Feeling rage for my MIL after becoming a mom?

Every new parent dreams of cherishing those first precious moments with their newborn, but for one new mother, those moments were disrupted by constant intrusions from her mother-in-law. From the delivery room to daily routines, the mother-in-law’s overbearing presence has left the new mom feeling robbed of her special time and overwhelmed by unsolicited advice.

Though she values her mother-in-law’s intentions, the new mom struggles with mounting resentment and anxiety. For anyone who’s felt their boundaries trampled by a well-meaning relative during the vulnerable postpartum period, this story may strike a chord.

ADVERTISEMENT

‘Feeling rage for my MIL after becoming a mom?’

Hi friends, just found this page and need to vent. I am a new mom to a 9 month old baby and since the moment I entered the hospital to give birth my MIL has been something else. She invited herself to the hospital, and when I was about to push DH asked her to leave and she said she was going to stay.

He finally got her to leave, but 40 minutes after baby war born she appeared. I was so exhausted and out of it after 36 hours of induced labor, but her stealing my “golden hour” is something I won’t ever let go of. From the second we brought baby home she would take the baby and say she would hold him while I “cleaned or something” I could barely walk after a grueling labor and had a rough recovery— wasn’t cleared from the doctor until 16 weeks!

MIL stayed with us the first couple of weeks, and well yes she was helpful with cooking, I feel like she intruded on my special time with my newborn that I will never be able to get back. She inserted her opinions, nonstop, and even while me asking her to stop, she continued to do it.

ADVERTISEMENT

She comes to my house for 5 nights at a time every other month or so and she is so messy! She always has something to say about my parenting my dogs, my cookware… any little thing you can think of. This last visit she snapped at me , for example I asked her to just make sure LO food was cut up small enough. She was like “I raised three kids I know!!!!!”

Like, jeez lady I’m just concerned for LO safety I don’t think it’s a bad thing to remind you after 30 plus years. The final straw was the morning she was leaving she went in and WOKE UP my LO. After I told her to not do that (she had done it before during his naps).

Selfishly pulled him out from his bed to play with him an hour before he typically wakes— which will now ruin my whole day (i work from home and have part time help) (we’ve set up a schedule that works for us and she effed it up! ) I woke up and saw him out of his bed and I saw red. I ran upstairs and confronted her.

ADVERTISEMENT

She started crying and since then I can’t stop thinking of every little thing she has done over these last 9 months. I don’t know if I’m overreacting or what but I feel rage, anxiety in my belly, and starting to resent DH for not nipping it in the bud sooner. I can say a million more things that she has done, but we all have busy lives. I’ll save it for my therapist ;). We are scheduled to have a phone call with her this week…. Wish me luck.

Part 1: A Mother-in-Law’s Intrusion from Day One

The new mom’s challenges with her mother-in-law began the moment she entered the hospital to give birth to her now 9-month-old son. Uninvited, the mother-in-law arrived at the delivery room, and even when the new mom’s husband asked her to leave as labor intensified, she insisted on staying.

Only after firm insistence did she step out, but a mere 40 minutes after the baby’s birth—following a grueling 36-hour induced labor—she reappeared. Exhausted and disoriented, the new mom felt her cherished “golden hour” with her newborn was stolen, a loss she still carries deeply.

ADVERTISEMENT

When the family returned home, the mother-in-law stayed for the first two weeks, offering help with cooking but overshadowing the new mom’s bonding time. Barely able to walk due to a difficult recovery that delayed her medical clearance until 16 weeks postpartum, the new mom watched as her mother-in-law took the baby, suggesting she “clean or something” instead of resting or cuddling her son. Despite requests to stop, the mother-in-law bombarded her with parenting opinions, from feeding to sleep schedules, ignoring the new mom’s wishes.

