“She Can’t Come”: MIL Shocks Woman After She Rejects Her Mom From Joining Them For Christmas
Christmas is supposed to be a time of joy and celebration. The holiday season is about showing generosity and kindness to others and making sure that everyone enjoys a warm and cozy holiday. So when it comes to family gatherings, most of us think “the more the merrier!”
One woman, however, has decided that her home doesn’t have space for one more person, even if that person happens to be her daughter-in-law’s mother. Below, you’ll find the full story that this daughter-in-law recently shared on Reddit, as well as some of the replies that readers left her.
Christmas should be a warm and cozy holiday surrounded by loved ones
Image credits: freepik (not the actual photo)
But when this woman asked if her mom could join her in-laws’ celebration, her mother-in-law immediately refused
Image credits: freepik (not the actual photo)
Image credits: Designer_Visit_879
The best way to spread Christmas cheer is by showing generosity to others
Image credits: freepik (not the actual photo)
As a child, I considered Christmas to be the most magical day of the year. My parents bent over backwards to make sure my brothers and I always had a joyful holiday, and I will forever remember each Christmas as an incredibly special occasion. But as I’ve gotten older, I’ve realized that Christmas can not only be a time full of love and joy; it can also, unfortunately, be a time of great pain and sorrow.
If you’ve lost a loved one, celebrating Christmas might not ever feel the same without them. And if you’re struggling to keep a roof over your head or to put food on the table for your children, the pressure of trying to make the holiday season feel magical might be exhausting.
So it’s important to not only think about buying presents for friends and family members and cooking an elaborate feast. We should also keep in mind how crucial it is to look after one another. To show some generosity during this time and spread some holiday cheer, many people choose to volunteer around Christmas time.
This might include donating presents to families in need, creating care packages for families or unhoused residents, serving food at a local soup kitchen, raising money for charity, singing Christmas carols in hospitals, donating toys to animal shelters or writing kind Christmas cards to elderly residents.
There’s absolutely no better way to bring some warmth into your heart than to help someone else. And if there are people in your life who are struggling during the holiday season, it’s important to do anything you can to show them support.
The holidays can be a difficult time for many people, so it’s important to show loved ones support
Image credits: freepik (not the actual photo)
Mind.org notes that Christmas can be challenging for a variety of reasons, including losing loved ones or going through a recent divorce. So to help show support, they recommend first understanding that Christmas will mean something different to every person. Be sympathetic to the fact that they might be struggling, and make sure they know that they’re not alone.
Listen to what they have to say, and accept their feelings. It can also be a good idea to ask them what might help. Maybe they want to play board games or bake cookies and watch cheesy Christmas films. Whatever they’re in the mood for, make sure they don’t have to do it alone.
Before buying a present, make sure that you consider exactly how it will be received. For example, food and alcohol-related presents aren’t always going to be appropriate. But gifting a loved one an outing that they’ll enjoy that you can experience together might be a great idea if they need friends and family to be around.
If it feels like this person is putting a damper on Christmas or being a downer, remember that they’re not doing so intentionally. Everyone wants to have a magical holiday season, but sometimes life circumstances get in the way. Make sure that you’re taking care of yourself as well, so you can be in a good place to provide them support.
We would love to hear your thoughts on this situation in the comments below, pandas. How would you have responded if you were in this woman’s shoes? Feel free to weigh in. And then, you can find another Bored Panda article featuring similar family drama right here!
The majority of readers agreed with the woman and called out her mother-in-law for being so unwelcoming
However, some thought that the mom would be intruding if she attended the Christmas celebration
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So much for Christmas spirit, i bet MIL thinks she's a good christian too. I don't understand how some people can celebrate Christmas all while being selfish heartless douchebags at the same time.
It's usually the AH's who think they're "good" christians.
Load More Replies...To all the people saying it is rude to invite a person without asking first need to reread the entire story slowly. No one was invited without asking! No where in the story does it suggest that even happened. The whole point of the story was asking for the invite. This story would have been about the Mother showing up to the Christmas party uninvited if that had happened. How did people miss the entire point of the story?
