retirement and was a breadwinner actually. However she never buys herself anything, another weird thing. She wears same stuff every single day.