I called it "Got MIL?" and in hindsight, posting it was not my most prudent move. It was an essay that discussed, at some discomfiting length, my relationship with my mother-in-law. It was not an essay that was particularly flattering to my mother-in-law, because she was -- is -- not a particularly easy mother-in-law.
But -- as I later told my brothers- and sister-in-law (who, yes, found the post; this is how this story ends) -- I believed that it was my story to tell. It was about my experience with her, my responses to the things that she said to me, my discomfort in struggling to accommodate her while she visited, for the first time, her newborn grandson.
At the time, I was struggling with post-partum depression. I could barely cope. When faced with that weekend -- with trying to recover from that weekend -- I turned to my favored form of therapy: spilling my guts to the Internet.
The essay began like this:
Yeah, so. My MIL. She makes me crazy. Like, total-batsh**-pass-the-vodka-where're-mah-pills crazy. I know. I am completely and utterly unique in my experience of my mother-in-law. Everyone else has sweet and adorable mothers-in-law who celebrate them and thank them for loving their children and bearing their grandchildren and who bake them cookies and say things like "Oh, heavens, my darling son/daughter would have been lost -- LOST -- without you" and who also maybe give them money.
Mine says things like, "My, but the baby has a big nose. Not our family nose at all! He must get it from you." And then, just as I'm about to fire off some deliciously outraged retort, this: "How nice! His nose will be distinguished! Not delicate, like Emilia's. Prominent, like yours!"
Or: "Oh, how charming that you have no problem being untidy! It must be so liberating!"
Or: "Oh, how nice that you let Kyle do all the cooking! How lovely for him to get to work on dinner while you hold the baby and do your blog! Is that what you call it? A blog?"
Or: "Oh, you must really be feeding the baby a lot! He's so fat! He won't walk until he's nearly two, I'm sure! But how lovely for you! He'll be SLOW!"
And then she sashays away, her work done.
In my defense, I tried to hide the post. I believed in my right to write it, but I also knew that my in-laws (my brothers-in-law and sister-in-law; my MIL does not partake of this thing that we call the Internet, and so I did not worry that she would see it) would not like to read it. My husband, I wasn't sure about; he understands my frustrations concerning his mother, but it's a subject that we try to avoid. I figured that he wouldn't begrudge me the opportunity to vent, but that he would prefer that I not broadcast my complaints from my virtual front porch.
So I hid it, or tried to. I maintain an anonymous site -- the Basement -- for women to post their confessions and their secrets and their rants, but I knew that my family would see it there, and recognize my voice, even if I posted anonymously. So, I went as covert as I knew how: I posted it at a friend's blog, during a week that I was ostensibly "on hiatus" from blogging. I asked that she not link back to me, or talk up the post in any way.
They found it anyway. Not that week, not that month, even -- but they found it. And they weren't happy.
My sister-in-law sent me an email that was, at least, somewhat understanding ("I know that Mom is difficult, but ..."). My husband said, "You should probably expect to hear from my brothers, too." One brother-in-law sent me an email that was a little less understanding ("How could you do that? Writing such things about your family is irresponsible ...") and then another one and another, and I decided not to open any more emails from in-laws.

I apologized to them. I told them that I understood how it could be hurtful to read someone's complaints about their mother. I told them that I should not have posted it under my own name. I told them that I would have it taken it down, and I did.
By then, however, it had been up for a long time, and it had been quoted and re-quoted and excerpted all over the place, and there was nothing that I could do about it. It had taken on a life on its own, one that would last forever, in Internet years -- those unforgiving, unflinching Internet years -- and I would have to say I'm sorry many, many more times.
A recent New York Times article cites cyber-scholar Viktor Mayer-Schönberger as saying that "a society in which everything is recorded will forever tether us to all our past actions, making it impossible, in practice, to escape them ..." and that "without some form of forgetting, forgiving becomes a difficult undertaking." He's right. I would never be able to escape the story that I'd released, and so would never really be able to put it fully behind me, and my family.
I asked for forgiveness anyway. I said that I was sorry. I said that I was sorry that I hadn't been more discreet, and that it was out there, with my name attached to it, for the world to see, and that it would remain there, probably, for as long as there was an Internet.