It’s good that she asked, but she needs to accept the no.
Load More Replies...I'm an introvert. I hate social situations. A perfect holiday for me is sitting in my recliner in my pj's, alone, watching movies. That said - if someone asked if they could spend the day with me because they didn't want to be alone, I would welcome them (and tell them to wear their pjs).
OMG, that sounds lovely! Can we have a cat & a fireplace too?
Load More Replies...I just lost my dad this year and for Thanksgiving my brother's wife's family invited my mom and I to their house...and my sis-in law's sister invited us to her house for Xmas day! That's what family does!!!
I'm so sorry for your loss. (I lost my dad in 2021 and it still hurts.) I'm so glad to hear your family is supportive and are good people :) I hope you are doing as okay as you can be <3
Load More Replies...We've had Christmas at my cousins for decades, and there is often someone included that several of us have never met but they didn't have anywhere else to go. And it has made our lives richer for being kind that way. Some of them still come often, some we never see again. But it is one meal on one day, and we are happy to share it.
In my family, everyone is invited. It's so weird to actively try to leave someone out on a holiday. As long as you can handle the noise level, come on in the door. We just need a head count before we buy food.
The lady asked her MIL, she did tell her or just show up with her mother, that would have been very rude. For whatever reason the MIL doesn't like her mother and doesn't want to get to know her at all. Glad that her husband called his mother after what she said about his MIL. I was so lucky with my husband's family except 1 time that his brother royally pissed me off. If he had been in my house instead of their parents house I would have kicked him out and cussed him out. Just because he hated kids didn't mean the rest of us do. He had 2 kids that even lived with him for a while. He never saw any of his 6 grandkids before he died a couple of years ago because he didn't want to. He was absolutely nothing like the rest of the family. My mother was always invited to the family Christmas.
Good heavens... it's one extra person that they all know (maybe not know well, but they're not strangers), it really shouldn't be an issue. Yowzers, not much empathy from the in-laws, is there??
There's no room at the inn is technically a Christmas saying, but that's not who you're supposed to emulate in the story.
My parents had the big house, so every Christmas or Christmas eve, we'd have both sides of the family over! Thus, the YTA about not wanting to get to know the daughter's partners family is wild!!! Sure, your kid married someone, but you have no desire to meet or get to know their family? What happens when they have kids (aka grandkids)? That person will probably make them choose... that's sad.
It's such a pain when people try to gatekeep Christmas instead of spreading joy like we're supposed to.
There is no way on God's green earth my mom would be spending Christmas alone. Would never happen, would never even be a possibility. I lost her in my early teens, but there is just no way. I also couldn't imagine my MIL being so egotistical and cruel. I hear so many of these stories and am always in awe of how terrible people can be.
I hope OP's hubs has her back + has a discussion with his mom why he + OP will not be at MIL's X-mas dinner, party, whatever.
I get the MIL's frustration, but... it's Christmas. My cousin's in-laws got divorced and we have invited her MIL to every xmas eve - an additional place-setting isn't that hard. And again...Christmas!
What a horrible, insensitive, cruel person MIL is. & She obviously has no idea what the meaning & spirit of Christmas are. I'm only now reading this on Christmas Day, & I know you made sure your mother wasn't alone. My FIL died abt 15 months ago & we spent both last Christmas - Eve & Day - & this Christmas with my 93-year-old MIL. Boy, it's hard seeing 3 chairs at the table instead of 4. We try to steer the conversation around to some of our happy memories of holidays past, some are silly things. And, in retrospect, a lot had become family traditions. We'd start out with the nice s & p shakers then FIL would say the holes were too small & he couldn't shake anything out. So somebody would get up, go to the kitchen, & come back with the box of Morton's salt & the tin of pepper & put it on the formally laid table. & MIL has always made a very sweet, sweet potato casserole that's about equal parts sweet potatoes, cream, & sugar, with a brown sugar & butter crispy topping. Invariably MIL would say, "Jack, you didn't get any sweet potatoes!" & He'd say, "I b'lieve I'll have mine for dessert." FIL always said the blessing at the table on holidays so last year MIL said it & this year my husband did & I generally tack on something irreverant like, "Heavenly Father, we know you were used to the beautiful blessings Jack used to say, but please bear with us now that he's with You, & he's probably looking down & laughing at us now. Take good care of him & make sure he knows how much we miss him. And Grace is going from chair to chair begging for turkey. Amen." Very hard, very bittersweet, but it gets MIL smiling - today I was bemoaning the fact that I didn't have anybody to eat fruitcake with - nobody else liked it but me & FIL - & MIL told us abt her mom's fruit cakes, drenched in whiskey, which of her siblings liked it, who drank too much ..... It's so hard but the parent who has lost a spouse deserves kindness, compassion, & not to be left alone.
