I am curious to see what everyone does for their in-laws, their relationship dynamic and the boundaries they’ve set on things they absolutely will not do.
I can’t stand my MIL. We have never had a “real” relationship. I have always just appeased her to keep the peace while she has slandered my name. It took years to be the bigger person and just look the other way.
Her health is seriously declining. She has other family besides her 1 son but no one will help or really talks to her outside of the occasional phone call because she has been a verbally and emotionally abusive viper her whole life.
My husband and I have been married for 31 years. The sun rises and sets behind my husband, but he also really wants nothing to do with her. If it comes down to it he’ll talk to her But in recent months he has stopped even initiating a relationship, calling her or going to see her unless I make him.
Just curious to see what everyone does for their in-laws. Where do you draw the line and hard no’s you will not do.
here are mine:
toileting
showers
hands on caregiving
Find a nursing home where MIL will be properly cared for. Use her funds to pay for it, and if she can't afford it, apply for Medicaid for her. After she's been placed in a facility where her basic needs will be seen to, you and your husband can interact with her as much or as little as you choose.
After 46 years of her putting me down, belittling me, saying nasty, horrible things to me and DH just sitting back and allowing it, b/c "she's old, you have to make allowances". Phooey! She was 44 when I married into the family--that's old?? I was supposed to allow her to destroy me over and over--for what purpose??
I never fought back. I cried a TON. My poor kids, they saw what was going on and are mad to this day at their father who never said a word in my defense. They don't like grandma much either.
One year ago--a little more, since I know we weren't wearing masks yet-- I had to accompany DH to her house while he fixed her computer. She would not allow me to sit down, I had to stand there like a whipped dog. Finally DH says "Oh, for pity's sake, grab the office chair and sit down". She tried to argue with him, but I did get to sit. (My bad back was grateful!) Then, b/c she had been 'thwarted' she laid in to me something fierce. Just vitriol, nasty, hateful yelling at me. DH is deaf as a post and so is she, so she couldn't hear him and he wasn't even trying to listen to her. I sat there and had a great epihany. I didn't HAVE TO PUT UP WITH HER!!
I got up, slapped her on the back and said "V, I'm giving you the best gift in the world. I'm leaving and you'll never see me again" Followed by a good slap on the back and the theft of a Diet Coke.
I slammed out the back door, which neither one of them heard, darn it. Walked the few blocks to my sister's and by the time I got there I was laughing. Sis sat me down, fed me some chocolate and we talked and by the time DH came to get me I was fine.
And I have not spoken to nor seen my MIL since. NOTHING could make me see her again and I don't intend to. Why? Why put yourself in the line of fire?
I TRULY did not know people as nasty as my MIL actually existed.
Here's my hard no's of what I will not do:
see her again, ever
go to her funeral (but she is never going to die--she tells us that all the time)
Isn't that sad? Really, she could have had a good friend in me. I cannot change her and I'm OVER changing me for her.
It also brings me happiness to know her son really wants nothing to do with her anymore either. It’s like a my secret wish has been granted
It could literally kill him.
We have a family member who is exactly as you describe. Narcissistic tendencies for sure. When I read the book “The Sociopath Next Door” I thought that fit her even better.
Her only child had to cut his parents totally out of his life on doctors orders. He had been suicidal. They cut ties for over a decade. She stalked them. They had to call the police, had counseling with their ministers etc. The ministers told MIL she was wrong. She changed churches.
In time, she stopped but if her sons family was mentioned, she would leave, go pout, become angry. She of course blamed it all on the DIL. Time passed. And MIL father died.
Son and family came to the funeral. Everyone was so happy to see them. Little by little they would attend family events.
Of course the MIL was quick to return to her old pattern but this time the kids had stronger boundaries and the vulnerable grandkids were mostly grown. That lasted awhile.
Then MIL DH had a heart attack and died. It’s a wonder he lasted as long as he did. So much drama. He was in his mid 60s. She was filled with remorse for how she had treated him.
