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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Childcare from grandparents- your experience vs your child’s experience

155 replies

Ariel269 · 28/02/2026 04:53

Growing up my grandparents babysat us all the time- to let my parents go to work, for them to go nights out/date nights, to let them go away for the weekend, sometimes just because.

I hasten to add, my mum and dad’s shifts would overlap at the weekend and I had a younger sister with a big age gap. I would babysit my sister on a Sunday morning-afternoon every week due to this while I lived at home, from when I was a teen . This inevitably meant missing nights out when I got to a certain age as I needed to be up early on the Sunday . When I left home as a student and got a job that involved weekend work, my mum was furious and I would always end up avoiding certain shifts to let me continue to help her with childcare. This meant taking my sister from the Saturday night until Sunday afternoon. This only stopped once I was a qualified nurse and couldn’t avoid these shifts. Miraculously, my mum managed to alter her own hours then.

I now have my own children and don’t really ask for help with childcare. Husband and I both work and sort childcare between us both by working opposite to each other. We have a date night maybe once every 12-18months at most. We have had one night away, for our wedding night. Other than that, I generally only ask for help if it’s really extenuating circumstances like when I was in labour. My mum usually isn’t the one to provide this childcare.

A few weeks back my daughter was hospitalised. I couldn’t stay as the resident parent, as I’m breastfeeding my youngest who is still a small baby. So, husband stayed with her and I would go to the hospital while the rest were at school/nursery and in the evenings. My sister, auntie & uncle, neighbour and friends all chipped in to help, without me needing to ask. On one of the days, we had nobody during the day because everyone was at work. I wanted to be able to attend the ward round (it’s me who generally attends all my daughters appointments due to the way our shifts are, so I know her medical history much more fluently than my husband and it would have been helpful to have me there). My mum was off work and I asked if she could collect my toddler from nursery at lunchtime and sit with her for an hour or two to let me go to ward round. My toddler naps at this time, the nursery is a 3 minute walk from my front door. My mum
herself stays a 5 minute drive from my house. I would have been home within 2 hours max as needed home for school pick up. She said no. She gave no rationale other than it would be “a lot” for her. She is in her late 50’s, physically well and still works etc. she would not have found this physically taxing.

I feel as if there is a huge disconnect between her expectations of childcare when she had us as kids and what she thinks she should provide as a grandparent. I think it bothers me more as I helped her with childcare for years, which was never complained about but was a pain as meant missing friend’s birthday parties, nights out etc if they fell on a Saturday night.

Is this similar to the experiences of others? I feel like everyone else I know has much more help from grandparents.

OP posts:
BeRedHam · 28/02/2026 19:08

I'm sorry to hear how your mum said that it would be too much for her, for two hours while you might
have visited your DC in hospital!
I'm pleased you have other support.
Both sets of our parents lived hours away from us in opposite directions to each other so we had no regular, day to day support.
With other support from friends etc we managed.
Maybe regard your mum as local to you but as though she is hours away, for the purposes of any help you might need.
Cherish the friends you have as well as you DHand DC :)
All the best. You sound like a lovely person.

SlouchyBeanie · 28/02/2026 19:17

It must skip a generation because I can’t wait to help out with any grandchildren I’m one day blessed to have. I will so be right in there for regular childcare and days out and sleepovers

Health and circumstances change. Not everybody can once they get there.

Momtotwokids · 28/02/2026 19:35

Stickytoffeetartt · 28/02/2026 05:17

This is completely unfair. She needs to have it spelt out to her. I would explain to your mother that you provided childcare for her all those years and looking after your dc as a once off in an emergency situation is the least she can do for you. Also stick in the fact that you will not be caring for her when she needs it, tell her she's going to have to sort something else. She sounds like a horrible , selfish person.

I'm sure her mother is going to want to hear that.

Bunny65 · 28/02/2026 20:20

I think OP should point out to her mother how much she helped her growing up, and how unkind it was to refuse to look after her toddler for a couple of hours in an emergency. As a busy woman in her 50s it is is ridiculous to say it was too much for her.

Chilly80 · 28/02/2026 20:22

Sounds like your mum didn't really want children but had them as back then that was what you were supposed to do. I wouldn't be doing anything ever again for your mum.

EvieBB · 28/02/2026 20:31

Ariel269 · 28/02/2026 04:53

Growing up my grandparents babysat us all the time- to let my parents go to work, for them to go nights out/date nights, to let them go away for the weekend, sometimes just because.

