Woman Badmouths DIL For Everyone To Hear, Cries When She Pays Back With The Same Energy
It takes two not just to tango but to keep family gatherings from turning into passive-aggressive battlegrounds. And Reddit user AlderMoonstone says her mother-in-law has been taking (subtle) digs at her parenting for years.
The last straw came during her husband’s birthday dinner, when the lady began criticizing her in front of everyone. However, after the woman called the mother-in-law out, she quickly flipped the script and played the victim. So the Redditor decided to ask the internet if she was wrong for escalating the situation.
Some people love giving unsolicited advice
Image credits: shurkin_son / freepik (not the actual photo)
But this woman’s mother-in-law takes it to the next level
Image credits: freepik (not the actual photo)
Image credits: freepik (not the actual photo)
Image credits: AlderMoonstone
Sadly, this is the reality for many moms
Mothers of young children face numerous parenting decisions every day, from feeding methods and diet to sleep position and safety. Some mothers have a support system that encourages them during the challenging times; others — just like our Redditor — face negativity and criticism of their choices.
The C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital National Poll on Children’s Health asked a national sample of American mothers of children 0–5 years old about their experiences, and most of them (61%) say they have been criticized about their parenting choices, most frequently by family: their spouse or child’s other parent (36%), their in-laws (31%), or their own mother or father (37%).
Mothers report less criticism from peers — friends (14%), other mothers they encounter in public (12%), commenters on social media (7%) — or from their child’s health care provider (8%) or childcare provider (6%).
About a quarter (23%) have been criticized by three or more of these groups.
Overall, 62% believe that mothers get a lot of unhelpful advice from other people, while 56% believe that mothers get too much blame and not enough credit for their children’s behavior.
As was the case this time, discipline is the most frequent topic of criticism, reported by 70% of criticized mothers. Other common topics of criticism are diet and nutrition (52%), sleep (46%), breast- vs. bottle-feeding (39%), safety (20%), and childcare (16%).
Mothers describe different — and sometimes conflicting — responses to criticism about their parenting. Many seek additional information about a specific topic, either searching for information themselves (60%) or asking a health care provider (53%), and 37% have made a change in how they parent. While 67% of mothers say that criticism made them feel more strongly about their parenting choices, 42% indicate that at times, criticism has made them feel unsure about their parenting choices.
Half of mothers say that they avoid certain people who are critical, while 56% have stopped criticizing other mothers after experiencing criticism themselves.
Image credits: nastyaofly / freepik (not the actual photo)
However, experts believe it’s often best to take a beat before you snap back
Marriage and family therapist Sara M. Klein, LMFT, says the key to dealing with a meddling mother-in-law is to bite your tongue, and — when in doubt — imagine you’re all part of a National Geographic docuseries.
“One strategy I might use,” Klein explains, “is to pretend you are an anthropologist and just observe and describe. This will help with judgments.”
Rather than rolling your eyes when she criticizes you — which is quite likely happen — Klein suggests saying something like, “It’s interesting that your family does it this way”
If you’re really tempted to drop a snarky line when your mother-in-law keeps intruding in your marriage, Klein warns against deflecting responsibility.
“Blame and shame are not effective relationally. They shut people down, and there is no space in between.”
Instead, she suggests saying, “We made a decision about this and we are happy to discuss our thought process with you.”
When it comes to parenting, the expert explained that it’s normal to want to parent differently from how your in-laws raised their children.
And statements like “We’ll never do that with our children” can feel like a direct critique of how your in-laws raised your spouse.
Instead, try: “We’re trying to limit screen time while the kids are little — it’s just what’s feeling right for us right now. But who knows, ask me again in six months,” Klein explains.
The woman provided more information on her family in the comments
Most people said she’s not the jerk in the situation (NTJ) and criticized her husband for siding with his mother
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"he said he agrees with me in private" no, f**k that. I just had this conversation with my wife, if you support me in private and say nothing to defend me in public you don't actually support me
The husband was in the room and didn't feel attacked about his parenting? That means he's a babysitter and not a parent, no matter what the private time party line is. It's his family, let him sort it out, and if he won't it's time for big conversations.
