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I told my husband to choose me or his parents – they haven’t seen their grandchild in 8 years and I’ve got no regrets

I KNOW people will judge me for cutting my child’s grandparents out of her life, but unless you have been in my shoes you have no idea.

I first met my husband’s family in 2002 when I was 27, a few months after we got together.

After more than a decade of increasingly toxic behaviour, I told David to choose between me or his parents
He chose me and eight years ago severed ties completely – I’ve never been happier

At first, they were really happy and smiley — possibly a bit over-the-top friendly.

But David seemed tense.

After one of our early meetings, he asked if I liked them, then said: “They’re not as nice as they make out, you know.”

Over time, I found out exactly what he meant and after more than a decade of increasingly toxic behaviour, I told David he had to choose — me or them.

Thankfully, he chose me and eight years ago severed ties completely. I’ve never been happier.

One in five UK families cut off family members, with ten per cent severing contact with their mums and 20 per cent cutting out dads.

I became paranoid

For me, alarm bells first started to ring about a year into our relationship.

David’s mum would often be late — once by two hours when we hosted Christmas dinner — or would suddenly change plans.

I would call it being awkward for awkward’s sake.

Before our wedding in April 2008, my mum offered us £1,000 out of the blue.

In contrast, my in-laws said they had spent enough on their son all his life and didn’t want to do it any more.

But I thought it was strange, as I’d been brought up in a generous household.

When we had our daughter in 2012, their odd behaviour went into overdrive.

They wanted to see their granddaughter whenever they liked and would get angry if we said no — even if a visit clashed with her bedtime routine.

They started accusing us of keeping their granddaughter from them, which was so far from the truth.

In the end, I became so paranoid that I’d text them every Monday morning, detailing what I was doing that week to tell them when I was free.

It made me feel very on edge and they would often just reply with: “No, not this week, thanks.”

That night we came across narcissistic personality disorder on Google. It was a light bulb moment.

Amanda

One day they said they wanted to open a bank account for our daughter, but David didn’t trust their motives as his mum once spent all his childhood savings on herself.

And when his grandad left him £250, his parents said they would invest it. He never saw it again.

During my second pregnancy in 2013, I had a missed miscarriage (when the baby has died but the mother experiences no symptoms of this). Afterwards we asked if we could stay at their caravan on the coast, but they said no.

David’s dad then stopped liking my posts on Facebook, even photos of his granddaughter. They also made digs about my weight, comparing me to an obese friend when I’m not even overweight.

In 2015, at our daughter’s third birthday party, a friend commented on my mother-in-law’s behaviour. She had watched her gushing over every child there apart from her own granddaughter.

That night we came across narcissistic personality disorder on Google. It was a light bulb moment.

David read a book called You’re Not Crazy — It’s Your Mother by Danu Morrigan and checked off every point on a list of narcissistic traits.

The straw that broke the camel’s back came during Christmas 2015, when my daughter brought home a toy torch she had been playing with at their house — after they had said she couldn’t.

End of our tether

Furious, they made her apologise and said we must return it immediately. They moaned about it so much, I ended up posting it.

In January 2016, we finally sent a recorded letter telling them how we felt.

We said we’d had enough and explained how frustrated we were feeling with the relationship.

They emailed us, saying they were very angry and accused us of being cruel. But when we met them in person, they didn’t say anything to our faces.

Feeling they were losing us, my father-in-law said his wife was getting poorly, never specifying how, and that David should call her. We knew it wasn’t true.

We were at the end of our tether. I told my husband I didn’t want to be a part of their lives any more and, in despair, said: “It’s either them or me.”

Luckily he chose me and, in October 2016, he phoned his dad and told him to stop calling.

On reflection, I know I did the right thing giving David an ultimatum. It was the push he needed to end this dysfunctional relationship that was dragging our family down.

You’d think Christmas and birthdays might be hard, but these occasions make us thankful they are not in our lives.

Amanda

I can’t imagine what life would be like if we were still in touch with them. Something had to give.

They still send birthday cards for my husband and daughter, but we throw them in the bin.

You’d think Christmas and birthdays might be hard, but these occasions make us thankful they are not in our lives. They always made an occasion stressful.

David is happier to be free of them than I am and our daughter does not ask about them.

A year ago my father-in-law got in touch saying he had listened to a podcast about a man who had left his family after joining a cult. He asked if that is what happened to us.

This sums up how insane it is to be in a relationship with them — we are so lucky to be out of the madness.

DAVID SAYS: “I’ve never regretted making the decision, ever. It is hard sometimes because I’ve lost my parents and my daughter has lost her grand­parents, but they are not the loving people they like to portray to the outside world.

“Behind closed doors, they are monsters.”

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