Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always thought that once you are a mother you should celebrate Mother's Day the weekend later or something. Since I was a daughter long before I was a mother I feel like I have to show up for my own mom and it can't be about me. I honestly wish we could have a separate day just for my mother's day.
Or you can all celebrate all the Moms of the family together?
If this is the only problem in your life then you live a very privileged life. Remember that your mindset is creating hell in your mind. Instead of a blissful life, you are living in a poverty mindset.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I block MIL for one day so I don't have to see her "Happy Mother's Day" text (I'm not her mother, or her daughter) and won't see if she calls. It's my one day a year of not having to deal with her fake BS.
She's called me overweight to my face after I had an extreme health issue that required heavy-duty steroids. She's told me she likED (past tense, liked) me "before I had kids and changed." She asks me for my family recipes after deliberately telling me I can't have a certain cookie recipe because "I'm not family and it's a family recipe." So I feel fully justified in blocking her for one damn day.
This "nobody should wish me Happy Mother's Day" is super petty. I bet your spouse does! It's not like infants do anything or even know that we're their mothers. I wish Happy Mother's Day to colleagues that I'm close to and friends, who do the same. When someone wishes you Merry Christmas! it's not because they think you're the Christ! Or Happy Easter because they think you're an Easter Bunny. You can do what you want, but please don't post this insanity as if it's something normal and acceptable. Your MIL KNOWS that you're not her mother or her daughter. You sound socially awkward.
Seems you didn't read what this lady wrote...It sounds like the issue is with this MIL and having to focus on her that day despite her being cruel, and not about other mothers at all.
If a person is socially awkward, everything may sound cruel if misconstrued. In fact the more one obsesses about holiday wishes, instead of reciprocating, the more socially awkward it becomes as the years go by. You take the PP as an objective story teller and I don't. A MIL who does not like or never liked her DIL DOES NOT WISH her a Happy Mother's Day, even performatively! There are plenty of MIL, mine among them, who would not be caught dead wishing their DILs a Happy Mother's Day! They're too self-absorbed and self-important for that, after all, the Mother's Day is about them and not the DIL! The fact that the MIL actually reaches out on this holiday, speaks for itself.
My inlaws despise me. Yet I receive a birthday card and Mother's Day card every year, signed "Love, First Name and First Name." SMIL buys cards for the family once a year, signs, stamps, and addresses them all and files them in an organizer. So loving and warm. A card can be meaningul but just sending one is not.
Well, then I guess despise is not enough "warmth" for my MIL who has NEVER sent me a card on Mother's Day or wished me anything. On birthdays I sometimes get something, but more often I do not. I used to send cards/flowers/etc but stopped. I actually enjoy exchanging good wishes on holidays (which I do with many people) and find it really awkward. Oh well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It really seems for many Mother's Day is actually Grandmother's Day! How ridiculous of older women to not make way for the younger ones with their demands and expectations!
Have you met either Boomers or Millennials? Everything in this entire thread comes down to one or the other of those generations being self-centered narcissists.
Anonymous wrote:It really seems for many Mother's Day is actually Grandmother's Day! How ridiculous of older women to not make way for the younger ones with their demands and expectations!
Anonymous wrote:I always thought that once you are a mother you should celebrate Mother's Day the weekend later or something. Since I was a daughter long before I was a mother I feel like I have to show up for my own mom and it can't be about me. I honestly wish we could have a separate day just for my mother's day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm on very good term with my MIL. She lives 15 minutes away and that comes with its pros and cons. Now that we have our own kids, I would love to spend mother's day at our house, but she still expects that we all go to her house on Sunday. My husband is conflict averse and does not want to "rock the boat."
I know, I'm a little petty and feel sad that the day isn't "about me." But I've been buying MIL her mother's day gift (my husband would never remember or care about it) for over ten years now, and now that I'm in the thick of raising young kids, I'm tired. I just want to stay in my own house that day, spend it with the kids, and maybe get a few hours to myself. I did tell DH this but somehow he sees this as a big disruption to "the way things have been" and is afraid his mom will take offense if we don't show up at her place to celebrate her on Sunday.
Those of you that have this living arrangement, what do you do?
Frankly, if you were my daughter, I would knock some sense into you. Someone is cooking you and your brood a meal and you just have to show up and stuff your mouth with food? What is your issue?
When my DD got married, I told her that I will be damned if she has to accommodate me for Christmas, Thanksgiving, Mother's Day, Father's Day etc. Her MIL is into all of this - more power to her. She (the MIL) is a sweet lady and wants to do all of this. As for myself - lets all go to a restaurant a couple days before or after the "event" so that we all can chill out, order what we want to order and be relaxed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I block MIL for one day so I don't have to see her "Happy Mother's Day" text (I'm not her mother, or her daughter) and won't see if she calls. It's my one day a year of not having to deal with her fake BS.