Her comments were very specifically designated against mothers. The only way to nip passive aggressive people like this is right then and there when it happens. No one neglects spilt milk. Passive aggressive comments like this are designed to make the target feel small. I started doing this with my MIL and she won’t dare do it now. No love lost because none was ever gained.
Load More Replies..."Keeping the peace" does nothing but promote the problematic behavior in these situations, and those who tell you to do so are cowards who don't want to deal with the behavior as long as it's not focused on them.
This woman's husband reminds me of my dad who always made us keep the peace when faced with my tyrannical grandmother - regardless of manipulation, damage and lies involved. Ultimately I couldn't respect him kow-towing to a dictator and stopped coming to family get togethers altogether which made me a bit of a pariah with the rest of the family and led to years of estrangement. He's dead a long time now but my grandmother's wicked nature put him in the ground well before his time. I still spit on the ground when her name comes up - evil f*****g b***h.
“Keeping the peace” is ALWAYS said to the person sitting quietly in the bows of the boat, while behind the person berating them, the actual problem is taking an axe to the decking.
MIL decided it was ok to say that💩 in front of everyone, so OP had the perfect right to respond. I agree with all of the, "You have a husband problem" comments. Hope OP can get "dear husband" to counseling or he's going to find out how much child support he'll be paying in the years to come.
Yeah, clown the husband and then go back in the living room and clown the mother in law. Gloves off, elbows up. F**k that.
Another worthless POS "momma's boy". They almost always make terrible partners. I'd tell hubby until he can decide who he values more, his wife or his mother, he can sleep on the couch.
Undermine her authority as grandmother?! W*F? She has no authority as grandmother. In the words of Taylor, I don’t start sh$t, but I can tell you how it ends.
Oh hai, MIL, you do realise that your own son is the parent to that child too, right? So that must make him a bad parent as well. Want to reconsider your stance, or would you rather be LC/NC?
It’s ok for her to upset you but not for you to upset her. Tell your husband that going forward, you will be calling his mother out in public when she criticizes you in public. If that makes him uncomfortable, you recommend that he works with is mother to get her to stop criticizing you in public and his problem will be solved.
“going forward, you will be calling his mother out in public”: I don’t see any reason for OP to entertain her MiL in public OR in private. Eff that noise. She sounds entirely too unpleasant to waste spending time with her, and the kids ought not be exposed to that harridan. Yuck.
Load More Replies...It's always some c**t is fine to openly be a c**t for years, and everyone awkwardly ignores it, but once someone dares stand up to them, all the meek little f*****s suddenly have a voice and start acting like standing up to a c**t is unreasonable. Humans are one thick species.
Mil publicly shames and disrespects her dil but when the same happens to her she cries and feels disrespected. How can her social comprehension be so low?
Yeah sorry but mil is vile , she started it op finished it !, n husband can stand up of his wife of shut the hell up, the ine only one as owes an apology is the monster in law !! NO ONE ELSE !
Honestly what is he afraid of with his mother? Exactly WHAT is she going to do? Ground him...no. Take away his car...no. Stop his allowance, again NO. Old biddy would probably go radio silent. So what. We don't reward kids for bad behavior we shouldn't adults either. Reward being still attending events in their home around their children. It would hurt her much more in the long run. Who cares let her moan and whine to whomever she wants they'll get sick of hearing her eventually and ice her out as well.
good parenting is correcting inappropriate behavior at the moment it happens
NTA. If someone calls you out publicly, you're entitled to respond publicly. MIL FAFO'd.
... so it's okay for MIL to undermine OP in OP's house, but not okay for OP to 'supposedly undermine' MIL? (See quotes because I don't think OP was intending to undermine MIL at all; simply say "no, this behaviour is not okay"). The husband is pathetic. I hope that we can one day refer to him as 'DH' -- 'dumped husband'.
Everyone else has to "keep the peace" for the sake of the person not keeping the peace. Got it. /s
"he said he agrees with me in private" no, f**k that. I just had this conversation with my wife, if you support me in private and say nothing to defend me in public you don't actually support me
The husband was in the room and didn't feel attacked about his parenting? That means he's a babysitter and not a parent, no matter what the private time party line is. It's his family, let him sort it out, and if he won't it's time for big conversations.