But in a year or so, after her DIL did everything she could for her, MIL was back. DIL had helped her learn how to pay her bills, moved her into a smaller home after selling her house for her, had her to dinner. Slowly all the old patterns returned. Time passed.
DIL would push her husband to call his mother, send her a card, buy her a gift etc. which he clearly did not want to do. DIL would complain, I can’t get him to do anything. He leaves it up to me. He had health issues. He was exhausted. He went to counseling, lost weight, cooked great meals, loved his grands. Worked all the time.
MIL began to push, push push. DIL was pushing on the other side. The grands tolerated her but they were adults now and preferred to not see her. One Monday morning early we get a call. The son was found on the bedroom floor passed away from a heart attack. Mid 50s.
The ever kind DIL had a nice funeral for his mother’s benefit.
She and her husband had discussed their wishes and his was no service and cremation. Of course they thought it would be many years before such an event. But the DIL gave her husband a nice service, during COVID, well attended. I watched as the MIL fussed with the flowers and casket, moved his hair and arranged it like she wanted and never acknowledged her DIL and I thought to myself for the millionth time… This woman is nuts.
The DIL looked on and was fine.
Later MIL continued to come to family events at DIL home but would not even say hello to the DIL. She would swamp the grands. Finally she went one step too far with the GD one day recently and got called to task.
I waited to see what tales would come my way. How she would spin this. Crickets. But it’s early days and she’ll be sharing with her church friends and forget what really happened.
The GD stood up to her GM and cut her off at the knees when the GM tried to blame the current snafu on her DIL, GD mom.
The GD who has had a ringside seat all the years her mom had tried to build peace was not having it.
The DIL told her daughter…You will have to forgive her or it will eat you up. She is family…DIL still pushing. In a sad way, she’s still doing what her MIL does. Trying to control the narrative. it’s hard to break a generational dysfunction.
I was proud of the GD. She had put up with so much from her GM when she was a child. Now the GM was trying the same tactics on GD 5 yr old trying to instill “FOG” into her little GGD. The GD knows what she sees and put a stop to it.
This MIL has caused great harm. If DIL doesn’t knock it off she’ll do the same to her DD.
DIL and her husband would have celebrated their 30th anniversary last week. So many similarities to your story.
This applies to in-laws, parents, siblings, anyone.
If someone can't stand a person and never had a real relationship with them they should not feel obligated to do for them. Just because a person is in someone's life for many years or they're a relative, does not mean they're owed something from people they've never treated well or been close with.
If your husband is limits his contact with his mother, he has reasons for this. Don't push him to visit her or even see her if it's not what he wants to do.
As far as you're concerned, you don't owe her a thing.
How about he forces YOU to have a relationship with his viper mother? Would you like that? There's nothing virtuous about having to be abused by a parent.
B/C she NEEDS to be right and everything needs to fit HER narrative.
She actually ended up telling him to f-off and go to H3ll. (I bet that coming out of a 90 yo woman's mouth, it was funny or heartbreaking--) and he said he would do just that.
Talk about shooting yourself in the foot! Anyway, he came home, angry, upset and sad. I let him simmer for a few days than gave him some reading material on Narc Moms. He was astounded! Said he didn't know it was a 'thing'.
He needs help to get over this and won't seek it. We don't talk about her, much and if he's speaking to her, almost a year later, I don't know about it.
He has said, quite a few times, that he wishes I hadn't 'blown up' at her, b/c he liked to take me with him to visit--using me as an excuse to skip out after a half hour. Hey--she made her choices and she is living with the consequences.
We have 5 kids and 14 grands. She doesn't know the name of any of them. Their parents, our kids, have kept them away from her pretty effectively.
Really? It's sad and NOT what I would have chosen.