She's called me overweight to my face after I had an extreme health issue that required heavy-duty steroids. She's told me she likED (past tense, liked) me "before I had kids and changed." She asks me for my family recipes after deliberately telling me I can't have a certain cookie recipe because "I'm not family and it's a family recipe." So I feel fully justified in blocking her for one damn day.
No! A recipe?!!!!
I burst out laughing at this one "complaint". Grow up PP. You sound utterly exhausting.
Anonymous wrote:I always thought that once you are a mother you should celebrate Mother's Day the weekend later or something. Since I was a daughter long before I was a mother I feel like I have to show up for my own mom and it can't be about me. I honestly wish we could have a separate day just for my mother's day.
Anonymous wrote:I block MIL for one day so I don't have to see her "Happy Mother's Day" text (I'm not her mother, or her daughter) and won't see if she calls. It's my one day a year of not having to deal with her fake BS.
She's called me overweight to my face after I had an extreme health issue that required heavy-duty steroids. She's told me she likED (past tense, liked) me "before I had kids and changed." She asks me for my family recipes after deliberately telling me I can't have a certain cookie recipe because "I'm not family and it's a family recipe." So I feel fully justified in blocking her for one damn day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Friday - My house gets deep cleaned by my cleaner.
Saturday - DH looks after the kids. The lawnmower guy mows and spruces up the yard. I go with MIL for pedicure, massage and a panera lunch/costco lunch (hey yes MIL and I are both cheap). Selfies. Kiss, kiss, hug, hug. Then I come home and sleep. Dinner is Chinese takeout. Order enough dishes so that Sunday dinner is also covered.
Sunday - Kids snuggle with me. Give me a card and a cup of tea in bed. Kiss, kiss, hug, hug...photo. DH and kids take out MIL and FIL for brunch. Cards (I sign too), photos. Kiss, kiss, hug, hug. I continue to bed-rot. Take a bath. Eat Costco salad. DH comes back... we all watch TV, eat Chinese leftovers.
If my parents are around...I follow the same script. Except my mom and dad get added to the celebrations and I may then decide to attend the sunday brunch. No separate celebrations with both sets of parents etc.
Over 3 days...my MD gifts are -
- a clean house, spruced up lawn
- bed-rotting and warm bath
- Chinese takeout for two nights
- Bed tea
- Massage, pedicure and lunch with the moms.
- Photos shared on our group chat
- Having my DH keep my kids out of my hair for two days.
- Giving a break to my MIL (and my mom), spending some time with her/them doing something that I like (massage/pedicure), having no woman in the family cook or take care of the kids.
- Not getting flowers so that I don't have to take care of it.
- Do not want any other gifts.
There is a lot of genius here. Well done and Happy Mother's Day!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I block MIL for one day so I don't have to see her "Happy Mother's Day" text (I'm not her mother, or her daughter) and won't see if she calls. It's my one day a year of not having to deal with her fake BS.
She's called me overweight to my face after I had an extreme health issue that required heavy-duty steroids. She's told me she likED (past tense, liked) me "before I had kids and changed." She asks me for my family recipes after deliberately telling me I can't have a certain cookie recipe because "I'm not family and it's a family recipe." So I feel fully justified in blocking her for one damn day.
This "nobody should wish me Happy Mother's Day" is super petty. I bet your spouse does! It's not like infants do anything or even know that we're their mothers. I wish Happy Mother's Day to colleagues that I'm close to and friends, who do the same. When someone wishes you Merry Christmas! it's not because they think you're the Christ! Or Happy Easter because they think you're an Easter Bunny. You can do what you want, but please don't post this insanity as if it's something normal and acceptable. Your MIL KNOWS that you're not her mother or her daughter. You sound socially awkward.
Seems you didn't read what this lady wrote...It sounds like the issue is with this MIL and having to focus on her that day despite her being cruel, and not about other mothers at all.
If a person is socially awkward, everything may sound cruel if misconstrued. In fact the more one obsesses about holiday wishes, instead of reciprocating, the more socially awkward it becomes as the years go by. You take the PP as an objective story teller and I don't. A MIL who does not like or never liked her DIL DOES NOT WISH her a Happy Mother's Day, even performatively! There are plenty of MIL, mine among them, who would not be caught dead wishing their DILs a Happy Mother's Day! They're too self-absorbed and self-important for that, after all, the Mother's Day is about them and not the DIL! The fact that the MIL actually reaches out on this holiday, speaks for itself.
My inlaws despise me. Yet I receive a birthday card and Mother's Day card every year, signed "Love, First Name and First Name." SMIL buys cards for the family once a year, signs, stamps, and addresses them all and files them in an organizer. So loving and warm. A card can be meaningul but just sending one is not.