I hasten to add, my mum and dad’s shifts would overlap at the weekend and I had a younger sister with a big age gap. I would babysit my sister on a Sunday morning-afternoon every week due to this while I lived at home, from when I was a teen . This inevitably meant missing nights out when I got to a certain age as I needed to be up early on the Sunday . When I left home as a student and got a job that involved weekend work, my mum was furious and I would always end up avoiding certain shifts to let me continue to help her with childcare. This meant taking my sister from the Saturday night until Sunday afternoon. This only stopped once I was a qualified nurse and couldn’t avoid these shifts. Miraculously, my mum managed to alter her own hours then.

I now have my own children and don’t really ask for help with childcare. Husband and I both work and sort childcare between us both by working opposite to each other. We have a date night maybe once every 12-18months at most. We have had one night away, for our wedding night. Other than that, I generally only ask for help if it’s really extenuating circumstances like when I was in labour. My mum usually isn’t the one to provide this childcare.

A few weeks back my daughter was hospitalised. I couldn’t stay as the resident parent, as I’m breastfeeding my youngest who is still a small baby. So, husband stayed with her and I would go to the hospital while the rest were at school/nursery and in the evenings. My sister, auntie & uncle, neighbour and friends all chipped in to help, without me needing to ask. On one of the days, we had nobody during the day because everyone was at work. I wanted to be able to attend the ward round (it’s me who generally attends all my daughters appointments due to the way our shifts are, so I know her medical history much more fluently than my husband and it would have been helpful to have me there). My mum was off work and I asked if she could collect my toddler from nursery at lunchtime and sit with her for an hour or two to let me go to ward round. My toddler naps at this time, the nursery is a 3 minute walk from my front door. My mum
herself stays a 5 minute drive from my house. I would have been home within 2 hours max as needed home for school pick up. She said no. She gave no rationale other than it would be “a lot” for her. She is in her late 50’s, physically well and still works etc. she would not have found this physically taxing.

I feel as if there is a huge disconnect between her expectations of childcare when she had us as kids and what she thinks she should provide as a grandparent. I think it bothers me more as I helped her with childcare for years, which was never complained about but was a pain as meant missing friend’s birthday parties, nights out etc if they fell on a Saturday night.

Is this similar to the experiences of others? I feel like everyone else I know has much more help from grandparents.

Sorry op. Your mum sounds really unhelpful/unreasonable.....

My mum helped me out so much when my 2 dd"s were little and I had chronic fatigue....she never complained I was (and am) so very grateful.

Londonrach1 · 28/02/2026 20:34

I saw my gp once a year for a week...now in laws come every 2 weeks and we pop to my parents every 1-3 months. No childcare. If you lucky enough to live close by you see gp more.

Dawnb19 · 28/02/2026 21:04

My experience is completely different to my childrens. I grew up with my nanna helping out after school until my mam came home. My partners granny was even more involved. She would cook and clean while my mil was at work. She would come and get them ready for school even though MIL only worked part time. Her and FIL frequently had nights off and weekends away. I live in Ireland so don't live near my parents but my mil doesn't help out much. If we visit her after picking my daughter up from preschool she might sometimes let her stay for a few hours but that it. She live opposite us. She hasn't watched my 1 year old since June even though she's in good health and doesn't work. So I haven't had a break or night off since then as we've got no one else. There has been times where I've cried in front of her about being so tired but she doesn't offer to help. 🤷 Even taking my son for a walk in a pram would have been an amazing help for me to nap (he had bad colic and reflux and didn't sleep a full night until recently. I got an average of 4-5 hours sleep per night for the first year. My partner works a mixture of nights and days on the railway so it's hard to plan anything around this.

She's quite a bit younger than both my grandparents and my partners grandparents were when we were my childrens age. 🫤 I've had to quit work until we can get more childcare when my son is 3. (We don't get free childcare in Northern Ireland) It's a real struggle. My 4 year old is in preschool 9-11.20 but that's it.

I see it as her loss. She's missing out on them. Also I sure as hell won't be helping her like we all helped our grandparents when they got older. My parents and sistersbdid a lot for our grandparents as we had a good relationship. My partner and his siblings did a lot for he's grandparents as well. But I won't be going out of my way to help her or FIL.