This made me laugh because my MIL, it seems, never called my daughter by her name, it was always "the girl" and she only has 4 grandchildren. Seems my SIL reminded her. She paid more attention to my daughter, I brought into the marriage, then her own granddaughter. I think it was just her showing family "look how I have excepted Js daughter"
My MIL was a hard women to understand. Just when I thought I understood her, she would do something new. She was a habitual liar. My GF, her niece, said everyone was aware of her lies but they didn't hurt anyone so family over looked it. I told my GF that they hurt me. And TG I had her Mom to put the rest of the family straight. If I visited her alone she would tell my husband I said one thing when I said another. Making herself look good. DH would come home and tell me what she said and then I tell him what I actually said. He used to say "she tends to exaggerate". I never said anything but I think he was just trying to be his nice self.
I did not encourage him to do or not do. He has a mind of his own. I would have never cared for her. Her sweetness with other people was a facade. When she didn't get her way, she was pouty and nasty in a subtle way. I saw that nasty side and found my husband would always be on my side. She seemed to be in competition with her 3 DILs. She had a husband who loved her and was a very nice man. Two sons lived 8 and 12 hrs away from her. We lived 16. The two sons never came home to live after graduating college. My DH stayed in the same town. TG she moved to FL. Not sure what our life would have been like after FIL passed at the age of 71. She lived 20 more years. And that whole time trying to talk my DH into moving there until I finally said "not going to happen".
Your husband does not need to have a relationship with his Mom. You have no idea what she was like when he was a child. He has probably tried but has come to the realization he can't deal with her anymore. Its not easy coming to that decision and finally excepting that you can't be around your own mother. So please, stop forcing him to see her.
Sorry to say, she has made her own bed. Please, never consider caring for her. You can help her find resources. If she has money, you can suggest she hire help, go to an AL. If no money, then she can get Medicaid to help in home care or her going to LTC and them footing the bill. A crisis will happen. She'll wind up in the hospital then rehab and if 24/7 care and no one to care for her she will be transferred to LTC because rehabs cannot do an "unsafe discharge". The State will take over her care.
I think we are all compassionate people but sad to say there are those who play on that compassion. Yes, I too felt sorry for my MIL but she made her bed. She wanted things her way. And that was DH moving to FL. When I said I would not leave my Mom, she said bring her with you. I said at her age I was not uprooting her from Friends and her Church. My MIL said "we all have to compromise" I didn't but should have said "and what are you compromising".
What goes around comes around.
Do you or your husband have any idea what if anything she may have set up? Does he have any legal authority to help? If not maybe she has made her statement and if she has set that up and he chooses to take on any responsibility for the arrangements you can either choose to support HIM by helping behind the scenes or simply providing moral support, it’s entirely up to each of you independently and together. Either way discussing it together is going to help you both through this as involved or not you are attached as family and will be privy to whatever happens. You have no legal or moral responsibility to her, your responsibility is only to your husband and it sounds like he is either conflicted himself or has made his decision and you need to have a discussion together about that. At least IMHO (in my humble opinion)
I consider it our responsibility to make sure our "seniors" - both moms, my dad, my unmarried aunt - are safe and healthy if they are no longer mentally competent. It is harder with my dad who is an alcoholic and has mental health issues; he wants nothing to do with the family. He is considered mentally competent so he is responsible for his own life choices. My MIL lives in out of state with no family nearby, her choice, and is cared for by 2 caregivers in her condo. She is safe and healthy and well cared for. When her finances are gone, then we (BIL and my husband) will make other arrangements.
but in your case, doesn't seem there is even a Like fir you MIL.
So, in that case your husband should help his Mom look a few Nursing Homes and help her get move in.
Add in MommyDearestMIL’s years of resentment from an abusive person, and continued, ongoing verbal abuse, and hands-on care is a recipe for unhappiness for one and all. I would NOT want to be cared for by someone I dislike who also dislikes me! Sometimes the best thing you can do is recognize you can’t do a job by yourself, even if pure-of-heart and willing to try.
