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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:
Bowies · 01/03/2026 18:45

in your situation it’s really upsetting she wouldn’t help for a couple of hours.

I think she shouldn’t be expecting help from you later and I would consider moving further away and adding more distance in the relationship.

My DP had a lot of help from my DGP I have had help during some school holidays.

I don’t agree with DGP “having to” put in regular hours to cover childcare, though some have more capacity and are keen, I see some really struggling and getting ill all the time.

Thebigarsedbitch · 01/03/2026 23:59

We lived hours away from both sets of parents when our children were young, but both had our two kids to stay during the school holidays and my parents would often come and stay for a few days so that we could go away as a couple. I'm sure that they would all have done more if they had lived nearer to us.

Our grand children live a 30 minute drive away and although we couldn't offer daily childcare, as we were both working full time, we frequently had our grandson to stay at weekends from the age of six months and his sister too when she arrived three years later. We' also had them for longer periods so that DD sand DSIL could go on holiday.

.The grandkids are young teens now and have busy weekend schedules, but they do still stay over the occasionally and we take them on holiday in the summer. In addition, we are happy to be on call if we are needed.

We always viewed it as a great privilege to be able to build a close relationship with them when the were little, ven though it was exhausting at times!

Morepositivemum · 02/03/2026 02:31

I always love when people say people over their 50s are working with nothing physically wrong- everyone I know over 50 (and most I know would have older kids) are already physically exhausted. She’s reared kids and is working there’s no way she’s at the same place physically you are. In 20 years time you’ll realise this.

Saying that as a once off or non regular thing there’s no way I wouldn’t help out

Morepositivemum · 02/03/2026 02:35

Owly11
I'm so sorry you have a mother like this. There's nothing you can do except grieve what you never had and the fact that she expected you to care for her and her children but doesn't reciprocate now.

grieving what you never had is a tad overdramatic!!!! A lot of us have no extra help it’s just life, we chose to have kids and get into shit positions and get stretched, it’s crap but we figure it out and get on with it, no need to dwell on what we don’t have, overthink it and become bitter- that doesn’t help our kids and it doesn’t help us!!

junebirthdaygirl · 02/03/2026 03:34

My dm had 8 children so lots of grandkids. She never did full time childcare understandably but she was always there for emergencies. Most of my friends are now gps and are available to their children when needed. I will be the same hopefully! Your dm was mean..very mean and l would be pulling right back from her. Even if you never babysat or had your gran she could have helped seeing your little one was ill so it's a family emergency. Is it possible to have a discussion about this or is she impossible to talk to?.Also just to add..in my experience the grandads are brilliant in these circumstances.

Your mom is a taker and you are a nurse. Be very careful she is not expecting you to mind her in her old age. Move a distance while you can.

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