Tuesdayschild50 · 28/02/2026 21:27

Your feelings come from you helping your mum and you missing out .. and now your mum refuses to help you I understand this my mum would pull a face if I asked for help when mine were little and her mood would change.
I'm a grandparent now to a 5 yr old little girl and I absolutely love helping my son I wouldn't have it any other way I still do my own things aswell .
Mum sounds bit selfish or uninterested .

Ewg9 · 28/02/2026 22:11

Feel really sorry for you OP, your Mum is a hypocrite and doesn't practice what she preaches. family first and all muck in by the sounds of it. Childcare from grandparents shouldn't be expected, but if you provided childcare for your sister, and shouldered the responsibility to support your parents It is piss poor that your own mum can't help you when you really need it. To expect babysitting from you once you went to uni seems nuts, maybe if it was a one off, but to expect you to provide childcare on a regular basis and to miss out on normal and nice things when you were young seems barmy along with limiting your own ability to earn whilst you studied!? Mental!

I am a SAHM and I notice there are alot of of Grandparents helping out with childcare at the toddler groups I go too. I go to a group near enough every day of the week, and I see the same grandparents at the sessions so it is a regular and formal arrangement to help their kids out. With regards your Mum, I would address her double standards in not helping you out. Especially when there has been a medical situation, and the hurt you may feel that she couldn't assist her own daughter and grandchildren when they really needed her... She doesn't sound a very supportive, empathetic or even kind Mum to leave you in the shit like that...

Burntt · 28/02/2026 23:47

My mum used me as free help with her childcare job. Deligate loads of housework onto me too. Won’t do fuck all to help her kids with childcare now. Oh sorry she won’t help her daughters her son she pines for more time with his kids

Uticary · 28/02/2026 23:53

OP, your mother sounds like a deeply selfish person.
I strongly recommend you put in firm boundaries.
You were shockingly used by her as a child.
Do not get used again as an adult.
I would be putting distance between you.

I certainly wouldn't be forgetting her response to your asking for help from you.
Glad things are better now.

cadburyegg · 01/03/2026 00:24

My experience is also the opposite. I never knew 3 of my grandparents, the only one I remember lived 300 miles away. My parents didn’t have any family support locally so they paid babysitters or did sleepover swaps with friends if they wanted to go out.

I’m a single mum and my mum helps me with doing 2 school pick ups a week, also helps in emergencies and in school holidays although I try not to ask her to have them all day because that is too much now I think.

My exh says he was practically brought up by his grandparents. His parents sometimes did a bit of childcare for us but it’s dwindled to nothing now. I think if parents were not involved when their own kids were young then they won’t be involved with grandkids.

Ariel269 · 01/03/2026 01:30

Thank you for all your replies. I definitely think I need to consider what the future looks like if/when my mum ever needs my support.

OP posts:
pandp · 01/03/2026 07:55

I have 2 grandchildren, one who is now 20 and a 5 year old, I have always been a willing baby sitter and have looked after both GC from a very early age, looking after them for one day a week, having them for sleepovers, taking them to activities etc. I am now 76 and take my 5 yo to weekly swimming lessons, have her to sleep over on a regular basis, meet her from school one day each week and look after her some days during school holidays. I absolutely love and treasure the time that I have spent with them, it has brought a new dimension to my life and I am so thankful that both my son and daughter have trusted me with their children. Sadly your mother is missing out.

GreenCaterpillarOnALeaf · 01/03/2026 08:46

I was watched by my mums dad Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday after school when I was very little. My dads parents didn’t do much but they did take us on holidays every couple of years which was really kind of them looking back because otherwise I probably would never been abroad till I was an adult. Once my brother was 15 he took over childcare and him and my now SIL (then his girlfriend) would walk me to school and pick me up. He was expelled from school and went to college so he didn’t have to be in at normal times.

Now my in laws have our kids pretty frequently (they are really keen to have them, MIL got no help from her own parents). We pay them to do afterschool some weeks because of DHs work but we don’t need that every week. My dad has them about once a month Friday night (picks them up from school after collecting DD from me) to Sunday morning and him and my step mum take them swimming basically every time. My dad was (at times) not a very good dad due to his alcoholism and I kind of think he feels like he missed out so he is always keen to take the kids and my brother and SILs kids. I don’t ask my mum to take them ever because she’s done her time raising six children and I have enough help as it is, but she comes on days out with us a lot. My mum also takes them one on one for special treat days out a few times a year which is really nice.

I am very very lucky and I know that having this much help is not the norm, but your mum sounds mean and uncaring.