I had a failed opportunity, if you will, in having a MIL and FIL, who were my late ex husband's parents, who was a bad man. I will leave it at that. I wasn't blessed with kind in laws or any in laws.
But I keep thinking about what my boundaries will be with my own parents and hope I will figure out how to hold firm to them when the time comes. I currently cook and do their laundry and we split the cost of a housecleaner for our shared home. I'm trying to prepare my dad for my mom to go into care with her dementia. He can't care for her and I won't be able to (or won't want to, if it involves incontinence), so we're visiting AL/MC facilities now. They saved well and have the funds for care, so they need to spend it on others giving them the care.
You don’t like anything she stands for, so are you concerned about this? Stay out of it. Do you want your husband to drag you into this mess or resent you for interfering with his decision not to become involved with her?
I adored my mother in law because she was thoughtful and kind. I didn’t have to set boundaries with her because she never overstepped. She didn’t expect me to be her savior. I wish that I could say the same for my father in law. He was a rat through and through. My husband wanted nothing to do with him. Guess what? I don’t blame him. I didn’t make him feel as if he had to have a relationship with him after he showed his true colors. I used to be sad that he and his dad wasn’t close like my dad and I were, so I tried to encourage healing between them. Do you know what my husband said to me, “Your father has always been more of a dad to me than my own dad.” So, I let it go. I never interfered again.
Let it go. Don’t push your husband to continue in a relationship. You can’t force his mom to be a loving mother or mother in law.
Focus on what is good in your life, disregard what isn’t, because it isn’t worth your time or energy. I don’t believe in wishing others harm and I no longer yearn to change what I can’t. I simply accept it. I am a lot better off now. I have peace and am happier. Do not ever allow anyone else to steal your joy! I learned this from my therapist awhile back. He was right. Why should we let others steal our joy because they are miserable? Misery loves company. Don’t take the bait and then they can’t hurt you.
I feel sorry for those who are struggling and are miserable, but I am not going to join them on any level. I feel sorry for anyone who feels like they have an obligation to these people and volunteer to help. We cannot help anyone who doesn’t want our help. All that we can do, if we choose to, is hope they find help from another source. If they do, that’s great. Bottom line, it is their problem, not mine.
I suppose that I have become more of a realist as I grow older and hopefully wiser. I was a dreamer or an idealist when I was younger. After being kicked in the gut a few times, that changed my way of thinking.
I would like to believe that I haven’t become apathetic, because I do believe in hope. Without hope, we have nothing. I don’t feel that I have to be the one to solve the problems of all of the world’s dysfunctional people!
That said, I care for my mom in an appreciative situation. But, it struck me that the things you listed I would not do for my mom: bathing, toileting, and toe nails -unless and until she is bedridden. The reason for this is that I think I can best provide care for my mom when I keep a layer of distance and dignity in our relationship. I think she would respond better to a home health aide providing these supports, and our mother/daughter relationship can stay relatively intact if I do not go there. I have witnessed my grandparents fight their daughters over these types of tasks. I fear as a daughter-in-law with a disrespectful relationship with your MIL, these caregiving tasks would become a battle - and you would lose, quickly.
Two big caveats I have:
1. I am not to this point, yet, but it is on the horizon as my mom is 90 years old - so I am thinking about these tasks more. My mom is cognizant enough to tell me what she wants, and I think I know she would pick a paid caregiver.
2. I am lucky that my mom will have the financial ability for me to call in a home health aide if/when needed. In large part this is because I have supported her in her home for 5 years at a tremendous savings over Assisted Living.
As a side note: I also don't clean my mom's home. I am happy to cook for her, and do yardwork. But, I pay someone else to clean. Again, I am keeping my mom safe, secure, and as physically/ emotionally/cognitively healthy as possible, and I do it joyfully. A large part of that joy comes from knowing what my boundaries are and picking what I want to do for and with her - and outsourcing the rest. For the last 5 years, so far, so good.
I wish you luck in finding someone else to care for your MIL.