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AIBU?

Is anyone BU here over childcare?

303 replies

holidayhelpp · 18/11/2019 01:09

Mil, 2 sons and 2 dils....

Dil A has recently had her first child with son A. Son A has 3 dc, all in their teens, from first marriage.

Dil B has recently had 2 dc with son B.

Mil provides childcare for son b and Dil b.

On being asked by son a and dil a for childcare, mil has said she can only offer one day a week and gives it to son b’s dc as she has given time, money, effort etc to son a’s first 3 children and it is now son b’s turn to benefit. Son a and Dil feel this is favouritism and their child is being treated unfairly.

Dil b has a lot of support from her family whilst dil a does not, if that’s relevant.

Relationships are now souring.

Is anyone bu?

OP posts:
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Boom45 · 18/11/2019 01:14

If she's only got 1 day to spare and has an existing arrangement with family b, particularly if she has already provided childcare to family a's older children it sounds ok to me. She can't magic up extra time and she's helped family a in the past.

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Contraceptionismyfriend · 18/11/2019 01:17

So you're DIL A.

As MIL sos she's have a lot to one son and now wants to give to B. That's not favouritism. She's levelling it out.

YABU.

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HeddaGarbled · 18/11/2019 01:20

Anyone who asks their MIL for childcare other than the odd occasion here and there is being unreasonable. She’s done her child-rearing and should be allowed to enjoy her retirement without all this aggro.

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Hithere2 · 18/11/2019 01:21

With this little background, I say MIL is being unreasonable and displaying a clear case of favourtism.

This new baby doesn't have any time left in the babysitting quota given to son a's children? No, it doesn't work that way

I also get MIL has her hands full with 2 kids and a third would be a lot. Still no excuse.

Are children b coming from the golden child and children a coming from the scapegoat?

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MsPavlichenko · 18/11/2019 01:23

No. Regardless of circumstances she owes no one child care.

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Wildorchidz · 18/11/2019 01:23

If I was mil I’d go on strike.

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BellatrixLestat · 18/11/2019 01:25

Did she provide childcare for Son A's older children?

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BellatrixLestat · 18/11/2019 01:28

I also get MIL has her hands full with 2 kids and a third would be a lot. Still no excuse.

Erm..... I'd say that's a pretty damn good excuse given that she's provided childcare for 5 GCs over a number of years. She is not obliged to provide any!!

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Mintjulia · 18/11/2019 01:37

Agree with Bellatrix, mil doesn’t have to provide childcare for anyone. She already has her hands full with existing arrangement.she is not being unreasonable.
Many single parents cope completely on their own. If family A can’t cope with one baby between two adults and three teenagers, then they need to take a long hard look at themselves.

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Ohyesiam · 18/11/2019 01:42

Did she provide childcare for Son A's older children?
Yes, that’s that this thread is aboutHmm

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rightsideofherstory · 18/11/2019 01:44

Dil A. Husband already has 3 children mil helped with. When does she get to enjoy her life if all she is doing is minding her children's children?

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HypatiaCade · 18/11/2019 01:47

MIL wants to help her own DSs out, NOT her DILs.

She has already done loads for DS A, with his first children. Now DS B is getting some help.

That's pretty fair and equal, really.

I get that DIL A feels a bit hard done by, she herself hasn't got any help. But SHE is not the recipient, her DH is, and he's already had loads.

If this was money, and DS A HD received a deposit for a house with his first wife, and now DS B is getting a deposit for a house, I doubt anyone would think it unreasonable for the parents to say 'No, DS A, you're not getting ANOTHER deposit, We've already given you £x once'.

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Rhododendronite · 18/11/2019 01:54

Son A and DIL A are being unreasonable.

Your MIL has a pre-existing arrangement with Son & DIL B - that comes first.

It's her life and her decision.

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Iamallatsea · 18/11/2019 01:54

Family A are not owed childcare from anyone and they ABU and DIL A needs to stop thinking it’s some kind of competition.
Son A is being particularly unreasonable if he has benefited from MIL’s help in the past, if the older kids are teenagers then MIL has been helping one or other of her sons for years.
Maybe DIL B has more other help as well because she is not as demanding and point scoring as DIL A?

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GrumpyHoonMain · 18/11/2019 01:58

The Mil is son A’s mother who has had a lot of childcare support from her already. It is quite rightly Son B’s turn now. Dil A just has to suck it up I’m afraid and learn how to look after her own child.

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WinkysTeatowel · 18/11/2019 02:02

HypatiaCade has got it spot on with the money analogy. Aside from that MIL does not ‘owe’ anyone help with childcare.

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Bluerussian · 18/11/2019 02:08

WinkysTeaTowel, I too agree with HypatiaCade, very sensible analogy.

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Hithere2 · 18/11/2019 02:09

I agree childcare is not owed at all. I am team daycare

Don't have kids if you cannot support them and depend on free services to raise them

@hypatiacade
I love the house money analogy.
I changed my mind. MIL is not unreasonable and not favouritism.

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IWantADifferentName · 18/11/2019 02:11

Hypatia’s analogy is good. Things may not be fair between the grandchildren but they are fair among her children. I suppose views may differ on whether this is a helping hand for DS and DIL or an ‘opportunity to bond with a grandchild’. But the OP did use the phrase ‘childcare’ which suggests it is more about helping the parents than focussing on relationships with grandchildren.

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SofiaAmes · 18/11/2019 02:12

Why can't the teenagers help with childcare?

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BeanBag7 · 18/11/2019 02:17

MIL is not unreasonable.

Firstly she already has an existing childcare arrangement so those days are not free. The other days of the week presumably she wants some time to her herself which is more than reasonable.

Secondly her son has already had a "share" of free childcare even if it was a long time ago.

Thirdly she has offered to have the child one day week anyway, it's not that she has refused entirely (which would also be totally reasonable btw) so she is still doing you a huge favour.

In short, you're being unreasonable. Dont have kids if you can't afford their care.

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notusedbysomeonealready · 18/11/2019 02:18

Hmm, son A seems to have already had the benefit of his DMs help and time over the years and so the fact that she's dedicating her time in the present for son B certainly seems 'fair'.

My only concern for the MIL would be that this current arrangement, albeit certainly fair, may sacrifice the quality of relationship that she has with her youngest GC. As the DCs become older, it may become evident that she's chosen to spend more time and so formed deeper bonds with the older DCs.

Some people would be happy with this and some would not, but it's entirely MIL's decision to make and she should be under no obligation to provide childcare for anyone.

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BeanBag7 · 18/11/2019 02:19

Also what happens when MILs other 2 children have kids, will she be expected to look after them too?

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kateandme · 18/11/2019 03:11

i totally get pp about this being fair the the SONS point of view.but for the grandchild it wont be.nor for the relationship or bond they can get.is she always then not going to look after them and not be with them becaus his older kids has had their time.which yes is fair in terms of time and care taken but still the new lo will be the one missing out.

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Josette77 · 18/11/2019 03:21

Son A sounds very selfish. No one is owed child care, not to mention he already benefited from his mum helping out.

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