First, it is after gifts are opened. Second, it is coming when the family has cinnamon rolls, so not a sit down lunch or dinner where they may not have an additional space at the table. Third, unless mom has treated MIL poorly, not sure why MIL is treating me poorly. My siblings in-laws do not like my mom (they liked dad), but parents would still get invited so that they could spend some time with their grandchildren.
My sister's MIL and our mother are best friends. DIL passed several years ago, and now MIL is planning a trip here (we live states away) to celebrate their 80th birthdays together. She's always been family. I look forward to her visits. She's so much fun. When people choose to be a family, it can work. Sometimes people don't want to be for whatever reason. They're really missing out. I think it's never a bad thing to welcome others in.
My daughter once asked if her grandmother in law could come to Thanksgiving, she is always alone and since everyone would be at my house, I felt bad for not thinking of it myself. She has been with us every single Thanksgiving and Christmas ever since. Love having her and send her home with a few doggie bags for dinners later.
Oh my god, is this my brother and his witch wife? I had the same situation one year at Christmas. We invited my friend who'd been cheated on and laid off at the same time, and invited my husband's friend whose mom had just died so they wouldn't be alone. My brother and his then gf (now wife) got so mad and offended on how we invited other people to join. My mom wanted to invite more lol
Gah... I grew up with whoever wanted to come to our house on Christmas day could. Even if we saw them another day too for Christmas. We gathered other times for gifts. Both sets of grandparents would be there if they wanted to come. It was about family and spending time together. We had a small house too! Didn't matter... we allowed whoever needed a place on Christmas to come and enjoy the day. No one really opened gifts that day other than us kids getting our "Santa" before everyone arrived.
Buy oversized boxing gloves and have the two mothers battle to see who gets your time - problem solved.
Mmmm, she asked and she got her answer. Sounds like she asked as a formality, not really out of consideration for the hostess. That said, she has a very valid reason to skip it. And MIL will have her son and the rest of her family alllll to herself.
sounds like evangelical/trump christianity at its finest. Those people would have Jesus thrown in jail if he showed up now. It always seems like the most devout christians are the biggest hypocrites of all.
If I knew my daughter in laws mum was on her own for Christmas Day regardless if the kids had spent the previous day with her I'd invite her over anyway I wouldn't need to be asked what's one more at the table just means there would be a little less to put in the dogs afterwards
I personally hate when people extend my invitation to them to others without my consent. Knowing that her mother was feeling lonely she should have arranged for her to come over for Christmas and just went over to the in-laws for a few hours after her mom had left. If MIL wanted them to stay longer she'd have to extend her invitation to the OPs mom then (It's impolite to leave out a visiting house guest). think the MIL just doesn't like the OPs mother for some reason. It would be charitable and kind of the OPs MIL to have her mother over for Christmas but as another pointed out being divorced doesn't make you a tragic victim. Thr OP should definitely be supportive of her mom but shouldn't automatically expect to be able to bring her along to other people's events like carry-on luggage. Balancing different family obligations is a part and parcel of being married.
