I think it's time for her to send the kids to the fathers family! That's it or plan b pill if you live in a state like that allows it! Otherwise I would suggest adopting the kid out.
I Refuse to Keep Supporting My Daughter and Her 5 Kids for Free

This is June’s story.
Dear Bright Side,
My daughter is 25 and already has 5 kids from 4 different men. I understand that it is partially my fault, I should’ve been a better mother to her and taught her more about life. But believe me, I’m paying the price for it now.
Last year, after the twins were born, she lost her job and shortly after that, their dad took off. My daughter came to me and asked if I could help her out. I agreed and let them move in with me. A few months ago, my daughter started dating again, and the boyfriend moved in as well.
So I’ve had 7 extra people under my roof for the last few months, and we cover all their expenses. From their food, to their bills and the school expenses for the two older kids. It hasn’t been easy. We have both had to make arrangements to get more money in while they do nothing to contribute.
Well, last week my daughter turned 26, and at her Birthday party she gathered us all in the living room. I was nervous because I knew it couldn’t be good news. Then she said she had a “surprise” for us. Everyone waited anxiously, and then she said the two words I never wanted to hear again.
My heart dropped the second the words “I’m pregnant!” left her mouth. This was the worst possible time for her to get pregnant again. The twins were barely a year old and she and only known this guy for a few months. How could she be sure he wouldn’t be like all the rest?
I was furious when I pulled her aside to ask her what she was thinking, but she just shrugged off my concern. So I told her that if she planned on bringing another child into my house, she had better start helping out.
I was not going to keep working myself to death to cover her costs. She needed to start paying her own expenses and helping with the housework. If she didn’t want to, she was welcome to leave. She was devastated and accused me of robbing my grandchildren of a future.
So Bright Side, is she right? Should I stand by what I said, or should I be more considerate of the position she was putting my grandchildren in?
Regards,
June L
Some advice from our Editorial team.

I can't believe she's got FIVE kids and thinks it's ok for more all wile living at home!! I stopped at 3 because I knew I couldn't take care of any more living with my mom. Now I take care of them AND her in her old age! That's how it works not YOU taking care of HER!! She's selfish and disgusting!! Btw why would YOU allow some strange man to move into YOUR home near YOUR grandbabies?? STOP being a doormat!
Dear June,
Thank you for reaching out to us and sharing your story.
If you want to help your grandchildren without letting your daughter drag you under, you need to separate “supporting the kids” from “enabling your daughter.”
Right now, she’s living in a system where every crisis gets absorbed by you so she never has to confront what her choices cost. That’s why she could announce a pregnancy like it was a cute surprise instead of a responsibility she’d have to shoulder.
You weren’t wrong to tell her that another baby means she has to contribute. In fact, it’s the first moment you’ve asked her to face reality. But here’s the key: don’t make it an all-or-nothing eviction threat, and don’t backtrack either.
You can keep your home available for the children while requiring your daughter to either step up or step out. That means putting it in concrete terms, if she wants to keep living under your roof with this new baby, she must get a job, contribute financially, and actively parent her children.
If she refuses, you hold her accountable; she can leave, but the kids don’t get punished for her choices. You can pursue temporary guardianship, take over care during the day, or structure the home so the kids stay stable while she finds housing or support services.
Your daughter will call it “robbing her children,” but it’s the opposite; you’re showing them what stability and responsibility look like. The only way this cycle stops is if you stop absorbing the fallout of her decisions while still giving her kids the structure they desperately need.
June’s situation is not an easy one, especially since she just wants what’s best for her grandchildren. But she isn’t the only one with family struggles.
Another one of our readers reached out to share their story. You can read the full version here: My Mother-in-Law Called Me a ’Terrible Mother’ but My Husband Stayed Silent.
Comments
Your daughter needs to move out with her kids. Stop by to help her now and then but whatever you do, don't let her stay there with you or she'll never get out. She can get public assistance and a food card with plenty enough to feed them all. She also needs her tubes tied. Furthermore if she says anything about not letting her live with you to help her, tell her she should stop screwing guys the minute she meets them and pick one that will actually help her out next time. Make her leave with her kids or you'll be sorry. I know this from experience!!
I knew a woman that rented a room to me. I didn't know that she had a 7 year old and I was renting HIS room. Her mother, already in her late 50's, was raising him, while Dora was collecting welfare for her son. She was also collecting rent from me. None of that money ever made it to her mom, for her son. I moved out as soon as I could. MY BF at the time was the only male in this child's life, that actually treated him like he was an important kid. Baseball games, arcade trips, taught him how to fish. All of this on the days that DORA was supposed to be hanging out with HER OWN SON. It was heart breaking. Women that have kids, but don't want anything more than the attention and perks they get from it, need to be forcibly sterilized. NO child deserves to be an accessory for their lazy, selfish and greedy mothers, and or fathers.
Having kids is easy but you should be responsible enough to take care of them, she needs to grow up.
You are entitling her by not asking to contribute and by not telling her, that her boyfriend can't move in. Also that if she gets pregnant again, she's on her own. You created your own storm and your complaing because is raining
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