I Refused to Help My Pregnant DIL—I’m Retired, Not a Free Babysitter

People
3 weeks ago
I Refused to Help My Pregnant DIL—I’m Retired, Not a Free Babysitter

Ah, the classic family conflicts: one side thinks “it takes a village to raise a child”, the other says, “sure, but I’m not the village”. This story blew up in our inbox because it hits a nerve for so many grandparents who thought retirement meant cruises, hobbies, and sleeping in—not diapers, school runs, and endless babysitting.

Dear Bright Side,

When my DIL got pregnant, they asked me to babysit her son from her first marriage, and I agreed. However, when I planned a trip, she snapped, “Only a selfish woman would choose her pleasure over a future mommy’s needs”. I smiled, but she lost it when I asked for money to become a babysitter for her.

Did I miss the part of the story where it says DIL wants Gma to be a full time everyday sitter? But if it is that expectation my whole thoughts on Gma M-F 8am to 6pm at night is wrong. Mom and Dad know they'll be needing fulltime babysitting while they're waiting for their newest arrival so as a responsible couple they should be interviewing daycares or nannies or whatever. Gma's should not be an automatic job filler ever. It takes away part of the pleasure of being a grandparent. Even if Gma is living in their household. This is a job position they knew needed filling and as such should have been prepared to pay an employee to perform and grandparents don't automatically fill that roll

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I believe a grandmother should be paid to babysit a grandchild. What can be better then piece of mind your grandchild is with someone you trust & has hands on experience with children. Just like any job caretakers are entitled to time off. Your DIL is nasty.

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Which is it - you don't want to be saddled with babysitting, or you won't mind if you're paid? Your mistake was bringing up being paid. Now, if they offer you a reasonably amount to sit, you've kind of commited yourself, but regardless.... those times there's something else you have planned, say 'no, I have plans that day or week. You'll have to find someone else'.... and don't back down. Your DIL has gall expecting you to give up your life to make hers easier.

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Even paid babysitters have time periods where they are not available, so Carol's point that it's either or is not exactly correct.

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‘Future mommy needs’? Sounds like a severe case of the entitlement disease. I chose to remain childless so I am able to do what I want when I want, not to be childcare for other people’s children.

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In 1979, when my oldest brother and his wife were expecting the first grandchild, my sister in law, who was a registered nurse, suggested that my mother, who was only 44 at the time, quit her full-time job to become their full-time unpaid babysitter. My mother still had a minor child at home that she was expecting to go to college. My mother told her it was impossible because they had a mortgage and car notes and all the expenses of a family. I think my mother was more angry that she had been asked to give up her job than my sister-in-law was that my mother turned her down.

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What kills me the most are these so called "Parents" who dont want to spend money to take care of what should be their most important "asset"!!! You get what you pay for...remember that!!

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Ikr? My neighbour’s adult daughter cared for my child when she was an infant to toddler. Her two teenaged children treated my daughter as a loved sibling and played with her, danced with her, taught her basic things. I left her signed, blank checks to fill out each week for her pay. My reason was that I trusted her enough with my child, how could I not trust her with anything less?! There was never an issue, and when she was offered a manager’s position at a friend’s jewelry store a few years later, she returned my daughter and some unused checks. We’re still great friends, and my daughter is 32 now.

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Grand parents should be paid in both reciprocated services and money to prevent abuse. I pay for my babysitter (grandparent) to accompany us on family trips, drive grands to appointments, and cook for them when the services are provided locally. I feel that lower levels of detectable passion/pleasure form through obligation... Help the grands enjoy by taking care of your responsibilities.

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Absolutely agree with this. They raised their kids. Not right to make them become a free babysitter. Have compassion for them. Especially with it not being their own grandkids. But even if it was can't expect them to do it all the time for free.

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Now she’s not talking to me, and my son is awkwardly trying to “stay out of it”. Apparently, I’m the villain for daring to have a life and not volunteering as free childcare on demand. I love my grandson, but I’m not a full-time nanny, and I don’t think it’s wrong to expect some respect, or at least a conversation that doesn’t involve guilt trips.

So, I’m curious, what would you do in my shoes? Am I being unreasonable for wanting boundaries, or is it time to stop helping altogether until they treat me like a person and not an unpaid employee?

— Abigail

Thanks Abigail for sharing your story! That’s a tough spot to be in. Family drama hits different, especially when you were just trying to help and suddenly you’re painted as the bad guy. From what you’ve said, it sounds like your DIL’s gotten a little too comfortable treating your kindness like an obligation.

Here are a few thoughts that might help before you lose your mind (or your relationship with your son).

Where exactly is your disrespectful trifling dil mother or father why can't they help your son and dil to hire a babysitter and get on with your life.If they don't like it too bad sounds like a personal problem to me

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  • Set a babysitting schedule, and stick to it. Tell them exactly which days/times you’re available. “I can help on Wednesdays from 2 to 6, and that’s it.” No last-minute guilt trips, no “future mommy emergencies.”
  • Start saying “I have plans”, even if your plan is a nap. You don’t owe anyone your time 24/7. A simple “Sorry, I’ve got something that day” shuts down the entitlement without explaining your entire life.
  • Talk to your son privately. Sit him down and tell him point-blank: “I love your family, but I’m not their free childcare. Either we set respectful boundaries, or I’ll have to step back.” He needs to hear it clearly.
  • Stop offering until the tone changes. If she’s rude or disrespectful, hit pause. No babysitting until she can ask politely and appreciate the help. Respect first, favors later.
  • Ask for a fair trade. If money talk freaks her out, suggest an exchange—maybe they cover your gas, meals, or do something helpful in return. It reminds them this isn’t a one-way street.
  • Document what’s been happening (for yourself). Not in a “Karen” way, just jot down dates or texts when she’s been demanding or rude. It’ll help if your son ever claims “You’re overreacting.”
  • Acknowledge her situation. Pregnancy hormones, exhaustion, and stress can make anyone snappy. It doesn’t excuse the “selfish” comment, but it might explain it. Sometimes a little grace goes a long way.
  • Apologize if needed, and expect the same. You can say, “I didn’t mean to offend you by mentioning money,” and still expect her to say, “I shouldn’t have called you selfish.” Mutual respect or nothing.

She is. Trouble maker. I'd keep my distance from her. Stand your ground. It's her kid to raise not yours. Just because you're a grandmother doesn't mean you sit around waiting to be needed to babysit. Shit on that. Anytime you put boundaries in place toxic people flip their lid. Boundaries are a full proof test for toxicity...

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  • Don’t hold grudges. Families move on, but if she keeps treating you like free labor, remember it for next time. Forgive, sure but don’t reset to “doormat mode”.
  • Offer alternatives. If she really needs help, suggest a sitter, daycare, or even a friend she trusts. That way, you’re being supportive without being the only option.

Families fall into this cycle all the time, someone gives too much, someone expects too much, and suddenly love feels like a chore. It’s messy, but it’s real. If this one hit close to home, you might want to check out our similar story.

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