Based on the story you just read, your entire premise is wrong. The mom asked to join what would have most likely been a party the mom knew about. This happens all the time in the world I live in and their is nothing wrong with it. The DIL then asked if their mother could come. No where was an invitation extended. But let's grant you your incorrect premise. This is family not just another person. Whether or not some one is a "tragic victim" is irrelevant to opening your house on Christmas to your in laws. Someone who is alone and extended family should be enough for a normal human being. Unless OP is holding back there is nothing their mom did to the husband's mom. If there was some incident I would agree. I get that some people don't like other people for seemingly no reason, but you have to do the right thing in this situation. The host of the party was given a chance to do the right thing and refused. If it were me, husband or wife, I would not go to the Christmas party.
Load More Replies...To be fair, your mil may be one of those people who hate change. Some of my family is on the spectrum and even small changes in a planned event can seem overwhelming to them. It isn't necessarily about gifts or resources, though she might have started overthinking about those things. As she barely knows your mother, it probably isn't anything personal. Still, she should have rolled with it and not let it stress her, especially as it wasn't even for the whole day and you would be there to help entertain her.
I can understand that some people don't feel comfortable with strangers, nothing special about the time of year. My parents never met my MIL.
Your child's spouse's parents aren't exactly "strangers" in the way a random person you walk past in the supermarket is a "stranger", though. One would hope that one would be willing to at least MEET your child's spouse's parent(s), perhaps before Christmas, to ensure they are no longer a "stranger" when they come over on the actual holiday.
Load More Replies...If I were asked, I'd say no too. I'm not Christian and I just want to be comfortable and spend time with people I want. If I don't feel close to you I don't want to invite you. Op can ask, I can also say no, and I'll deal with the consequences. Op can also spend time with Mom, instead of me. I understand and no one is stopping Op. Would it be a nice thing to do? Maybe. I don't know, but I do know I don't want to be uncomfortable in my own place.
Checking with the person running the event was the story you just read.
Load More Replies...So much for Christmas spirit, i bet MIL thinks she's a good christian too. I don't understand how some people can celebrate Christmas all while being selfish heartless douchebags at the same time.
It's usually the AH's who think they're "good" christians.
Load More Replies...To all the people saying it is rude to invite a person without asking first need to reread the entire story slowly. No one was invited without asking! No where in the story does it suggest that even happened. The whole point of the story was asking for the invite. This story would have been about the Mother showing up to the Christmas party uninvited if that had happened. How did people miss the entire point of the story?
It’s good that she asked, but she needs to accept the no.
Load More Replies...I'm an introvert. I hate social situations. A perfect holiday for me is sitting in my recliner in my pj's, alone, watching movies. That said - if someone asked if they could spend the day with me because they didn't want to be alone, I would welcome them (and tell them to wear their pjs).
OMG, that sounds lovely! Can we have a cat & a fireplace too?
Load More Replies...I just lost my dad this year and for Thanksgiving my brother's wife's family invited my mom and I to their house...and my sis-in law's sister invited us to her house for Xmas day! That's what family does!!!
I'm so sorry for your loss. (I lost my dad in 2021 and it still hurts.) I'm so glad to hear your family is supportive and are good people :) I hope you are doing as okay as you can be <3
Load More Replies...We've had Christmas at my cousins for decades, and there is often someone included that several of us have never met but they didn't have anywhere else to go. And it has made our lives richer for being kind that way. Some of them still come often, some we never see again. But it is one meal on one day, and we are happy to share it.
In my family, everyone is invited. It's so weird to actively try to leave someone out on a holiday. As long as you can handle the noise level, come on in the door. We just need a head count before we buy food.
The lady asked her MIL, she did tell her or just show up with her mother, that would have been very rude. For whatever reason the MIL doesn't like her mother and doesn't want to get to know her at all. Glad that her husband called his mother after what she said about his MIL. I was so lucky with my husband's family except 1 time that his brother royally pissed me off. If he had been in my house instead of their parents house I would have kicked him out and cussed him out. Just because he hated kids didn't mean the rest of us do. He had 2 kids that even lived with him for a while. He never saw any of his 6 grandkids before he died a couple of years ago because he didn't want to. He was absolutely nothing like the rest of the family. My mother was always invited to the family Christmas.
