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| #Post#: 42181-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Inviting (or not) judgmental MIL to Christmas lunch? UPDATE 2023 | |
| post 120 | |
| By: LifeOnPluto Date: November 18, 2019, 4:41 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I wasn't sure whether to post this in the "Family and Children" | |
| folder, or this one - so mods, please feel free to move. | |
| Asking for a friend here. | |
| My friend "Sue" is married to "Tom", and they have a 3 year old | |
| son "Billy". Unfortunately, Sue does not get on with her | |
| mother-in-law. After Billy was born, she (the MIL) said some | |
| rather judgmental things to Sue ("Goodness me, you're doing | |
| [insert parenting activity] like that?? In my day, we always did | |
| it like this!"). Ironically, MIL has some questionable parenting | |
| theories herself (eg "It's fine to give some solids to 3 month | |
| olds" and "There's no point in toilet training children until | |
| just before they start kindergarten!"). She also has a rather | |
| flaky personality. As a result, Sue does not allow her MIL to | |
| babysit Billy. | |
| In addition, Sue's parents and Tom's mother do not get on. The | |
| families are completely different in terms of values, | |
| personalities, and outlooks on life. Previous attempts to bring | |
| them together have resulted in long, uncomfortable silences, and | |
| - at worst - outright sniping at each other on a couple of | |
| occasions. Sue's parents have privately told Sue that they | |
| "can't stand" Tom's mother. | |
| Since Billy was born, Sue and Tom's standard practice has been | |
| to host Christmas lunch at their house, and invite Sue's | |
| parents. They visit with Tom's side of the family on Christmas | |
| Eve or Boxing Day. This arrangement has worked okay in the past, | |
| as MIL has spent Christmas Day with her husband (ie Tom's dad), | |
| mother (ie Tom's grandmother) and daughter (ie Tom's sister). | |
| Unfortunately however, Tom's father died in 2018, and Tom's | |
| grandmother passed away earlier this year. Tom's sister is | |
| currently overseas. So this year, MIL has no one to spend | |
| Christmas Day with. Tom wants to invite his mother over for | |
| Christmas lunch, but Sue has already invited her family over as | |
| per usual, and does not want her MIL there also. | |
| Sue's rationale is "I don't want to be judged and commented on, | |
| in my own house on Christmas Day. Plus, it's not fair on my | |
| parents if she is there - there is too much tension." | |
| Tom's rationale is "She's my mum. She's had a tough couple of | |
| years. I don't want to leave her by herself on Christmas Day." | |
| This has caused some friction between Sue and Tom. Both of them | |
| feel the other is being unreasonable and unsupportive. For the | |
| record, Sue is fine with celebrating Christmas with her MIL on | |
| Christmas Eve or Boxing Day - just not Christmas Day itself. | |
| What do you all think? Who is right? How could this be worked | |
| out? | |
| #Post#: 42182-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Inviting (or not) judgmental MIL to Christmas lunch? | |
| By: Hanna Date: November 18, 2019, 5:18 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I think Sue needs to compromise with her husband and put her own | |
| feelings aside. She has celebrated Christmas with her own family | |
| every year; this is a particularly bad year for Tom and his | |
| family. Leaving his mother alone on against his wishes on | |
| Christmas day would, in my opinion, make her a pretty terrible | |
| wife and person. | |
| Just reading this reminded me of my ghastly ex-sil who ruled | |
| over all holiday schedules. She really harmed my family and made | |
| life unpleasant. | |
| #Post#: 42183-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Inviting (or not) judgmental MIL to Christmas lunch? | |
| By: Aleko Date: November 18, 2019, 7:28 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I also feel that this is a time for everyone to grit their teeth | |
| and show Christian charity. It's simply not on to leave one's | |
| mother alone on Christmas Day when she can readily be invited | |
| over. Sue needs to outline the situation to her parents, who | |
| presumably are perfectly aware that she can't stand this woman | |
| either, and ask them to collaborate with her in parking their | |
| dislike for the day and trying to maintain a mood of peace and | |
| goodwill to all men (and in-laws). If Sue's parents are decent | |
| people, they will surely see the rightness of this. | |
| I don't say that Tom might not be asked to drive over in the | |
| late morning to fetch his mother to Christmas lunch, which | |
| (unlike her driving herself) enables them to decide when he | |
| takes her home - preferably reasonably shortly after dinner is | |
| over, enabling everyone else to stop maintaining the sweetness | |
| and light and relax in the gratifying sensation of duty done. | |
| (Which gives her some quality time alone with her boy to gripe | |
| at That Woman You Call Your Wife, the in-laws, and her | |
| grandchildren's manners; so it's a favour to her, really.) He | |
| can 'confidentially' spin the shortness of her visit as a favour | |
| to her - 'I know you can't stand Sue's parents, so we won't ask | |
| you to stay very long'. | |
| #Post#: 42185-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Inviting (or not) judgmental MIL to Christmas lunch? | |
| By: Hmmm Date: November 18, 2019, 8:19 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I cannot imagine telling my DH that I wanted to exclude my MIL | |
| because she had given me unsolicited advice. I understand that | |
| the examples given are just a few instances but usually people | |
| lead with the worse and those just don't equate to toxic family | |
| member. Not everyone can have perfectly harmonious families and | |
| not every personality meshes. I'm sure Sue wouldn't drop out of | |
| a social group because there was one person in the group who | |
| annoyed her. I also doubt Tom is as eager to spend Christmas | |