But I also said this: that I wasn't sorry that I had written it in the first place. I wasn't sorry, I said, because I believed -- and still do -- very firmly in the importance of women sharing these kinds of stories, these difficult stories that we are so often told not to tell, not to share. How would I, a new mom struggling with depression, fighting through that depression to find her place in her expanding family, know that I was not alone in that experience if other women were not telling those stories? How would I know that I was not the only woman to have a difficult relationship with her mother-in-law? How would I know that a new baby can aggravate that already-challenging relationship? How would I know that it is not just me, if we never told these stories, if we kept them hidden behind the heavy curtain of familial privacy, inside the quiet domain of the private sphere?
Yes, I had an obligation to protect my family by whatever means possible -- change names, post anonymously, give them advance warning -- but my obligations to my family do not extend to fully silencing myself, I don't think. Because if we accept this as one of our duties, as women, to family -- to keep quiet, to be silent on all matters concerning family -- then we condemn ourselves to remaining behind the veil, our voices unheard, our stories untold, our world -- or that portion of our world, large or small, that is the world of family -- forever cut off from the public sphere. And that hurts us, I think.
Of course, end of the day, I just wanted to rant about my mother-in-law. But if ranting about one's mother-in-law is wrong, I -- for some very good reasons, and a few purely selfish ones -- don't want to be right. Even if that means that I have to apologize every few weeks, every few years, every time that someone who knows someone who knows someone who knows my in-laws comes across that post or an excerpt from that post or a reference to that post, then so be it. I'll live with that.
Catherine Connors is a writer and recovering academic in Toronto. She's the author of the award-winning parenting blog, Her Bad Mother, the co-founder and editor of the Bad Moms Club, the featured parenting blogger at Beliefnet, the moderator of Her Bad Mother's Basement, and a contributing editor at BlogHer. Catherine's writing has appeared in a variety of on- and off-line publications, numerous books, and maybe a few papyrus scrolls. She still dabbles in her academic work, which concerns women and mothers in the history of political philosophy.













Comments:
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Monday 02 August
By bebe57
Perhaps you might try to remember that she raised the man you chose to father your children
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Monday 02 August
By Josephine
I almost cried with joy when I read this. Not even kidding. My MIL is HORRIBLE and I can relate to everything you have said. She has 'caught' me via facebook stalking all my friends (she is not my friend, however she has managed to add almost all of my mutual friends with my husband, and thus sees what I post reguardless of my privacy settings) and attempts to start fights constantly. Never once have I appologized, and I give you props for sticking to your statemtents. It seems as if your brother in laws may not have significant others, because if they did I'm sure they would hear all of your complaints on a weekly basis. Stay strong!!
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Monday 02 August
By marri
mine is never on my side and always agree's with my mate and always will. she shit's on me whenever she feels like it. not all mother in-laws are a pain in the ass like mine.
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Monday 02 August
By Courtney
First of all, speak not what you would not have quoted in any imaginable forum. Seems that the writer actually lived by this, but the MIL did not. Unless the writer was lying or exaggerating, she did nothing wrong. I'm sorry if this embarrassed the family, but I think that what they are all embarrassed about is their mother/MILs behavior and comments, not the actual article. Abuse is abuse whether it is verbal, physical or emotional. The MIL is abusive, and no one has put her in her place. If the author had written about a physically abusive MIL, everyone would have encouraged her to report it, put an end to it by any means possible, etc. So why is verbal abuse minimized? If the MIL and the family is embarrassed about the reporting of the MIL's behavior, maybe the MIL should change the behavior. And BTW...that behavior wouldn't last 5 minutes in my household, but then again, I could NEVER imagine my MIL acting in such a rude, hateful way!
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Monday 02 August
By ItGirl
Ok, the MIL is obviously a bitch, but why couldn't you address her nasty comments at the time she made them instrad of posting it on your blog. I agree with some of the others that subconsciously you wanted to get caught since you clearly had it under your own name. And why apologize to your in-laws if you still stand behind what you did? SO passive aggressive. How about you pick up the freaking phone & talk it out with your MIL? Clear the air and address the problems. They are not liable to go away just because you vent on an anonymous blog. Have a backbone and deal with it. Nothing wrong with blogging your feelings but it is NOT cool to put others on blast like that.
