Anonymous wrote:20 min is not long enough to clean the house. She's acting like a baby and needs to get over herself. She has no boundaries. You did the right thing. Let her stew in her own juices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP Here. Thanks all for your feedback, it's always helpful to hear other viewpoints. I agreed with replies on both sides so I just sent her a text apologizing for the misunderstanding. I told her that reading through our text thread, I can see where she did what I asked. She told me that she'd be coming by and then texted when she was on her way. Then I said "I just think everyone has different opinions on advance notice and I hadn't really gone into detail with you about my preferences when we talked about it earlier. I'm glad we cleared thing up more now. Xo"
It really doesn't sound like you have cleared anything up. You haven't told her what advance notice means to you, what she can do that you would consider acceptable.. You have also decided the situation is resolved based only on your own feelings about it.
Anonymous wrote:I deal with this with My DH and his family as we just communicate and 'plan' differently. I learned to start communicating differently. For example: in response to her morning text I would have said "Great! We are excited to see you. I do have a few things planned for today so let me know what time I can expect you so I am sure to be home." or "Give me a head's up when you are about an hour away so I can be sure to be home." I would do this even if I am not going anywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DH needs to have a boundaries talk with her. The new baby is the perfect excuse. He should do it in the most loving way, but he needs to make her understand that just because you're a stay at home mom doesn't mean the door is always open Monday-Friday. (He can remind her that she most likely didn't allow her MIL into her day at every one of her MIL's whims.) You can't have this talk. It can only come from him because nothing he says to her will make her think less of him - but it will make her think less of you if you try telling her any of it. Have him take her out to lunch one day, just mother and son. She'll probably respond well if he tells her from the heart why certain boundaries during the week are important. DH and I went through the same thing. It's just 'growing pains' as I like to refer to it. But now, we're in a great groove with his mom (who also lives 20 minutes away!)
I hate when people say the husband has to step in. The OP is an adult and should be able to manage her own relationships with the people in her life. Nothing worse in family relationships than telling someone to tell someone else how you feel. I wouldn't even trust my husband with that conversation, because it's tempered by how he feels about each of us. Bad set up.
The OP handled it the way she wanted and now she's the only one who can determine if it had the desired effect. Sometimes the first solution you try isn't the one that works. That doesn't mean she's wrong or that it's not worth trying again.
Anonymous wrote:PP here. DH and I also have a rule in our house: I deal with all communication with my family, and he deals with all communication with his family. Your DH should maybe mention to his mom that the same way you don't expect him to communicate constantly with your parents, he doesn't expect you to constantly communicate with his family. It's so important for a balanced marriage, and just because you two had a baby doesn't mean you're suddenly obligated to constantly communicate with his mom.
Anonymous wrote:Your DH needs to have a boundaries talk with her. The new baby is the perfect excuse. He should do it in the most loving way, but he needs to make her understand that just because you're a stay at home mom doesn't mean the door is always open Monday-Friday. (He can remind her that she most likely didn't allow her MIL into her day at every one of her MIL's whims.) You can't have this talk. It can only come from him because nothing he says to her will make her think less of him - but it will make her think less of you if you try telling her any of it. Have him take her out to lunch one day, just mother and son. She'll probably respond well if he tells her from the heart why certain boundaries during the week are important. DH and I went through the same thing. It's just 'growing pains' as I like to refer to it. But now, we're in a great groove with his mom (who also lives 20 minutes away!)