Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think being the sole parent on the holiday means the OP needs to do what works for her, not what works for her MIL. If DH is solo parenting some holiday (seems unlikely but if...) he can make a different choice based on what works for him. I do not understand everyone assigning the OP additional emotional labor on behalf of...what? A metaphorical gold star from a a MIL who makes snide comments? A metaphorical gold star from her husband who *doesn’t want* to be around his family? A DD who gets to have a stressed out mother on the holiday in addition to no dad? Who are these posters trying to save here???
On behalf of her freaking kids? Or maybe common decency?
The fact you had to turn one muttered "it's not fair" into "a MIL who makes snide comments" is telling. If OP had even one other example of her MIL disrespecting her, being ungrateful, being snide, she certainly would have presented it in any of her flailing follow-ups. Years of different treatment and complete disregard for her kids' relationships with her paternal grandparents leading to exactly one offhand comment is not a "snide MIL." If you have a leg to stand on you don't have to twist the narrative like this.
Anonymous wrote:No I'm judging the MIL based on the fact she makes snide comments to her DIL rather than taking the issue up with her own son. This isn't on the DIL to fix. Common decency would be handling the situation with maturity and placing the blame where it belongs on her own child.
Anonymous wrote:The kids get to see MIL the weekend after for the holiday. The kids have a relationship with the paternal grandparents. Its not about the kids, its what works for OP and DH. If DH is working and OP wants to spend the time with her family then so be it. The kids are not missing out on anything, they will see MIL the following weekend.
Common decency is not muttering snide comments under your breath. Who would want to spend holidays around that. No one.
Anonymous wrote:I think being the sole parent on the holiday means the OP needs to do what works for her, not what works for her MIL. If DH is solo parenting some holiday (seems unlikely but if...) he can make a different choice based on what works for him. I do not understand everyone assigning the OP additional emotional labor on behalf of...what? A metaphorical gold star from a a MIL who makes snide comments? A metaphorical gold star from her husband who *doesn’t want* to be around his family? A DD who gets to have a stressed out mother on the holiday in addition to no dad? Who are these posters trying to save here???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you could use this as an opportunity to rethink your own views on family holidays, honestly. You clearly think of your family as yours and DH's as his, which fine, but your children are as equally your MIL's grandchildren as they are your own parents' and given the way you've written your complaint here, you don't seem to get that. It's undoubtedly hard enough that their own son isn't willing to try to make some of their larger family holiday get-togethers without a resentful, possessive DIL so aggressively privileging her birth family when there are now grandchildren involved. I get you're constantly irritated at your DH but yeah, I do think you should consider spending some actual holidays with your in-laws, even if only as a brief drop-in so they can see their grandkids, unless there are genuine other mitigating factors such as abuse.
And no, I'm not a MIL.
I do not agree with this at all. I'd never spend a holiday at my inlaws w/o my husband. It's up to your DH to work it out with his parents. Or not. You do see them for the holiday, just not ON the holiday.
As for your DH, is he Dr. Evil or something? He cannot attend ONE holiday? That would absolutely not fly with me.
+1. Wtf is wrong with all of these people who expect the DIL to always travel to her ILs, with kids and no spouse, every holiday? His family, his problem. The recurring jealousy issues MIL has have surely resulted in more than just this one snide comment that alienated the DIL.
My take->OP's family should spend some of their holidays together, just them. Then move the FOO's to around but not on the actual day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you could use this as an opportunity to rethink your own views on family holidays, honestly. You clearly think of your family as yours and DH's as his, which fine, but your children are as equally your MIL's grandchildren as they are your own parents' and given the way you've written your complaint here, you don't seem to get that. It's undoubtedly hard enough that their own son isn't willing to try to make some of their larger family holiday get-togethers without a resentful, possessive DIL so aggressively privileging her birth family when there are now grandchildren involved. I get you're constantly irritated at your DH but yeah, I do think you should consider spending some actual holidays with your in-laws, even if only as a brief drop-in so they can see their grandkids, unless there are genuine other mitigating factors such as abuse.
And no, I'm not a MIL.
I do not agree with this at all. I'd never spend a holiday at my inlaws w/o my husband. It's up to your DH to work it out with his parents. Or not. You do see them for the holiday, just not ON the holiday.
As for your DH, is he Dr. Evil or something? He cannot attend ONE holiday? That would absolutely not fly with me.
Anonymous wrote:I think you could use this as an opportunity to rethink your own views on family holidays, honestly. You clearly think of your family as yours and DH's as his, which fine, but your children are as equally your MIL's grandchildren as they are your own parents' and given the way you've written your complaint here, you don't seem to get that. It's undoubtedly hard enough that their own son isn't willing to try to make some of their larger family holiday get-togethers without a resentful, possessive DIL so aggressively privileging her birth family when there are now grandchildren involved. I get you're constantly irritated at your DH but yeah, I do think you should consider spending some actual holidays with your in-laws, even if only as a brief drop-in so they can see their grandkids, unless there are genuine other mitigating factors such as abuse.
And no, I'm not a MIL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's so disheartening to see women continuing to push traditional gender roles on other women. You may make a different choice but don't push your choices on others. OP and her DH have established how they will celebrate holidays. If her DH's mother has an issue with it, OP's DH should address it.
Then it’s not about gender roles at all, if OP and husband jointly decided that OP’s parents get all actual holidays.