Good heavens... it's one extra person that they all know (maybe not know well, but they're not strangers), it really shouldn't be an issue. Yowzers, not much empathy from the in-laws, is there??
There's no room at the inn is technically a Christmas saying, but that's not who you're supposed to emulate in the story.
My parents had the big house, so every Christmas or Christmas eve, we'd have both sides of the family over! Thus, the YTA about not wanting to get to know the daughter's partners family is wild!!! Sure, your kid married someone, but you have no desire to meet or get to know their family? What happens when they have kids (aka grandkids)? That person will probably make them choose... that's sad.
It's such a pain when people try to gatekeep Christmas instead of spreading joy like we're supposed to.
There is no way on God's green earth my mom would be spending Christmas alone. Would never happen, would never even be a possibility. I lost her in my early teens, but there is just no way. I also couldn't imagine my MIL being so egotistical and cruel. I hear so many of these stories and am always in awe of how terrible people can be.
I hope OP's hubs has her back + has a discussion with his mom why he + OP will not be at MIL's X-mas dinner, party, whatever.
I get the MIL's frustration, but... it's Christmas. My cousin's in-laws got divorced and we have invited her MIL to every xmas eve - an additional place-setting isn't that hard. And again...Christmas!
What a horrible, insensitive, cruel person MIL is. & She obviously has no idea what the meaning & spirit of Christmas are. I'm only now reading this on Christmas Day, & I know you made sure your mother wasn't alone. My FIL died abt 15 months ago & we spent both last Christmas - Eve & Day - & this Christmas with my 93-year-old MIL. Boy, it's hard seeing 3 chairs at the table instead of 4. We try to steer the conversation around to some of our happy memories of holidays past, some are silly things. And, in retrospect, a lot had become family traditions. We'd start out with the nice s & p shakers then FIL would say the holes were too small & he couldn't shake anything out. So somebody would get up, go to the kitchen, & come back with the box of Morton's salt & the tin of pepper & put it on the formally laid table. & MIL has always made a very sweet, sweet potato casserole that's about equal parts sweet potatoes, cream, & sugar, with a brown sugar & butter crispy topping. Invariably MIL would say, "Jack, you didn't get any sweet potatoes!" & He'd say, "I b'lieve I'll have mine for dessert." FIL always said the blessing at the table on holidays so last year MIL said it & this year my husband did & I generally tack on something irreverant like, "Heavenly Father, we know you were used to the beautiful blessings Jack used to say, but please bear with us now that he's with You, & he's probably looking down & laughing at us now. Take good care of him & make sure he knows how much we miss him. And Grace is going from chair to chair begging for turkey. Amen." Very hard, very bittersweet, but it gets MIL smiling - today I was bemoaning the fact that I didn't have anybody to eat fruitcake with - nobody else liked it but me & FIL - & MIL told us abt her mom's fruit cakes, drenched in whiskey, which of her siblings liked it, who drank too much ..... It's so hard but the parent who has lost a spouse deserves kindness, compassion, & not to be left alone.
First, it is after gifts are opened. Second, it is coming when the family has cinnamon rolls, so not a sit down lunch or dinner where they may not have an additional space at the table. Third, unless mom has treated MIL poorly, not sure why MIL is treating me poorly. My siblings in-laws do not like my mom (they liked dad), but parents would still get invited so that they could spend some time with their grandchildren.
My sister's MIL and our mother are best friends. DIL passed several years ago, and now MIL is planning a trip here (we live states away) to celebrate their 80th birthdays together. She's always been family. I look forward to her visits. She's so much fun. When people choose to be a family, it can work. Sometimes people don't want to be for whatever reason. They're really missing out. I think it's never a bad thing to welcome others in.
My daughter once asked if her grandmother in law could come to Thanksgiving, she is always alone and since everyone would be at my house, I felt bad for not thinking of it myself. She has been with us every single Thanksgiving and Christmas ever since. Love having her and send her home with a few doggie bags for dinners later.
