Taking responsibility for a child you have never even met, for not a couple of hours but a couple of weeks? HELL NO. What kind of MOTHER (?) is your son's girlfriend? They can't just give you a list of emergency numbers and go! You need SO MUCH INFORMATION and a WHOLE LOT OF TIME before you should EVER if AT ALL, watch that child. If this was some kind of TEST be happy that you flunked it. There is NO WAY you should or could be responsible for her. Does the child have any other family? A father? Do you want to be responsible if you find out the girlfriend should not even have custody of her? Or worse? It's not a wise or safe thing for you to do. If your son's relationship is real and going to last then starting off LYING to the people who they want help from won't fly.
I Refuse to Be My Son’s Babysitter While He Travels for Work—I’m Not His Servant

We will love our children no matter what. They are part of our family, and we will do whatever we can for them because we treasure the relationship. But one of our readers reached out because she feels that her son had gone too far. Let’s see what she has to say.
This is Lindsey’s story.
Dear Bright Side,
My son and I have always been close, but the request he made when he called me last week left me stunned. The conversation went well until he said, “Mom, I need you to babysit for two weeks while I go on a business trip.”
I didn’t know how to respond because he doesn’t have any kids. So I thought he must be joking. Turns out he wasn’t. Apparently he’s been dating a woman for the last few months, and she has a young daughter.
He has kept it a secret from everyone because she didn’t want the child to get attached before she knew if it was going to work out or not. But something about this situation didn’t feel right. He had never mentioned this woman or her child to me, and now he wants me to watch her for two weeks.
It’s like he expects me to drop everything I had planned to play grandma to a child I didn’t know existed until he phoned. So I asked him why he had the sudden change of heart, and he said, “It’ll help me prove to her that my family’s supportive.”
I was stunned into silence. He wanted his family to be supportive of a woman who had been shutting us out for months. So I told him there was no way I would agree to it. I’m not going to become an instant grandma to a child that I didn’t know about, who isn’t even his.
If he wanted me to support this relationship and spend time with the child, he could do it the right way. Invite me over and introduce us, like anyone else would. And then I would consider babysitting the child if and when I had time.
He couldn’t expect anything more from me, considering that he had been lying to me this whole time. He got angry and accused me of “ruining his future.” I told him that he did that all by himself since he couldn’t stand up for what he believed was right like I raised him too.
But now I’m sitting here wondering if I made the right decision. So Bright Side, what’s your opinion? Did I overreact? Should I have agreed to take the child in? Or did I do the right thing by standing up for myself?
Regards,
Lindsey K.
A word of advice from our Editorial team.


Giving her child to a total stranger that she and the child haven't met let alone gotten to know? What kind of mother does that? I'd rather skip the trip and watch the child myself. And your son went along with this idea? Surely he must know better. He needs to remember to treat you with better respect.
Wise decision, 2 weeks caring and that silence relationship is suspicious. Dig more, and check where she get that child father. This might be worse than what is shown to you. Like they abandoned their child at you and run away ?
Big no. This child has never seen you but you're supposed to be an instant grandma. You should be getting to know each other and then babysit if you want to. He and his gf have caused their own problem. Where's her own mom and grandma? This is not how you show support. Tell him no and continue saying no.
Dear Lindsey,
Thank you for reaching out to us and sharing your story. We understand how frustrating a situation like this one can be, and how painful it must’ve been to find out that your son has been lying to you.
You absolutely did the right thing by saying no. Your son’s request wasn’t just surprising, it was asking way too much. He wanted you to step in as a parent to a child you’d never even met, all because he wanted to show his girlfriend that the family was “supportive.”
That’s not how support works. If he really wants your involvement, it should start with honesty and introductions, not secrets and pressure.
Babysitting isn’t a test of loyalty, it’s a big responsibility, and it’s okay to set limits. By standing your ground, you’re showing him that healthy relationships, with partners or family, are built on trust and respect, not shortcuts.
The situation that Lindsey is in is not easy. But she isn’t the only one who is having struggles with a child and the relationship they’re in.
Another one of our readers reached out with the story of her son. Read it here: My Son Refused to Speak to Me Without His Wife, Until It Blew Up in His Face.
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