Love it! Good going grandma 🤗
My DIL Tried to Turn My Retirement Cruise Into a Free Daycare, I Gave Her Something to Choke On
In our “Letters from Readers” series, we’ve got a new story to share.
This one comes from Marge W., our longtime reader. She wrote in about a recent family clash with her daughter-in-law, who tried to turn Marge’s long-awaited retirement cruise into a free babysitting gig.
But Marge turned out to be a hard nut to crack. Read the full story to see how she handled the situation and what happened next.


Here’s Marge’s email and story:
"Hi Bright Side,
So, I’m 67, recently retired, and have three grandkids aged 7, 5, and 3. I’ve been planning a solo cruise for over two years as a retirement gift to myself. I picked the ship, the route, the excursions, the dates, everything. It was my big thing, something just for me, before I started the next chapter of my life.
Everything was booked and paid for, and I was counting down the days.
Then boom, my son gets a promotion at work, which is great, but it comes with a one-month overseas assignment. My daughter-in-law is suddenly overwhelmed at the idea of being alone with the kids for a month.
She calls me up with this whole sweet speech about how she’d love to go with me on the cruise to “share the joy” and “celebrate my retirement,” and also if I could just help a little with the kids on the ship so she could relax and “soak it in” too.
I smiled, said, “Of course, how lovely that would be.” So I guess she immediately started looking at cabins and kid packages and kids clubs, etc. Then I called the cruise line and moved my trip one month later. Same ship, same route, just different date.
The day before the original departure, she shows up at my house, suitcases packed at home, kids hyped. I sit her down and tell her I moved the trip because it didn’t feel right to celebrate while she was stressed out and alone, and instead invited her to stay with me for the month.
She looked confused. Then I handed her a list of tasks, like getting quotes for repainting my living room, booking a deep clean, buying new curtains, stuff like that.
Told her, “Since you really wanted to share my joy, you can help me prep my house for this long-awaited cruise, while I look after the kids.” So she gets a break and I get my house ready. Win-win. She did not look thrilled.
My son, when he heard about it later, just said, “Mom, that was kind of genius, but I anticipate a big storm between you and Hailey now.” My daughter-in-law has been very cold with me since.
So, people, did I go too far by changing my plans and making her share in my joy this way?"
Thank you, Marge, for writing to us and sharing your story.
The topic of people taking advantage of someone’s time, kindness, and willingness to help hits close to home for many. It becomes even more complicated when it happens within a family, where cutting ties or setting hard boundaries isn’t always realistic.
We’d like to offer you a few practical tips that might help you navigate the situation with your daughter-in-law and hopefully ease the tension between you after your well-played move.
1. Loop Your Son In, Calmly and Clearly.


You don't owe your daughter in law anything. She thought she could take advantage of you on your trip. No absolutely not... you raised you kid. She needs to handle hers, and hubby can give her a spa weekend when he gets home to make up for leaving home for a month.
I love the way you handled this. Good for you.
She did nothing wrong. She owed no one a heads up or warning. Her DIL was passive aggressive and presumptuous in planning to keep her company. Her DIL needed a very clear boundary of what would not be allowed. Her DIL got the message and is put out knowing she was correctly called out and checked. The DIL needs to grow up. If the DIL chooses not to, she'll know MIL is fair and discerning and will not play along with her games. MIL well and excellently done. Sometimes correct isn't convenient or kind or accommodating to our preferences.
Have a casual chat with your son when things are calm, not heated. Let him know what happened without dramatics, just the facts and how it made you feel. Be clear that you’re not asking him to “take sides,” but that his awareness and support can make a big difference. Often, just knowing he’s in the loop will shift how your DIL approaches things in the future.
2. Set a New “Team” Dynamic.
Frame future help not as an obligation, but as a team effort, including your son, your DIL, and you. Say something like, “Let’s figure out how to support each other in a way that works for everyone.” It takes the pressure off you being the default solution. It also reminds them that parenting is their job, not yours.
3. Offer a Small Olive Branch — But With Structure.


You can soften the current tension by inviting your DIL for something small and specific: lunch, a short visit, no kids involved. Keep it light, but set a subtle tone that your time is yours now. If she brings up future help, gently say, “Let’s all talk together with [your son] and figure out what makes sense.” It keeps communication open but reminds her you’re not the fallback plan.
Some choices break your heart no matter what you decide — and sometimes, love demands more sacrifice than we think we can bear. At Bright Side, we received a letter from Nina, a 55-year-old woman whose life suddenly demanded she choose between her lifelong dream and her precious five-year-old granddaughter. Nina found herself in a very complicated situation.
Read her powerful confession here, we bet it’ll make you look at life under a new angle.
Comments
I think this is so underhanded. Why not just tell your DIL from the beginning that the cruise is a solo trip and not get her and the kids excited just to play games with them? I think what she did is really wrong and the advice to handle it here is not good enough. She didnt have to say yes to begin with. Also, if her son is going to be away for a month, he should have been the one to call her and ask her to help while he is away. The fact that this son isnt backing up his wife and kids is just another red flag here. I feel bad for the DIL.
Girl shut up..she don't owe dil nothing
N5A. Reminds me of a AITA post where a husband and wife's daughter and SIL "invited " themselves on their once in a lifetime trip. Husband did something similar and daughter and wife were upset with him because of it. Don't let her walk all over you like this. And who cares if there is a storm?

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