Oh my god, is this my brother and his witch wife? I had the same situation one year at Christmas. We invited my friend who'd been cheated on and laid off at the same time, and invited my husband's friend whose mom had just died so they wouldn't be alone. My brother and his then gf (now wife) got so mad and offended on how we invited other people to join. My mom wanted to invite more lol
Gah... I grew up with whoever wanted to come to our house on Christmas day could. Even if we saw them another day too for Christmas. We gathered other times for gifts. Both sets of grandparents would be there if they wanted to come. It was about family and spending time together. We had a small house too! Didn't matter... we allowed whoever needed a place on Christmas to come and enjoy the day. No one really opened gifts that day other than us kids getting our "Santa" before everyone arrived.
Buy oversized boxing gloves and have the two mothers battle to see who gets your time - problem solved.
Mmmm, she asked and she got her answer. Sounds like she asked as a formality, not really out of consideration for the hostess. That said, she has a very valid reason to skip it. And MIL will have her son and the rest of her family alllll to herself.
sounds like evangelical/trump christianity at its finest. Those people would have Jesus thrown in jail if he showed up now. It always seems like the most devout christians are the biggest hypocrites of all.
If I knew my daughter in laws mum was on her own for Christmas Day regardless if the kids had spent the previous day with her I'd invite her over anyway I wouldn't need to be asked what's one more at the table just means there would be a little less to put in the dogs afterwards
I personally hate when people extend my invitation to them to others without my consent. Knowing that her mother was feeling lonely she should have arranged for her to come over for Christmas and just went over to the in-laws for a few hours after her mom had left. If MIL wanted them to stay longer she'd have to extend her invitation to the OPs mom then (It's impolite to leave out a visiting house guest). think the MIL just doesn't like the OPs mother for some reason. It would be charitable and kind of the OPs MIL to have her mother over for Christmas but as another pointed out being divorced doesn't make you a tragic victim. Thr OP should definitely be supportive of her mom but shouldn't automatically expect to be able to bring her along to other people's events like carry-on luggage. Balancing different family obligations is a part and parcel of being married.
Based on the story you just read, your entire premise is wrong. The mom asked to join what would have most likely been a party the mom knew about. This happens all the time in the world I live in and their is nothing wrong with it. The DIL then asked if their mother could come. No where was an invitation extended. But let's grant you your incorrect premise. This is family not just another person. Whether or not some one is a "tragic victim" is irrelevant to opening your house on Christmas to your in laws. Someone who is alone and extended family should be enough for a normal human being. Unless OP is holding back there is nothing their mom did to the husband's mom. If there was some incident I would agree. I get that some people don't like other people for seemingly no reason, but you have to do the right thing in this situation. The host of the party was given a chance to do the right thing and refused. If it were me, husband or wife, I would not go to the Christmas party.
Load More Replies...To be fair, your mil may be one of those people who hate change. Some of my family is on the spectrum and even small changes in a planned event can seem overwhelming to them. It isn't necessarily about gifts or resources, though she might have started overthinking about those things. As she barely knows your mother, it probably isn't anything personal. Still, she should have rolled with it and not let it stress her, especially as it wasn't even for the whole day and you would be there to help entertain her.
I can understand that some people don't feel comfortable with strangers, nothing special about the time of year. My parents never met my MIL.
Your child's spouse's parents aren't exactly "strangers" in the way a random person you walk past in the supermarket is a "stranger", though. One would hope that one would be willing to at least MEET your child's spouse's parent(s), perhaps before Christmas, to ensure they are no longer a "stranger" when they come over on the actual holiday.
Load More Replies...If I were asked, I'd say no too. I'm not Christian and I just want to be comfortable and spend time with people I want. If I don't feel close to you I don't want to invite you. Op can ask, I can also say no, and I'll deal with the consequences. Op can also spend time with Mom, instead of me. I understand and no one is stopping Op. Would it be a nice thing to do? Maybe. I don't know, but I do know I don't want to be uncomfortable in my own place.
Checking with the person running the event was the story you just read.
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