| with Sue's parents as she is.Tom has recently lost his dad, his | |
| grandmother, and his sister is not physically available to him | |
| either. Sue comes across as insecure and really very uncaring | |
| of others in this situation. | |
| Aleko's advice is very good about giving Tom and his mother some | |
| alone time. | |
| *solid foods like cereals is not all that unusual at 3 months | |
| and there is a whole group of parents who would also agree about | |
| delaying potty training. | |
| #Post#: 42186-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Inviting (or not) judgmental MIL to Christmas lunch? | |
| By: kckgirl Date: November 18, 2019, 8:26 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I think they should invite the MIL. The idea of Tom picking her | |
| up and taking her home is a really good one for reasons stated | |
| above. They'll have bonus alone time for the holiday, which | |
| they'd probably both enjoy. One possibility is that, during the | |
| drive over, Tom could ask his mom not to make comments on their | |
| child rearing while she's visiting, because it upsets them and | |
| they'd like to have a peaceful and fun holiday celebration. | |
| #Post#: 42199-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Inviting (or not) judgmental MIL to Christmas lunch? | |
| By: gramma dishes Date: November 18, 2019, 9:26 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| It's Christmas! | |
| Certainly Sue and her family can rise to the occasion this one | |
| time, especially since it's so important to Tom. | |
| The funny thing is that there's an assumption here that Tom's | |
| mother is chomping at the bit, eager to be included in Sue's | |
| family's festivities. She may really be pleased to be asked, | |
| but it is also possible that she'd just as soon see them | |
| separately in her own home as she has in years past. In other | |
| words, she may not be all that eager to break her own traditions | |
| even though they'd obviously be different with the main cast of | |
| characters being so drastically reduced. | |
| Maybe they should ask her which she'd prefer? | |
| I think the danger here becomes, if Tom's mom happily accepts | |
| the invitation, then will she see it as a signal of a whole new | |
| standing tradition for her. Maybe at the time it could be | |
| stressed that some years the two families will celebrate | |
| together and some years they'll keep celebrations separate. | |
| #Post#: 42202-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Inviting (or not) judgmental MIL to Christmas lunch? | |
| By: Nestholder Date: November 18, 2019, 9:31 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| In Sue's situation, I would find it difficult to think of myself | |
| as a Decent Person if I left my husband's recently widowed | |
| mother to spend Christmas alone. It's hard to see that this | |
| MIL has put herself beyond the pale, there's just fratching | |
| about things and Sue hasn't taken the 'advice' well, but it's | |
| hard to see that unwelcome advice on child-rearing, no matter | |
| how condescendingly delivered, could justify leaving the woman | |
| on her own. | |
| If it turns out that MIL would prefer to be on her own than in | |
| company with Sue's family, there may well be a bigger problem | |
| here, but it isn't clear who's at fault. | |
| #Post#: 42204-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Inviting (or not) judgmental MIL to Christmas lunch? | |
| By: Model Date: November 18, 2019, 9:33 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Come on, of course they need to invite Tom's mother. I'm | |
| surprised this is even a question! | |
| #Post#: 42207-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Inviting (or not) judgmental MIL to Christmas lunch? | |
| By: Amara Date: November 18, 2019, 10:29 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Sue and Sue's parents sound a bit like douchebags. I mean, they | |
| can't even get along for a day? And how do we know Tom's mother | |
| is difficult? Those pieces of advice on childrearing sound like | |
| just helpful advice, unless they came with sneers and sarcasm. | |
| If Sue has a problem with her MIL's suggestions, she should just | |
| let Tom's mother know in a calm and polite way that she prefers | |
| to do things another way. But to snub her MIL on what will | |
| surely be a very difficult day for her is cruel. If I knew a | |
| "Sue" who did this I'd sure reevaluate the friendship. | |
| And for future, if the celebration is separate for each that the | |
| person/people who are going to be bumped off the actual day of | |
| Christmas should alternate. There is no reason for it always to | |
| be Sue's parents who get "the" day. That's just mean on Sue's | |
| part | |
| #Post#: 42209-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Inviting (or not) judgmental MIL to Christmas lunch? | |
| By: Hmmm Date: November 18, 2019, 10:34 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Amara link=topic=1407.msg42207#msg42207 | |
| date=1574094584] | |
| Sue and Sue's parents sound a bit like douchebags. I mean, they | |
| can't even get along for a day? And how do we know Tom's mother | |
| is difficult? Those pieces of advice on childrearing sound like | |
| just helpful advice, unless they came with sneers and sarcasm. | |
| If Sue has a problem with her MIL's suggestions, she should just | |
| let Tom's mother know in a calm and polite way that she prefers | |
| to do things another way. But to snub her MIL on what will | |
| surely be a very difficult day for her is cruel. If I knew a | |
| "Sue" who did this I'd sure reevaluate the friendship. | |
| And for future, if the celebration is separate for each that the | |
| person/people who are going to be bumped off the actual day of | |
| Christmas should alternate. There is no reason for it always to | |
| be Sue's parents who get "the" day. That's just mean on Sue's | |
| part | |
| [/quote] | |
| I thought the same thing. I doubt I'd want to remain friends | |
| with someone who treated their spouse and anyone really in this | |
| manner. | |
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