**My Mother-in-Law Constantly Criticizes My Parenting and Insists on Raising My Kids Her Way**
When I became a parent, I knew everyone would have opinions. But I didn’t expect my biggest critic to live just ten minutes away.
My mother-in-law loves to remind me that she “raised three kids just fine.” Which, apparently, means everything I do is wrong.
If I tell my toddler “no sweets before dinner,” she slips him a cookie when my back is turned. If I enforce bedtime at eight, she insists “kids need freedom” and keeps them up with cartoons. When my baby cried at night, she said I was “spoiling her” by picking her up.
Every visit feels like an interrogation. “Why don’t you use cloth diapers?” “Why aren’t you feeding them more meat?” “Why don’t you let them watch more TV?” She doesn’t ask—she tells. And if I push back, she looks at me like I’m ungrateful.
The worst part? My spouse shrugs it off. “That’s just how she is,” they say.
But “how she is” is undermining me in front of my children. They’ve already started parroting her words—“Grandma says I don’t have to.”
Last weekend, it all came to a head. We were at her house for dinner. I told my son he couldn’t have soda. She immediately poured him a glass and said, loud enough for everyone to hear: *“Your mother is too strict. Grandma knows what’s best.”*
Something in me snapped.
I stood up, heart pounding, and said, “Enough. You had your chance to raise your kids. These are mine. And if you can’t respect my rules, then you don’t get unsupervised time with them.”
The room went silent. My mother-in-law’s face turned red. “How dare you speak to me that way in my own house?”
I looked her dead in the eye. “How dare you sabotage me as a parent?”
My spouse tried to smooth it over, but I didn’t back down. I gathered the kids, grabbed our coats, and left.
That night, I told my spouse: “You need to decide. Either you back me as the parent of these kids, or your mother will run this family instead. And I won’t stay married to a partner who won’t defend me.”
It wasn’t an ultimatum I ever wanted to give—but I meant every word.
Because here’s the truth: children need consistency. And if my own authority as their mother isn’t respected, then neither am I.