Her comments were very specifically designated against mothers. The only way to nip passive aggressive people like this is right then and there when it happens. No one neglects spilt milk. Passive aggressive comments like this are designed to make the target feel small. I started doing this with my MIL and she won’t dare do it now. No love lost because none was ever gained.
Load More Replies..."Keeping the peace" does nothing but promote the problematic behavior in these situations, and those who tell you to do so are cowards who don't want to deal with the behavior as long as it's not focused on them.
This woman's husband reminds me of my dad who always made us keep the peace when faced with my tyrannical grandmother - regardless of manipulation, damage and lies involved. Ultimately I couldn't respect him kow-towing to a dictator and stopped coming to family get togethers altogether which made me a bit of a pariah with the rest of the family and led to years of estrangement. He's dead a long time now but my grandmother's wicked nature put him in the ground well before his time. I still spit on the ground when her name comes up - evil f*****g b***h.
“Keeping the peace” is ALWAYS said to the person sitting quietly in the bows of the boat, while behind the person berating them, the actual problem is taking an axe to the decking.
MIL decided it was ok to say that💩 in front of everyone, so OP had the perfect right to respond. I agree with all of the, "You have a husband problem" comments. Hope OP can get "dear husband" to counseling or he's going to find out how much child support he'll be paying in the years to come.
Yeah, clown the husband and then go back in the living room and clown the mother in law. Gloves off, elbows up. F**k that.
Another worthless POS "momma's boy". They almost always make terrible partners. I'd tell hubby until he can decide who he values more, his wife or his mother, he can sleep on the couch.
Undermine her authority as grandmother?! W*F? She has no authority as grandmother. In the words of Taylor, I don’t start sh$t, but I can tell you how it ends.
Oh hai, MIL, you do realise that your own son is the parent to that child too, right? So that must make him a bad parent as well. Want to reconsider your stance, or would you rather be LC/NC?
It’s ok for her to upset you but not for you to upset her. Tell your husband that going forward, you will be calling his mother out in public when she criticizes you in public. If that makes him uncomfortable, you recommend that he works with is mother to get her to stop criticizing you in public and his problem will be solved.
“going forward, you will be calling his mother out in public”: I don’t see any reason for OP to entertain her MiL in public OR in private. Eff that noise. She sounds entirely too unpleasant to waste spending time with her, and the kids ought not be exposed to that harridan. Yuck.
Load More Replies...It's always some c**t is fine to openly be a c**t for years, and everyone awkwardly ignores it, but once someone dares stand up to them, all the meek little f*****s suddenly have a voice and start acting like standing up to a c**t is unreasonable. Humans are one thick species.
Mil publicly shames and disrespects her dil but when the same happens to her she cries and feels disrespected. How can her social comprehension be so low?
Yeah sorry but mil is vile , she started it op finished it !, n husband can stand up of his wife of shut the hell up, the ine only one as owes an apology is the monster in law !! NO ONE ELSE !
Honestly what is he afraid of with his mother? Exactly WHAT is she going to do? Ground him...no. Take away his car...no. Stop his allowance, again NO. Old biddy would probably go radio silent. So what. We don't reward kids for bad behavior we shouldn't adults either. Reward being still attending events in their home around their children. It would hurt her much more in the long run. Who cares let her moan and whine to whomever she wants they'll get sick of hearing her eventually and ice her out as well.
good parenting is correcting inappropriate behavior at the moment it happens
NTA. If someone calls you out publicly, you're entitled to respond publicly. MIL FAFO'd.
... so it's okay for MIL to undermine OP in OP's house, but not okay for OP to 'supposedly undermine' MIL? (See quotes because I don't think OP was intending to undermine MIL at all; simply say "no, this behaviour is not okay"). The husband is pathetic. I hope that we can one day refer to him as 'DH' -- 'dumped husband'.
Everyone else has to "keep the peace" for the sake of the person not keeping the peace. Got it. /s





































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