Creative Home cook refuses to attend her mother-in-law’s Mother’s Day dinner after being shamed for budget-friendly meals by her husband and his mom: ‘I told him he can cook for himself, packed a bag, grabbed our daughter, and went to stay with my sister’

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  • "AITA for ruining Mother's Day by leaving the house and refusing to attend my MIL's Mother's Day dinner?"

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  • My husband (29m) and I (28f) have been together since high school and married shortly after college. We have a two year old daughter.
  • I work from home full-time, and he works a 9-5 office job. Early in our marriage, we agreed that I would handle most of the
  • household responsibilities, including cooking, since my schedule is more flexible.
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  • Over the past year or so, I've really gotten into budget-friendly cooking. I follow people who make creative, nutritious meals using ingredients from places like
  • Dollar Tree and Aldi. It's been a relief for me since I get to stay within budget when our finances are tighter without having us eat the same thing over and over again.
  • My husband has eaten everything I've made and complimented it regularly, always going back for seconds and saying how good it was. He even half joked once that he didn't care where it came from unless I was dumpster-diving for it.
  • A few days ago, my MIL had went over to our house to just drop off some toys she gotten for our daughter but while there, she
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  • apparently went through some of the receipts I keep in one of the kitchen drawers for budgeting purposes.
  • A decent few of these receipts were from places like the dollar store. Later, she confronted my husband, expressing her disapproval of where I shop for
  • groceries. She implied that feeding our daughter such "cheap" food was borderline neglectful, suggesting that it wasn't how a proper mother should care for her child.
  • The day before Mother's Day, my husband offered to cook to give me a break and while I appreciated it, something felt off. He was clanking pans, slamming drawers, and getting visibly
  • irritated while cooking. When I asked if he was okay, he finally told what happened with his mom, and that he was starting to see her point.
  • He said he felt like I'd been hiding where the food came from, and accused me of being deceitful. I reminded him that he literally
  • told me not to tell him unless it was dumpster food, and that he's been eating and praising everything I made for months.
  • But suddenly now, he says he's embarrassed, and he had even questioned whether it's right for our daughter to be raised on "this kind of food."
  • I felt so hurt and insulted. I told him if he really thinks I'm failing our family by putting food on the table that's affordable and homemade, then he can go
  • ahead and cook for himself. I packed a bag, grabbed our daughter, and went to stay with my sister and BIL for a little bit to cool off.
  • We were supposed to go to his mother's house for a Mother's Day dinner, but after our argument, I decided not to attend and just spent the time with my sister, BIL, and daughter.
  • Now, he's texting me, saying I blew everything way out of portion and ruined Mother's Day while depending that I come home. His mother also called,
  • suggesting that I need to reflect on the kind of household I'm creating and whether I want our daughter to grow up thinking that "bare-minimum living is acceptable."
  • I feel like I've been doing my best to provide for my family, both emotionally, physically, and financially, and now I'm being attacked for it.

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