The conversation should have started with the comeuppance ' I'm sorry but I couldn't help but overhear a conversation you had the other day in my known possible earshot, you seem to feel like I am something of an embarrassment and of no consequence to you. If that's truly how you feel I wish you not to have a key to my house . If I'm not a welcome person in your life should I still be treating you like a welcome person in mine if I am just a person of ridicule and mockery to you?'
My DIL Refused to See Me as Family—I Gave Her Exactly What She Wanted

One mother-in-law always treated her DIL like her own daughter. But one cruel moment changed everything. After she overheard harsh words, she refused to stay silent. Her bold story proves that even family love has limits.
Hello, Bright Side,
Need your opinion on this.
I treated my daughter-in-law like my own child for 9 years. I was there for every emergency. Then I overheard her saying, “She acts like she’s my mom. So pathetic!”
It was so unexpected to me. I was shocked and really cried. I took a moment to gather my thoughts and then decided that I wasn’t going to let this continue.
So when she and my son came for dinner the next time, I handed my son a new key and said, “This is for you, David. I changed the locks this morning.” She said, “Where’s mine?”
I answered, “I’m not your mother, remember? You told your friends my affection was ’pathetic.’ Since you don’t view me as family, it would be inappropriate for me to give a stranger a key to my home. I’m simply respecting the boundary you drew.”
She left. My son stayed for dinner alone. Now they’re fighting. They haven’t come back together since. My son comes alone on Sundays now. He brings the grandkids sometimes.
She never comes. She told my son I owe her an apology. But I think she is the one who needs to apologize. Am I wrong?
Betty
Hi Betty,
Sure, that stings to hear someone you’ve poured your heart into call your love “pathetic.”
That word basically implies that your care was excessive, your presence was unwanted, and your emotional investment was embarrassing. You saw yourself as loving. She called it intrusive.
Is she wrong?
Yes. Calling a supportive mother-in-law “pathetic” behind her back is objectively unkind and ungrateful. So, now she’s only experiencing the natural consequences of her own words.
Are you wrong?
Technically, no. But you were aggressive. Changing the locks and announcing it at dinner might feel great in the moment, but now you’re living in a world where your family is divided and the peace is broken.
What could have been done differently?
You didn’t communicate. You never told her: “I overheard what you said. It hurt me deeply.” Instead, you delivered a consequence without first offering a conversation. However, she might genuinely feel that you have been overstepping and you were too involved.

AGGRESSIVE? THROWING HER DIL OUT OF THE HOUSE BODILY, WOULD BE AGGRESSIVE. SHE GAVE WHAT SHE GOT. TOO BAD HE DIL COULDN'T DO THE SAME. SHE WAS THE ONE THAT HAD THE PROBLEM, IT WAS UP TO HER TO "TALK" TO HER MIL.
If you want to know how to act further, here are some thoughts:
- Enjoy the peace: If your son is still coming over and bringing the grandkids, that’s fine. Don’t ruin that time by venting about his wife. Let your home be the “fun, happy place” for them.
- You don’t owe her an apology for your feelings. But if you want to bridge the gap for your son’s sake, you could say: “I’m sorry things are tense, but I only have room in my inner circle for people who respect me. When you’re ready to be that person, the door is open.”
- If you want peace, you could invite her to coffee alone and tell her exactly what you heard and how it felt. Ask what she truly feels about your involvement and listen without defending. And then, based on her reactions and answers, you can decide what to do next.
Hope you will be able to make sure the situation doesn’t get so stiff that you can’t hug your grandkids.
Bright Side
Different stories, same painful question: when does kindness stop and self-respect begin? When one reader’s MIL humiliated her at her own birthday party, she refused to pretend it was funny. What started as a cruel “joke” turned into a moment no one in that family will ever forget. Here’s what happened.
Comments
So, basically you imagined that she has to love you in return because you do all the kind things (and we don’t even know the full picture). And the moment the claims she is tired of you, you act like a resentful child. Wow. Time to grow up.
That’s just weird to change locks to not let your DIL in.
Frankly, you both are bad. You eavesdropped on one conversation; heard your DIL making a comment which well could have been nothing but a moment's frustration over a specific incident, and interpreted that to mean nine years of hatred. But instead of asking her what she was upset about, you went nuclear and cut her out of your life entirely. Which is not to say your daughter in law is entirely blameless--if she had an issue with your behavior, she should have come to you to try to work it out. But you're both too stubborn and obnoxious to apologize or even talk to the other, and your poor son in the one caught in the middle. If I were him, I'd take the kids somewhere and be done with both of you. Maybe you can try holding your breath until you get your way, like a three-year-old. Thant seems to be the level of maturity on display here.
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