Susan7654 · 01/03/2026 09:02

"My mum was off work and I asked if she could collect my toddler from nursery at lunchtime and sit with her for an hour or two to let me go to ward round. My toddler naps at this time, the nursery is a 3 minute walk from my front door. My mum
herself stays a 5 minute drive from my house. I would have been home within 2 hours max"

So sorry. Your mum is NOT ok. I would be very upset that there is no reason for a NO from her other than beeing a selfish and heartless..
Maybe she holds a grudge against you, or is just a bitch as others said.
But saying no in those circumstances even holding a grudge is really shitty.

andthat · 01/03/2026 10:52

Ariel269 · 01/03/2026 01:30

Thank you for all your replies. I definitely think I need to consider what the future looks like if/when my mum ever needs my support.

I’m glad you can see that….if it makes the decision easier for you, you can think about if you had time to help… would your ether help your mum, or your kids?

Alternativelyviewed · 01/03/2026 10:55

@Ariel269
Some people are intrinsically selfish.
Have you ever spelled this out to her ? The sheer amount you did ?

mambojambodothetango · 01/03/2026 16:35

Total opposite to you, OP. My gps lived 200 miles away and we saw them at Christmas, Easter and in the summer. I don't recall that they ever babysat for us. My PILs live nearby and regularly look after our DC. My own Ps didn't much because they lived far away and were older.

Janeaway · 01/03/2026 16:41

My grandparents moved 200 miles away when I was little, so my parents never got any help. My mum was working for some of the time when I had my own children and my dad wasn't the sort you could leave grandchildren with. They did the odd babysitting if me and ex wanted to go out, maybe 5 times a year and that was that. My other set of grandparents were long dead, and my ex's family lived in a different country.

Letskeepcalm · 01/03/2026 17:01

Focacciaisyum · 28/02/2026 06:30

My experience is pretty similar to yours OP. MY GPs used to have us every Friday overnight so my parents could have some time to themselves until the GPs moved abroad when I was about 7. After that my brother and I used to fly out to them as unaccompanied minors for the school holidays so parents could work.
My parents have looked after my kids for maybe 3 or 4 evenings (not overnight) their whole lives. In-laws are the same although to be fair they don't live nearby.
Is it generational? My parents are boomers so this fits the stereotype.

Boomer here.
We look after grandchildren regularly through the week (2/3 full days, pre school children) and do overnights around once a month/weeks. We are late 60s and its hard work but wouldn't have it any other way. I know lots of grandparents our age who help out.

Netcurtainnelly · 01/03/2026 17:07

pandp · 01/03/2026 07:55

I have 2 grandchildren, one who is now 20 and a 5 year old, I have always been a willing baby sitter and have looked after both GC from a very early age, looking after them for one day a week, having them for sleepovers, taking them to activities etc. I am now 76 and take my 5 yo to weekly swimming lessons, have her to sleep over on a regular basis, meet her from school one day each week and look after her some days during school holidays. I absolutely love and treasure the time that I have spent with them, it has brought a new dimension to my life and I am so thankful that both my son and daughter have trusted me with their children. Sadly your mother is missing out.

She doesn't think she is

Blueyrocks · 01/03/2026 18:15

My grandmother brought me up on and off during especially difficult times in my childhood. I helped bring up my younger brother. My DM has never looked after any of my kids, not even when I was in labour.

@Ariel269 I'd focus on the amazing support of your sister, auntie and uncle. Your mum clearly isn't someone who wants to be around kids.

Cetera · 01/03/2026 18:20

I rarely spent time with my grandparents. Barely knew them. My parents were young when they had us and moved away from their families so they looked after us 3 kids on their own almost all of the time. I’ve been a parent for well over a decade, my parents couldn’t be less interested. They have spent no 121 time with my DC apart from one day when one of them was a baby. One of them hasn’t seen my DC in nearly 10 years (or me). My in-laws are slightly more interested but from a distance, they moved hours away when DC were preschool age. So it’s often all talk and no action with them and we’ve not seen them for ages. They live in their own bubble.

We’re on our own. Childcare was always been funded by us. Never have a night out alone together because of DC.

It is what it is, but my general thoughts are that my parents had not-great family relations when they were kids, they went and had their own kids at a young age because that’s what people did, and they probably never really wanted to be parents. Same for in laws. Incidentally my parents split up spectacularly and in a damaging way when I was a teen.

It used to blow my mind to see how close and supported my friends were with their families. Now I’m just numb to it really. We have to deal with the cards we are dealt in life.