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Tuesday 03 August
By Lizardbreath
Have you ever tried to reply to a person like the mil when they are doing their rude obnoxious thing?
If they are really good at what they do then they claim you have insulted them, humiliated them, they didn't mean anything by it BLAH BLAH!
Trust me it is hell. I've tried and they turn the table on you. They are good at it and they must practice.
My mother is a first class nasty you know what. I haven't seen her in years. One day it was just too much and she pulled one thing too many.
Sometimes it is best to grieve and know you are never going to have a good relationship and go on with your life.
When you try to appease a victimizer, you become a victim all over again.
Monday 02 August
By Boris
That's the thing about the internet. Once it's out there, anyone can see it. Next time you want to vent, get together with a few friends over mojitos or martinis, your choice. You'll have a better chance it won't get back to someone if you do it personally and not on a public forum like the internet.
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Monday 02 August
By Iwithyouon thisone
I understand your complaints, I need to start a blog about the experiences with my MIL....I COULD MAKE IT A BOOK AND NEVER HAVE TO WORK ANOTHER DAY IN MY LIFE....and for those of you that don't agree with her maybe you'll side with me when your MIL tells you" that the daughter you had was actually God giving her the girl she always wanted"...and treating my daughter like she was hers and calling you a mother that didn't know what she was doing.....she has three sons never had a girl........that is one incident .....I have many many many stories about how rude selfish and inconsiderate she has been....along with the fact that to this day dosen't fell her behavior was wrong or bad........If you don't have a mother in law....or your a mother with a married son......please take the time to step back and think of the person that your son is married too....IF YOUR MAKING THE WIFE UNHAPPY YOU LEAVE THEM WITH YOUR SON AND THE WHOLE HOUSE WILL BE UNHAPPY....YOU CREATE PROBLEMS MOST TIMES THAT DON'T EXSIST....AND YOU WILL REAP WHAT YOU SOW.!!!!!
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Monday 02 August
By The One
You have every right to blog and they have every right to read and respond. Then you actually are baffled to find out they read it (I tried to hide it, etc...). Do you actually have friends you can call and vent your feelings? Your comments were all self-centered. Remove head from butt and realize you reap what you sow. One other thing, get a friend(s) that have a phone. Problem would have been solved right then. You would have vented. friend may have given you sound advice or just listened. You compounded the problem!
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Monday 02 August
By Cindy
Thank you for posting that. You are right, there needs to be a venue. I thought I would go absolutely nuts when I had my first baby, my daughter, husband and I were staying with his parents while our place was being set up.
She never let a moment pass without a negative comment, an would actually laugh. I took so many walks, wrote letters that I'd tear up, but nobody could I speak with. Not even my husband, who of course, never stood up for me in any way, shape or form.
At one point I drove to a motel to stay there, called my mother and begged to come home...a 14 hour drive. I'd had it, she ole bitty had pushed me over the edge to where I told her off....and my mother and best friend came, got my daughter and myself..left the car behind and my baby and I went home.
I had told my sister and mother and best friend that I thought I was loosing my mind, I was unable to work or find a job, my daughter was almost 9 months old, unemployment had run out an the "husband" drank/gambled his check away every Friday. I wish to God there had been someone to talk to or a place to write, some place to vent. Even now.
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Monday 02 August
By crabby
Catherine Connors it appears that your need to be attention seeking was much stronger than your desire to act like an adult woman.Dealing with other people is what we all have to do. Acting out like you did towards your husbands mother is TABOO in ALL cultures.Your mother certainly did NOT teach you well did she? Your an idiot.You reap what you sow. I FEEL for your husband to be married to a moronic attention seeking child like you .The woman is HIS mother and you DISRESPECTED her and his siblings. You are NOT amusing or cutesy at all. You are really silly self indulgent and petty.Next time why don't you try acting like an adult and just deal with her? Back stabbing coward.
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Tuesday 03 August
By Gerelene
You are awful and mean. You dear sound just like her mother in law. No one has the right to disrespect a baby and its mother. Shame on you. May a wart grown on the end of your nose.
