Suggest your son & DIL find new accommodations, enough already.
I Refuse to Let My DIL’s Kid Sleep at My House Every Weekend, My Comfort Comes First

Having kids isn’t easy. We want to provide for our families and try our absolute best to make sure they get the best start to life. But with time, those relationships can become complicated, especially when there’s a spouse involved. One of our readers shared her experience.
This is Julia’s story.
Dear Bright Side,
I retired a few years ago and moved into a smaller, two-bedroom house. I didn’t need much as my husband had already passed away and just wanted a guest room in case one of my children came over. Or at least that was what I thought.
Last year, my son got remarried to a woman who has a daughter, Mia, from a previous relationship. Mia lives with her father, so the dynamic fit my son and his schedule quite well. But things took a turn.
My son reached out and told me he had been laid off, along with many others, at the company he was working for. He was trying to find a new job, but he was struggling, so I let him and his wife move in with me until they could get back on their feet again.
My son was hesitant, but I told him I was happy to help, he was my family after all, and I would do whatever I can to help a family member in need. Shortly after that, they came over. That was about two months ago and everything was going well until recently.
My son and DIL told me that Mia would be coming over every weekend. I was a bit nervous because I didn’t really know the child, but I was open to having a discussion about it. Then they asked if they could use my bedroom.
At first, I agreed. I didn’t mind sharing my space with a grandchild, in fact I thought it would be fun. I could bake with her and tell her stories, something I always wanted to do. But then my DIL told me that Mia can’t sleep with other people and would need to have the space to herself.
I was confused, until they asked me to sleep on the couch so she could have the bedroom. I refused because I had a hip replacement a few years ago, and I would be putting it at risk if I slept on something as hard and uncomfortable as the couch.

Say no. Son can give up the bed for the couch. And don't be bullied into doing/paying for anything. Or babysitting all weekend. I hope you're at least making them do chores.
But this morning I went out to get some groceries and when I got back I froze. I saw that they had already rearranged my bedroom and replaced the linen with kid’s stuff. The decision had been made without me, as if I were a guest in their home and not the other way around.
I pulled my son aside and asked him what happened. He looked defeated and said, “It’s just for two nights, can’t you make due on the couch?” I said no because it would happen every weekend and I can’t risk my health like that.
Later that day, when my son tried to discuss it with his wife, they got into an argument, and she left, saying, “If my daughter isn’t welcome here then neither am I.” So Bright Side, what’s your opinion? Should I have given up the bed to spare my son the drama?
Regards,
Julia F.
Some advice from our Editorial team.

Let them move out.Its your house not theirs.
Throw their Asses out and don't think twice about .. OR tell them on weekends to go rent as hotel with 2 bedroom and you will see them on Monday . Or tell them Go Buy a sleeper Sofa and when the daughter arrives they can sleep on the couch.
Make your son move everything out and put a lock on the door. She moved out? Good, now you don't have to evict her. Change the locks and ask your son if he's joining her. Let him know that her leaving won't work.
Or, change their room over to her stuff. Since it's only two days they can flip for who gets the couch. But it won't be you. This is your home, if they don't like the terms they can leave.
Keep a close eye on your son's new wife. She is out to evict you from your own home. Talk to your lawyer to secure your interest and house.
Then tell your son that Under no circumstances will you give up your bedroom. That if it doesn't suit, the door is there.
Ask your son if he thinks it's OK for his new wife to make demands in someone else's home?
Unfortunately, your son has rose-colored glasses on and is easily manipulated by his new wife...
So stand by what you've decided. Doesn't this suit the new wife? but what a shame...not.
Make your son understand that you've already done them a big favor by letting them live with you, if that's not enough, they're welcome to live with the wife's family.
No way give up your room .you were kind enough for them to move in. But to be forced out of your own bedroom is a no no in my book. Don't re-lent your son & daughter in-law are rather selfish if they expect you to sleep on the couch.
The DIL can sleep on the floor or your son. Never give up your room in your house. The entitlement of people today is outrageous.
YOUR DAUGHTER IN LAW IS RUDE. RAISED BY MANNERLESS PEOPLE. WTH. NO RESPECT FOR ELDERLY
Let them sleep on the floor and couch on the weekends if the daughter needs a room that bad
You said "no" to giving up your bed. That should have ended the conversation. If they want Mia to have her own room, they can sleep in the living room. Or better yet, MOVE.
Dear Julia,
Thanks for reaching out and sharing your story.
The moment they rearranged your bedroom while you were out was the line being crossed, not the moment you said no to the couch.
This isn’t about refusing a child or being inflexible. It’s about your son and DIL quietly redefining your home as theirs and repositioning you as the inconvenience, despite your age, your hip replacement, and the fact that you are the one providing the roof.
If you had given up the bed “just for two nights,” it would have locked in a weekly expectation where your health comes second to their comfort and decisions get made without your consent.
The correct boundary here isn’t emotional, it’s practical: your bedroom is non-negotiable, and any arrangement involving Mia has to work around that reality, not erase it.
Your son’s marital conflict didn’t start because you refused the couch. It started because he allowed his wife to override the homeowner and gamble with your physical well-being to avoid a harder conversation with her.
Standing firm now is the only way to prevent this from becoming a permanent, weekend-by-weekend erosion of your autonomy.
Julia finds herself in a difficult position, and at this point we don’t know how it will affect the relationship with her son. But she isn’t the only one with daughter-in-law problems.
Another one of our readers reached out to share their story. You can read the full version here: My DIL Charges Me for Toilet Paper When I Babysit—in My Son’s House.
Comments
You are 100% in the right! Either your DIL is a nut or there was a miscommunication. I suggest speaking to, texting, or emailing your DIL directly. Tell her you think there may have been a miscommunication and that you want to reassure her that her daughter is very welcome and that you are even excited to have her but that you are physically unable to give up your bed. Offer to help them purchase an air mattress so mia can sleep in their room or they can take the living room. I don't see how she could come back at you over that.
Your DIL obviously had no right to rearrange your bedroom without discussing it with you first. She didn't even care about your health and well-being. She only cared about her own. Also the fact that she disrespected your living arrangements by acting like your house was her house and not the other way around. Your DIL needs to practice using common decency from now on
I wonder 🤔 if it's in the custody agreement that Mia doesn't share a bedroom, and mom didn't want to give up her visitations but didn't want to acknowledge there may have been a prior problem...
Also where was mom before she and stepdad got married? Did she not support herself before and this his lay off shouldn't have affected bills that much other than bills he brought into the marriage.
Either way I side with grandma. Her house her rules.
Your son and DIL are entitled idiots.
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