Part 2: Escalating Tensions and a Breaking Point

The mother-in-law’s visits, occurring for five nights every other month, only heightened the strain. Her messy habits and relentless critiques—of the new mom’s parenting, her dogs, even her cookware—created a tense atmosphere. During one visit, when the new mom gently reminded her to cut the baby’s food into small pieces for safety, the mother-in-law snapped, “I raised three kids, I know!” The new mom, simply concerned for her son’s well-being, felt dismissed and disrespected.

The final straw came during the mother-in-law’s most recent visit. Despite being asked not to wake the baby—a rule she’d previously ignored during naps—she entered his room and pulled him from his crib an hour early to play, disrupting the carefully crafted schedule that allowed the new mom to work from home with part-time help.

ADVERTISEMENT

When the new mom discovered her son out of bed, fury surged through her. She confronted her mother-in-law, who responded with tears, leaving the new mom grappling with rage, anxiety, and resentment—not only toward her mother-in-law but also toward her husband for not addressing the issue sooner.

Part 3: Solutions—Reclaiming Space with Boundaries

After sharing her story online and reflecting on her needs, the new mom began exploring ways to set boundaries while preserving family ties, drawing on community advice:

1. Limit Overnight Visits: The new mom decided to stop hosting her mother-in-law for extended stays. Future visits would be shorter, with the mother-in-law staying at a hotel or nearby, allowing the family to maintain privacy and control over their space.

ADVERTISEMENT

2. Enforce Clear Rules: The new mom and her husband agreed to establish firm guidelines for visits, such as no waking the baby, no unsolicited parenting advice, and handing the baby back when requested. If these rules are violated, visits would be paused until respect is shown.

3. Empower the Husband’s Role: Recognizing her husband’s hesitation, the new mom encouraged him to take the lead in communicating boundaries to his mother, emphasizing that he must advocate for their family’s well-being to prevent further strain.

4. Take a Temporary Break: To heal from the accumulated stress, the new mom planned a three-month pause from visits, allowing her to focus on her son and her own recovery. Any future interactions would be on her terms, such as brief meetups at neutral locations.

ADVERTISEMENT

5. Seek Support and Communication: The new mom scheduled a phone call with her mother-in-law, with her husband present, to calmly outline their needs using a gentle approach: “We love your support, but we need space to parent our way. Let’s find a way to make visits work for everyone.” She also began therapy to process her resentment and strengthen her confidence.

Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:

When the new mom shared her experience online, community members offered a range of insights and strategies to help her address the situation:

Baby-Giraffe286 − You have a husband problem as well as a mil problem. He needs to get her under control asap and start defending your family. I highly recommend taking a break from her. No more staying at your home for a visit. She can stay in a hotel,

ADVERTISEMENT

and you can have daily meet-ups with your husband present when she visits for a bit until she can respect your boundaries. I am sorry for how much joy she has stolen from you. It is important that your husband sees and acknowledges it, too, so he will uphold your boundaries, too.

Charming_Crew2055 − She’s not clueless, she’s calculated. Crying is just damage control. You’re not overreacting, you’re underreacting for nine months of nerve-grinding disrespect. Set the boundary. Hold the line. Good luck, but also, unleash.

AgentConstant8723 − I've banned my MiL for this postpartum period after last time - best thing I've ever done. She's insufferable.

ADVERTISEMENT

Sudden-Pomegranate95 − It’s been 10 years since my MIL ruined my entire labor and delivery and the first 3 months of my first newborn being here. I’m not kidding when I tell you I think about it every day. I HATE that woman. It scares me how much I hate her and that I’m actually capable of despising someone so much.

Obviously, there’s a lot more to it but I will never forgive that selfish b**ch for taking my birth and making it her own story. The first few months of my babies life were ALL about her. When I finally lost my s**t and went NC, my DH didn’t. She still had her claws in and my life was still being controlled.

I’m only JUST forgiving DH (but not forgetting) for letting his family make me genuinely poorly. I’d wake up in the middle of the night having panic attacks from dreams she was kidnapping my kids and running away with them. When my second child was born I set firm boundaries and she couldn’t stand it.