Monday 02 August
By sandy
I am a MIL and I was bad mouthed on facebook. What's sad is it split up the family because everybody is just tired of the lack of respect and no problem resolution skills. Perhaps that was the goal.
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Tuesday 03 August
By Dueser
Do you really think splitting up the family was the goal? If that were the case, why would she bother to put it on paper not knowing for sure if you or any of the family would actually see it? I can see where you may be "surprised" to read something and assume it is about you. In this case I guess it was a correct assumption. But, so many times people read something online and make more of it than need be. So many times, it is another family member that brings it to everyones attention and causes the split in the family. Not sure why that isn't worst than someone blogging a frustration on a site that may not have been read by those she was frustrated at. I guess that is what is bothering me the most about this article. The MIL, SIL, BIL and most family members can say anthying they want. AND they have. They feel they are in the right, well, because "mom" has been offended. But where is the writers "right" to speech. If she chooses to post it somewhere that probably would not get as much negative attention as the broght about by the SIL/BIL's visicous attack, how is that wrong. When you say her goal may have been to split up the family, it makes me wonder it would even ackowlege that maybe, just maybe the family may need an attitude ajustment and she it in a different light.
Monday 02 August
By warned
Thank you for the warning! I've just gone through a second cancer. I've been wanting to write a memoir and create a blog about what I've gone through, family situations, infertility, things that have caused the cancers-- even a bit of a rant about my doctors and how they've caused the cancers via HRT, Tamoxifen ( I am one of the unlucky one percent they say will get uterine cancer from Tamxifen), refusing to do a hysterectomy when I asked for one negligence etc.. and about my academic troubles and my husband's and etc.. But, I just realized, through you, that this could cause disasters. Family can forgive and go on-- but others might not. thanks for saying that however you tried to disguise it you were found out! I was just at a writing workshop where the woman leading my workshop ( an academic who had just stepped down as dept. chair at a major university-- as also a memoirist, warned me about writing what I was writing, saying that I would destroy both mine and my husband's careers. You are lucky you weren't writing about tenure and academia-- where SILENCING is so pervasive-- but someone does need to speak out! I too was thinking of setting up an anonymous web page and blog to tell my story-- which is a legitimate story that NEEDS to come out and will help both academic women and women who have been through childbearing, careers of their own, careers supporting spouses, all that take a toll on our bodies. But how do we do it without causing more grief to ourselves and loosing our means of supporting ourselves and keeping our families together?! If someone knows PLEASE reply.
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Wednesday 04 August
By DL
Rather than blogging on the Internet, why not write a book? You could write a novel based on the problems of academia, but with your own new characters. Or you could do a study and interview people anonymously and write about their experiences as well as yours. You could use a pseudonym if you have to. Just understand that you can't rely on the Internet being anonymous.
It sounds like you have a lot of different issues to talk about, though - cancer and doctors and academic and women. Maybe you could choose to right about one issue or the other?
By the way, your doctors are negligent. They did a study a while back and found that Tamoxifin should not be used to prevent breast cancer because it causes other cancers.
Monday 02 August
By Bobo
Well My In Laws are so nosy into My Sister In Law's life with Her husband,
hoping He's a drug dealer & spying on My Sister in Law & Her Husband!
And My Mother In Law when She can't find anything,She makes things up,
like Rodney & His Daughter Shanna are having a affair,sick! And My Girl
Friend also spys on Them,and I find it so irritating!
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Monday 02 August
By longnthik
You are a coward and your MIL is an asshole.
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Monday 02 August
By lucy
this is a free country and the people said whatever they whant , I think she is not self - focus , it is not easy to have one hard mother in low , only the person who have experience like this woman can talk about it , maybe hers sisters and brothers in low act right because the MONSTER IN LOW here is they are mom , but if they have a mother in low like their own mother thinks will be diferent . "people think like they live ".
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Tuesday 03 August
By ForgetMeNot
Seriously? How juvenile and self-centered can one person be? You think it's okay that you wrote this peevish, mean spirited diatribe? Losers like you are the ones we MILs dread, and pray our sons and daughters will never encounter. If you had a gripe, you should have had the courage of your convictions and told her face to face. How rude and unforgivable.
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