ADVERTISEMENT

She lost her s**t at about 6 weeks PP and demanding my daughter for a sleepover, I said no. They then said they were taking us to court for custody of both my one year old and 6 week old and told us to BE THANKFUL that they’re only applying for Friday-Monday😂😂 finally my DH told them to go f**k themselves and cut them off. I genuinely believe I have ptsd from that entire time period of my life.

Before no contact we used to sit in pitch black and pretend we weren’t in, phones turned off, activity status on everything turned off. I couldn’t even go to the supermarket with my mum without her turning up screeching demanding us to hand the kids over for the night because my mum got to push their pram around the grocery store.

My grandma once came round for a cup of tea, she demanded to have the baby the day after for an entire day and sleepover because I need to “make up” for the time my grandma had. You will always feel that rage at MIL and DH. We very nearly split because of his inability to protect me.

ADVERTISEMENT

Even when she was calling me Sid the sloth??? “Tell Sid I’m having MY granddaughter for a sleepover YOU are MY son and she’s YOUR daughter so tell that fat little b**ch I don’t have to ask for anything I’m TELLING IT I’m having MY grandkids NOT asking IT”. The thought of her being anywhere near my kids makes me sick.

MamaBearRoars − Oh honey, your rage is SO valid! That “golden hour” theft and waking your LO are straight-up boundary stomps. You’re not overreacting—you’re a mama lion protecting her cub. I’d suggest a serious sit-down with DH before the phone call.

He needs to be your shield and tell MIL: no more overnight stays, visits are on YOUR terms, and any unsolicited advice gets her a timeout. You deserve to enjoy motherhood without her chaos. Sending you strength for that call!

ADVERTISEMENT

Tough-Board-82 − Coupons for massages from you. A muscle balm.

lster944 − It is not too late to set boundaries. Here's what I would do:. \- Supervised visits once a month at your house. You will let her know when you are available. \- No waking up the baby. Has she not ever heard the phrase don't wake up a sleeping baby? Just remind her of that phrase..

\- No opinions on parenting.. \- No feeding the baby.. \- If you ask for the baby, she gives the baby back. If the above is not followed, once a month visits goes to no visits until she can follow the rules. You don't owe her anything and her son should be the one to communicate this and all boundaries to her, not you.

ADVERTISEMENT

annettemendoza − YOU DON'T HAVE TO LET HER COME OVER!!!! You are an adult now and a mom to boot!! You don't have to do f**k all that you don't want to. She gets her little feelings hurt, good!! You have had yours hurt all this time. What is the worst she can do to you? Talk bad about you? You can bet your ass she already does that.

She'll be mad at you? So what, you're mad at her, but with more valid reasons!! Your SO wants her to come, he entertains her the whole time and you and LO go see YOUR family or a friend for that time. Grandparents EARN the chance to be in their grandkids lives. It isn't a RIGHT.

And keeping new mama happy and the new baby safe are the BEST ways to do that. Take a long overdue timeout from her for a few months. If you decide to let visits resume, she finds somewhere else to sleep and stay. Also make sure she doesn't have keys to your house to sneak back in. Waking a sleeping baby is just insane and so bad for their routine. That would have been my straw too.

ADVERTISEMENT

Background-Staff-820 − MIL, FAFO!!!!

IHateTheJoneses − 'even while me asking her to stop, she continued to do it.'. You are not over-reacting. Please read your sentence above again.. Does your husband agree there's a problem? If not, he's your problem, not her. . You need to stop having her over until she can respect you as a parent. 

Navigating boundaries with an overbearing relative during the tender postpartum period is daunting, but the new mom learned that protecting her peace and her son’s well-being is paramount. By setting clear limits and prioritizing her family’s needs, she’s reclaiming the joy of motherhood.

ADVERTISEMENT

For others facing similar challenges, small steps like shortening visits or enlisting a partner’s support can pave the way for healthier relationships. Boundaries aren’t about exclusion; they’re about fostering love with respect. Has anyone else struggled with an intrusive relative as a new parent? Sharing stories below could offer comfort and ideas for others in this delicate season.

Share this post

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *